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Kari Lake Could Be Tormenting Democrats For Years
Kari Lake Could Be Tormenting Democrats For Years
Kari Lake Could Be Tormenting Democrats For Years https://digitalarkansasnews.com/kari-lake-could-be-tormenting-democrats-for-years/ To the contrary, Lake has been a surprise. At the same time, she’s a reminder of the oldest of conventional political adages — candidate quality matters. You can peddle conspiracy theories about the 2020 election and sink beneath the waves if you are a state senator with no especially notable political skills; or you can peddle conspiracy theories about the 2020 election and achieve liftoff if you are an exceptionally poised former news anchor. Of course, Mastriano is the former and Lake is the latter, and that’s one key to their different trajectories. A Lake win is by no means a lock. She’s ahead of Democrat Katie Hobbs by just 1.6 percentage points in the RealClearPolitics average. Still, given the general political environment and how it is tilting further toward the Republicans, she’s clearly in a strong position. Win or lose, there’s no doubt that a major political talent has emerged. Lake is the latest in a line of female champions of a grass-roots conservative populism that runs from Phyllis Schlafly to Sarah Palin to Marjorie Taylor Greene, spanning the 1950s to today. These are wildly divergent figures. Schlafly had a deep seriousness of purpose and was one of the most consequential leaders of postwar conservatism; MTG trolls the libs and hopes to finagle a seat on the House oversight committee should Republicans take back the majority. Yet there are common threads in this line of “momma bear” populists down through the decades: a fervent opposition to the elite; a disdain for the Republican establishment; a hatred for the press; a dark or frankly conspiratorial view of the world; a fervent base of support from activists and ordinary voters immune to influence by critical outside voices; and a fearlessness and instinctive combativeness that made or makes these women even more hateful to their opponents and admirable to their supporters. What’s new about Lake and MTG is that loyalty to Donald Trump and the insistence that the 2020 election was stolen are now the litmus tests for this grassroots populism. When Phyllis Schlafly got her start in the 1950s, the intensity of someone’s anti-communism was the measuring stick. A single-minded devotion to 2020 election denialism is not the most natural calling card in a closely contested state like Arizona. This is why Lake seemed like such a poor choice for the GOP. Her other attributes, though, have made up for her poisonously outrageous views on the elections. As a local news anchor in Phoenix for 20 years, she entered the race with built-in name recognition and a reservoir of credibility that have stood her in good stead. It’s a little as if Walter Cronkite, back when network anchors were still near the height of their powers, up and decided to jump in the Democratic primary against President Jimmy Carter in 1980. Then, there’s the fact that Lake loves the microphone and camera, and they love her back. She has communication skills that an army of consultants could never impart to a candidate with less experience. Lake has basically had more than 20 years of media training, and it shows. At a rally with Tulsi Gabbard this week that involved a sit-down conversation with the former Democratic congresswoman on stage, Lake could have been mistaken for the celebrity MC. She was fluid and in control. Not a word was out of place. She seamlessly interwove pleasant chitchat with her campaign message, which, with an emphasis on the border, education and water issues, hardly sounded radical. TV news-anchoring is about connecting with the viewers and projecting authority, and these are attributes that are directly transferable to the political realm. If you seem unflappable, people will think you are unflappable, and that creates a sense of command. Lake has made a point of snapping back at the media constantly. Knowing how valuable these exchanges are for motivating Republicans, her campaign is careful to get them on video and spread them widely. The latest such moment had Lake taking a question about her election denialism from a reporter and turning it around by citing chapter and verse regarding Democrats denying the legitimacy of Republican presidential victories since 2000. This doesn’t excuse anything Lake has said, but it showed moxie — and in how she pulled it off — practiced showmanship. On top of all of this, she is running against perhaps the worst Democratic gubernatorial candidate in the country, the Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs, whose campaign is currently consumed with trying to justify her refusal to debate Lake. Hobbs emphatically lacks Lake’s star power and in fact, feels more like a candidate for the board of the Central Arizona Water Conservation District than the highest elected office in the state. If Lake wins, she instantly has to be at the top of Trump’s potential VP list. There won’t be many other major officeholders as enthusiastic about his 2020 fixation as Lake. She’d be a governor from a crucial swing state. She’s a woman. And she’s thoroughly absorbed the Trumpian practice of politics as combat and theater and can build a crowd. There’s a long way to go from here to there. If nothing else, though, we now know what a desperate misjudgment it was for Democrats to subtly assist Lake in the GOP primary. They thought they were propping up a patsy, when they were really helping create a star they may have to fear and loathe for years. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Kari Lake Could Be Tormenting Democrats For Years
Bring On The Durham Report: GOP Says Trump-Russia Investigation Report Will Reveal FBI Abuse
Bring On The Durham Report: GOP Says Trump-Russia Investigation Report Will Reveal FBI Abuse
‘Bring On The Durham Report’: GOP Says Trump-Russia Investigation Report Will Reveal FBI Abuse https://digitalarkansasnews.com/bring-on-the-durham-report-gop-says-trump-russia-investigation-report-will-reveal-fbi-abuse/ October 20, 2022 12:51 PM Republicans and conservative media outlets are turning their attention to John Durham’s impending report following his second high-profile court defeat, arguing the special counsel’s expected tome on his investigation of the Trump-Russia investigators will reveal further FBI malfeasance. A jury found Russian national Igor Danchenko not guilty this week on four false statements charges, declining to convict him for the allegations that the main source for British ex-spy Christopher Steele had lied to the FBI about his sourcing for the discredited and Clinton campaign-funded anti-Trump dossier. “Bring on the Durham Report: The special counsel can now tell the story of the FBI and the Russia collusion probe,” the right-leaning Wall Street Journal editorial board declared this week. “He can knit together the information he’s been relaying piecemeal through court filings. Please bring it on, and don’t spare the details or any of the participants. His report should be devoted to educating the public about what really happened, and why.” ANTI-TRUMP DOSSIER SOURCE FOUND NOT GUILTY IN RUSSIA INVESTIGATION TRIAL Special counsel John Durham is seen. (Graeme Jennings / Washington Examiner) If Danchenko is indeed Durham’s final case, then his report will come next. The special counsel is reportedly working on finishing a lengthy set of findings laying out his investigation’s conclusions, which will be handed over to Attorney General Merrick Garland. Robert Mueller’s special counsel investigation said in its 2019 public report that it “did not establish that members of the Trump campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities.” The Wall Street Journal argued that Mueller’s report “failed to disclose the dirty details that Mr. Durham found.” They added that Durham “is the only reason America has had a glimpse of the FBI abuses” and that “any attempt to squelch his report would compound the scandal.” Garland was grilled on this by Senate Republicans in October 2021. “With respect to the report, I would like as much as possible to be made public,” Garland testified. “I have to be concerned about Privacy Act concerns and classification, but other than that, the commitment is to provide a public report, yes.” Garland also vowed, “There will be no political or otherwise undue interference with the Durham investigation.” Bill Barr, Trump’s former attorney general who made Mueller’s report largely public, though with some redactions, and who appointed Durham special counsel in 2020, argued this week that Durham’s report will be a big opportunity. “The real public interest here was being served by exposing the full extent of the corruption that was involved in the Russiagate and the abuse by the FBI in that whole episode. And I think Durham is going to get a report out that is going to lay out all the facts,” Barr said on Fox News, adding that the report “will leave a very good foundation for pursuing it further on the Hill.” The conservative National Review editorial board also predicted this week that Durham’s two court losses “will give Democrats and pundits who championed the Trump-Russia smear fodder to argue that Durham’s ultimate report should be ignored” but that “Durham has done a public service in exposing how imperative it is that the FBI be subjected to searching congressional investigation and reform.” Matthew Miller, who was director of the Justice Department’s public affairs office from 2009 to 2011 under former President Barack Obama, argued this week that Garland, or another top official at the agency, should “pause” before making a decision on releasing its findings to the public. “I think Merrick Garland will be under a lot of pressure from Republicans to release that report, but I have to say, this circumstance is very different from the Mueller investigation, where, obviously, the attorney general Bill Barr did release that report,” Miller said on Alex Wagner Tonight on MSNBC. The Danchenko trial revealed that Danchenko was on the FBI’s payroll as a confidential human source from March 2017 to October 2020. FBI supervisory intelligence analyst Brian Auten revealed the FBI had offered Steele an incentive of up to $1 million if he could prove the allegations of collusion in his dossier, but the FBI analyst said the former MI6 agent was unable to corroborate the claims. FBI agent Kevin Helson, who was the handling agent for Danchenko, testified that he made an October 2020 request to pay Danchenko a lump sum of $346,000, and his testimony revealed that would have brought the total amount the Russian lawyer had been paid by the bureau over a few years up to a total of $546,000. The lump sum payment request was denied. A member of the FBI’s Human Intelligence Validation Unit also suggested that Danchenko may have been part of Russian intelligence services, according to court testimony. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER Democratic cybersecurity lawyer Michael Sussmann had been charged in September 2021 by Durham after reportedly concealing his two clients, Neustar Chief Technology Officer Rodney Joffe and Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, from FBI General Counsel James Baker when he pushed debunked allegations of a secret line of communication between the Trump Organization and Russia’s Alfa-Bank during a September 2016 meeting. But a jury found Sussmann not guilty of the false statement charge following a trial in the nation’s capital. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Bring On The Durham Report: GOP Says Trump-Russia Investigation Report Will Reveal FBI Abuse
Little Rock Police Investigating Early Thursday Homicide
Little Rock Police Investigating Early Thursday Homicide
Little Rock Police Investigating Early Thursday Homicide https://digitalarkansasnews.com/little-rock-police-investigating-early-thursday-homicide/ A Little Rock Police Department vehicle is shown in this file photo. Little Rock police are investigating a Thursday morning homicide of a man, according to a news release from the Police Department. According to the release, officers were called to the 3500 block of South Bryant Street around 8:30 a.m. where they discovered the victim. Additional information on the case, including the man’s name, has not been released. The investigation is ongoing, and the Police Department has advised people to avoid the area when traveling. The Police Department has asked anyone with information about the homicide to contact detectives at 501-371-4660.  Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Little Rock Police Investigating Early Thursday Homicide
Joanna Kliethermes
Joanna Kliethermes
Joanna Kliethermes https://digitalarkansasnews.com/joanna-kliethermes/ Joanna Kliethermes, 82, of Sullivan, MO, passed away peacefully on Wednesday, April 6, 2022 at Life Care Center of Sullivan. Joanna was born in Chicago, Illinois, on July 22, 1939, to the late Harry and Lerona (Griffith) Perry. She grew up in the Bridgeton area and attended Pattonville High School. Joanna was united in marriage to August Kliethermes in 1977, and sadly, he preceded her in death in 1980. Joanna was employed at various different jobs through the years, including driving the Oats bus. Joanna loved her family very much. She enjoyed just spending time with them and having barbecues together. She also liked to travel, play cards, Bingo, and reading. Joanna had many dogs that she loved dearly; however, Precious was her favorite. Joanna is survived by her six children: Clyde Lindemann and wife Tammy of St. Charles, MO, Glenda Cook and husband Ronald of Niangua, MO, Gregory Lindemann and wife Karla of St. James, MO, Scott Lindemann and wife Carrie of Sullivan, MO, Wayne Lindemann and wife Connie of Jonesboro, AR, and Michael White and wife Jennifer of Coppers Cove, TX; seventeen grandchildren; twenty-four great-grandchildren; two great-great-grandchildren; three brothers: Johnny Perry and wife Pam of Old Monroe, MO, Allen Perry of Aurora, CO, and Eddie Perry and wife Joann of Troy, MO; one sister, Lerona Henley and husband Buddy of Highlandville, MO; nieces, nephews, other relatives and many friends. She was preceded in death by her husband, August Kliethermes; her parents, Harry and Lerona; and one brother, Harold Perry. Graveside Services were 12:30 p.m., Monday, April 11, 2022 at I.O.O.F. Memorial Cemetery in Sullivan, with Pastor Lew Ensor officiating. Visitation was held from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Monday, at the Eaton Funeral Home in Sullivan. Online condolences may be shared with Joanna’s family at www.eatonfuneralhome.com. All arrangements were under the care of the Eaton Funeral Home and Cremation Center of Sullivan. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Joanna Kliethermes
Liz Truss Resigns As UK Prime Minister | CNN
Liz Truss Resigns As UK Prime Minister | CNN
Liz Truss Resigns As UK Prime Minister | CNN https://digitalarkansasnews.com/liz-truss-resigns-as-uk-prime-minister-cnn/ Watch UK PM Liz Truss’ resignation speech 01:30 – Source: CNN Liz Truss has resigned as Britain’s prime minister after a disastrous six-week tenure, making her the UK’s shortest-serving leader ever. Another Conservative leadership election is due to take place within a week, with the next prime minister expected to be announced on Friday October 28. Truss’ announcement came after her government descended into chaos, with key cabinet members and lawmakers savaging her leadership. The UK will now see its fifth premier since the divisive 2016 Brexit referendum, intensifying calls for an early general election. Candidates to replace Liz Truss as Tory leader will need at least 100 nominations from British Conservative MPs, Sir Graham Brady, a former committee chair and parliament member, has said.  Requiring 100 signatures to proceed in the race effectively narrows the field of potential candidates. Brady said the threshold allows for the possibility of three candidates at most.  In the event, only one candidate emerges, there could be a new party leader and Prime Minister by Monday, Tory Conservative Party chairman Jake Berry added. Berry said there would be an online vote for members if two candidates made it through the parliamentary stages. Former UK Prime Minister Theresa May has said Liz Truss was right to stand down as leader of the country, in order to provide a “roadmap for an orderly transition.” “MPs must now be prepared to compromise. It is our duty to provide sensible, competent government at this critical moment for our country,” she said on twitter. The record-breaking brevity of Liz Truss’s catastrophic stint as prime minister is perhaps best encapsulated by her defeat in a much-publicized contest with Britain’s most famous lettuce. The Daily Star tabloid posed an unexpected question last Friday, after Truss sacked her chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng and U-turned on her disastrous mini-budget, seemingly putting her premiership on course for a collision with an iceberg. “Can Liz Truss outlast a lettuce?” the paper asked. To test the theory it set up a live stream showing a 24/7 view of a lettuce alongside a picture of Truss, which quickly went viral. And, on Thursday, thousands flocked to the video to watch the lettuce celebrate its astonishing victory. “I can’t believe the lettuce won,” Labour MP Afzal Khan wrote on Twitter. “The lettuce wins with time to spare!” added SNP lawmaker Owen Thompson. Though the lettuce showed signs of browning during the six-day contest, it appears healthy enough to have held off Truss’s challenge for a further few days if necessary. London’s Mayor Sadiq Khan has told CNN the UK has become “a laughing stock” due to the ongoing chaos at the heart of government. “I’m not somebody who’s easily surprised or easily shocked, but I’m surprised and shocked that just a few weeks after Liz Truss became the Conservative leader and the British prime minister we have the chaos we’ve seen over the last few days and weeks, leading to her resigning today,” Khan told Christiane Amanpour. “What we don’t want is yet another internal Conservative leadership contest,” Khan said. “What we need is for Liz Truss or whoever Conservative members choose to be the next leader to give the British public the opportunity of voting for a fresh start.” WATCH: British Prime Minister Liz Truss announces her resignation, outside Number 10 Downing Street, London, on October 20. Henry Nicholls/Reuters “The Prime Minister is not under a desk.” It said much about the state of Liz Truss’s troubled premiership that this statement by fellow Conservative minister Penny Mordaunt at the start of the week was made, ostensibly at least, as a show of support. Three days later, on Thursday, Truss announced her resignation. Hard to believe it is less than six weeks since Truss descended a helicopter to “kiss hands” with Queen Elizabeth II (two days before the latter’s death in Balmoral Castle, Scotland), becoming the United Kingdom’s 56th prime minister. As she surveys the shattered wreck of her premiership, Truss must be wondering where it all went wrong – and quite how it collapsed around her ears so quickly. To recap: as the country observed 10 days official mourning for the late Queen, Truss and her close ally and Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng drew up plans for a financial package dubbed the “mini-Budget” but with consequences which would feel decidedly maxi. Truss and Kwarteng’s prescription for turbo-powering the economy in a quest for growth through unfunded tax cuts unnerved the markets, triggering a run on the pound and forcing the Bank of England to step in to prevent pension funds collapsing. Last week, Truss hoicked Kwarteng back from Washington DC, where he was attending a gathering of the IMF, to fire him for, as critics quipped, following her policies to the letter. In his stead, she installed as Chancellor the experienced Jeremy Hunt, a candidate from the opposite moderate wing of the party, but who trailed in eighth place behind her in the contest to replace Boris Johnson last summer. On Monday, Hunt took steps to steady the markets by jettisoning the entire mini-Budget, including a planned 1p cut in income tax, a corporation tax rise and VAT-free shopping for tourists (Truss and Kwarteng had already been forced to ditch plans to scrap the top 45p tax rate). That left Truss’s low-tax economic vision in tatters, a boil lanced not only for the short term but, to the fury of those who had been in her camp, leaving sufficient scar tissue to warn politicians off repeating the experiment for a generation. Rosa Prince is editor of The House magazine. She is former assistant political editor of the Daily Telegraph and author of the books “Theresa May: The Enigmatic Prime Minister” “and “Comrade Corbyn: A Very Unlikely Coup.” The views expressed in this commentary are her own. View more opinion on CNN. British Prime Minister Liz Truss meets with U.S. President Joe Biden during a bilateral meeting at the United Nations General Assembly Hall on September 21, in New York City. Toby Melville/Getty Images US President Joe Biden thanked British Prime Minister Liz Truss “for her partnership on a range of issues” in a statement Thursday following her resignation, and he pledged that the close relationship between the US and UK “will never change.”  “The United States and the United Kingdom are strong Allies and enduring friends — and that fact will never change,” Biden said in a statement Thursday. “I thank Prime Minister Liz Truss for her partnership on a range of issues including holding Russia accountable for its war against Ukraine.”  Biden said the US would continue its “close cooperation with the U.K. government as we work together to meet the global challenges our nations face.” He was later asked whether her resignation was the right move. “That’s for her to decide, but look she was a good partner on Russia and Ukraine. And the British are going to solve their problem. But she was a good partner,” he told reporters.  He dismissed that there could be potential spillover effects from the UK’s economic and political turmoil on the US economy. “No, I don’t think they’re that consequential.” Boris Johnson leaves 10 Downing Street, in London, on March 2. Tolga Akmen/AFP/Getty Images Members of Parliament who supported and in some cases worked on Boris Johnson’s first candidacy in 2019 think that the former prime minister will stand in the leadership contest that will follow Liz Truss’ resignation, according to two sources who worked on the 2019 campaign. Multiple allies have made the case that Johnson could be unity candidate who could bring stability to the country, despite the fact he resigned in disgrace only a few months ago after a series of scandals came together, making his position untenable. One MP who campaigned for Johnson in the 2019 leadership campaign, when asked how they could justify Johnson standing to be PM again, told CNN: “Socialists will destroy our economy and if you don’t understand that then I genuinely fear for our future.” Another MP who supported Johnson in 2019 said he was the only candidate who could comfortably win over both Conservative MPs and members of the Conservative party. Johnson’s closest allies said they were aware he was being actively lobbied in the hours after Truss’ resignation speech, making the case to him that he represented the party’s best shot at stability in the medium term. A morning commuter passes the Bank of England in the City of London, UK, on October 17. Jason Alden/Bloomberg/Getty Images A revolt among members of Liz Truss’ Conservative Party sealed her fate as the shortest-serving prime minister in Britain’s history. But the failure of her fleeting leadership was really written by financial markets. Investors immediately protested her disastrous “growth plan” when it was revealed in September. UK government bond yields rose at their fastest rate on record, sending borrowing costs surging, upending the country’s mortgage market and forcing the Bank of England to make three successive interventions to rescue overstretched pension funds. The pound at one point hit an all-time low against the US dollar, falling to almost $1.03. At a time when traders were already feeling anxious about the potential for a global recession, plans to dramatically slash taxes while ramping up borrowing fed concerns about the sustainability of the United Kingdom’s finances. At one point, UK medium-term borrowing costs leaped above those of Greece and Italy, two countries that are notoriously seen as riskier bets for investors because of their high levels of debt. Jeremy Hunt, who replaced Kwasi Kwarteng as the country’s finance minister last Friday, soothed markets when he announced Monday that he would reverse al...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Liz Truss Resigns As UK Prime Minister | CNN
Ahead Of The Midterms Energy Lobbyists Plan For A Republican House
Ahead Of The Midterms Energy Lobbyists Plan For A Republican House
Ahead Of The Midterms, Energy Lobbyists Plan For A Republican House https://digitalarkansasnews.com/ahead-of-the-midterms-energy-lobbyists-plan-for-a-republican-house/ The oil and gas industry is already setting priorities for at least partial G.O.P. control in Congress, with a particular focus on undercutting a Biden administration program to shift away from gas for home heating. Send any friend a story As a subscriber, you have 10 gift articles to give each month. Anyone can read what you share. The Capitol Power Plant in Washington, D.C. Energy lobbyists are preparing for the possibility of Republicans taking control of the House, and are taking aim in particular at a Biden administration program encouraging a shift from natural gas to electricity for home heating.Credit…T.J. Kirkpatrick for The New York Times Oct. 20, 2022Updated 12:18 p.m. ET WASHINGTON — Oil and gas industry lobbyists, anticipating that Republicans could take control of the House in the midterm elections, are already working behind the scenes on Capitol Hill to push back against what they consider the Biden administration’s anti-fossil-fuel agenda. The American Gas Association is helping to lead the charge, taking aim in particular at a program that encourages homeowners to replace furnaces and stoves that use natural gas with electric-powered devices in the name of fighting climate change. A top lobbyist at the powerful trade association told other gas industry executives at a conference late last month that the organization was preparing to team up with House Republicans to intensify oversight of the Energy Department, recalling Obama-era investigations by Republicans in Congress into a solar panel company named Solyndra that went bankrupt after receiving a federal loan guarantee. Their hope is to undercut a $4.5 billion program that will give rebates worth as much as $14,000 per household to low- and moderate-income families to install electric-powered heat pumps, water heaters, induction stoves and other devices that would in many cases replace appliances that use natural gas. The program is intended to improve air quality and reduce carbon emissions from burning natural gas. But the gas industry considers it a major threat that could lead to millions of families dropping natural gas as a home-heating source. The maneuvering by the lobbyists is an early example of how the influence industry is beginning to develop new strategies for the possibility that one or both chambers in Congress could come under Republican control after the midterms. With polling suggesting that Republicans have an especially good chance of capturing the House, trade associations, lobbyists and other special interests are honing plans to shape legislation and oversight to their advantage. “Republicans are expected to retake the House of Representatives, and they are champing at the bit to do some oversight to try to change the law where they can,” Allison Cunningham, the gas association’s top lobbyist, said at a conference in Minneapolis with other gas industry executives last month, according to a recording of the event. Representative Bill Johnson, Republican of Ohio and a member of the Energy and Commerce Committee, said in an interview that he had been discussing the issues with the gas industry. He said he was eager to try to elevate them in the new Congress starting in January. “We are supposed to be looking at energy efficiency, not social re-engineering,” said Mr. Johnson, who represents a part of rural southeastern Ohio that is a major source of natural gas. “This is an attempt by the department to pursue a rush to green agenda under the guise of efficiency standards.” Nationally, environmentalists and the gas industry are already engaged in an intense confrontation over whether cities and states should take steps to push homeowners to move away from natural gas. The shift is already underway: Natural gas was a primary source of heating in 46 percent of the nation’s households in the most recent Energy Department survey in 2020, down from 49 percent in 2015. The natural gas industry has been aggressively fighting back, lobbying in support of legislation passed in at least 21 states that limits local governments from imposing bans on the installation of gas-fueled appliances in new homes, a development taking place in New York City and dozens of communities in California. Lauren Urbanek, a deputy director at the Natural Resources Defense Council, which has pushed the shift away from natural gas, said she is not surprised the fossil fuel industry is preparing to team up with Republicans in Congress to push back. How Times reporters cover politics. We rely on our journalists to be independent observers. So while Times staff members may vote, they are not allowed to endorse or campaign for candidates or political causes. This includes participating in marches or rallies in support of a movement or giving money to, or raising money for, any political candidate or election cause. “They are definitely not looking out for American consumers,” she said. “This is really about making sure they continue to exist as an industry.” Image A Biden administration program would give rebates to low- and moderate-income families to install electric-powered heat pumps, water heaters, induction stoves and other devicesCredit…Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images Richard Meyer, a vice president at the American Gas Association, disputed the criticism, saying that the rebate program is flawed because households can get money simply by buying electric appliances, even if they do not improve energy efficiency in their homes. The industry also argues that gas heat, particularly in very cold regions, can be less expensive on a monthly basis, an assertion that renewable-power advocates dispute. In addition to the rebate program — which is intended to encourage switching to electric appliances by offering consumers an incentive — the gas industry is challenging a separate Biden administration proposal that would mandate much tougher energy efficiency standards in natural-gas-fueled furnaces. The proposal, called the Energy Conservation Standards for Consumer Furnaces, will effectively ban new installations of traditional furnaces that waste a sizable amount of the natural gas they burn when making heat. Instead, property owners will be required to buy more expensive 95 percent efficient gas-fueled units or switch away from gas entirely by buying an electric-powered heat pump or other electric-powered furnace. The Energy Department argues that this furnace efficiency rule alone will save consumers $30 billion over three decades and eliminate more than 363 million tons of carbon emissions, which cause climate change, estimates that gas association says are flawed because of “significant methodological and data flaws.” The American Gas Association also argues that certain older homes, especially in lower-income neighborhoods, will not be able to accommodate the new vents these high-efficiency gas furnaces require. “The department is unlawfully promoting fuel switching,” the trade association argued in a comment letter sent to Energy Department this month. The gas association has teamed up with the United States Chamber of Commerce, other gas utilities, landlord groups and even a national barbecue association to try to block the new furnace standards jointly, and it also may challenge them in federal court. Passing legislation in the new Congress to block either the rebates or the furnace efficiency mandate is unlikely, Ms. Cunningham and Mr. Johnson said. What is all but guaranteed if House Republicans take a majority, however, is an increase in demands from committees for documents and testimony from Energy Department officials detailing their energy efficiency efforts, including the drive to reduce the reliance on natural gas as a home-heating source, Republican lawmakers said in interviews. Oil industry advocates are preparing to turn to House Republicans as well to pressure the Interior Department to open up more federal lands in the West for oil and gas drilling, after a major slowdown in leasing in the first nearly two years of the Biden administration. There is almost glee in their voices when they discuss the possibility of helping draft questions for Biden administration officials, like Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, who if Republicans take control will be called to testify more frequently, and aggressively, in oversight hearings. “She has managed to dodge questions when she’s been before a Democrat committee chair,” said Kathleen Sgamma, president of the Western Energy Alliance, an oil industry group. “I don’t think she’ll get that same treatment when the Republicans are in charge. She hasn’t really had her feet held to the fire.” House Republicans on the Energy and Commerce Committee, which oversees the Energy Department, have already kicked off this effort by sending two letters this month to Energy Secretary Jennifer M. Granholm asking for information on the agency’s loan programs and other federal funding efforts, which the Republicans again called part of a “rush to green agenda.” These loans generally focus on much larger renewable-energy efforts, such as new battery factories planned by automakers, not on rebates to consumers converting appliances in their homes. But the Republicans are starting with these bigger-ticket programs first. “The Republican members of the committee intend to conduct robust oversight,” Representative Frank D. Lucas, Republican of Oklahoma, wrote in a letter to Ms. Granholm this month, with eight requests for information from the Energy Department for details related to the agency’s loan program. Raising questions about these larger-ticket loan programs is a way to put the Biden administration on the defensive, industry lobbyists said. “They are going to be looking for the next Solyndra,” Ms. Cunningham told ...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Ahead Of The Midterms Energy Lobbyists Plan For A Republican House
Fed's Harker Sees 'lack Of Progress' On Inflation Expects Aggressive Rate Hikes Ahead
Fed's Harker Sees 'lack Of Progress' On Inflation Expects Aggressive Rate Hikes Ahead
Fed's Harker Sees 'lack Of Progress' On Inflation, Expects Aggressive Rate Hikes Ahead https://digitalarkansasnews.com/feds-harker-sees-lack-of-progress-on-inflation-expects-aggressive-rate-hikes-ahead/ Philadelphia Federal Reserve President Patrick Harker on Thursday said higher interest rates have done little to keep inflation in check, so more increases will be needed. “We are going to keep raising rates for a while,” the central bank official said in remarks for a speech in New Jersey. “Given our frankly disappointing lack of progress on curtailing inflation, I expect we will be well above 4% by the end of the year.” The latter comment was in reference to the fed funds rate, which currently is targeted in a range between 3%-3.75%. Markets widely expect the Fed to approve a fourth consecutive 0.75 percentage point interest rate hike in early November, followed by another in December. The expectation is that the Federal Open Market Committee, of which Harker is a nonvoting member this year, will then take rates a bit higher in 2023 before settling in a range around 4.5%-4.75%. Harker indicated that those higher rates are likely to stay in place for an extended period. “Sometime next year, we are going to stop hiking rates. At that point, I think we should hold at a restrictive rate for a while to let monetary policy do its work,” he said. “It will take a while for the higher cost of capital to work its way through the economy. After that, if we have to, we can tighten further, based on the data.” Inflation is currently running around its highest level in more than 40 years. According to the Fed’s preferred gauge, headline personal consumption expenditures inflation is running at a 6.2% annual rate, while the core, excluding food and energy prices, is at 4.9%, both well above the central bank’s 2% target. “Inflation will come down, but it will take some time to get to our target,” Harker said. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Fed's Harker Sees 'lack Of Progress' On Inflation Expects Aggressive Rate Hikes Ahead
PROCEEDINGS FOR THE BOARD OF CHAFFEE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS RELATIVE TO THE ALLOWING OF BILLS FOR AUGUST 2022
PROCEEDINGS FOR THE BOARD OF CHAFFEE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS RELATIVE TO THE ALLOWING OF BILLS FOR AUGUST 2022
PROCEEDINGS FOR THE BOARD OF CHAFFEE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS RELATIVE TO THE ALLOWING OF BILLS FOR AUGUST 2022 https://digitalarkansasnews.com/proceedings-for-the-board-of-chaffee-county-commissioners-relative-to-the-allowing-of-bills-for-august-2022/ PUBLIC NOTICE PROCEEDINGS FOR THE BOARD OF CHAFFEE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS RELATIVE TO THE ALLOWING OF BILLS FOR AUGUST 2022 Vendor, Amount; 4 RIVERS EQUIPMENT, LLC, $9,903.31; A Church, $100.00; A+ GLASS LLC, $445.00; A-1 AUTO SERVICE, $2,015.97; ABS NATIONAL AUTO SERVICE, INC., $89.78; ACA PRODUCTS, $10,034.62; ACE EQUIPMENT & SUPPLY CO, $1,178.10; ACTION LOCK SERVICE, $281.00; AED AUTHORITY, $14,700.00; AFLAC, $1,160.99; AFLAC-GROUP, $1,834.64; ALDERTON, BILL, $195.00; ALLEN, JOANNE J., $150.00; ALLIMAN, CHARLES, $2,000.00; ALLISON, SHAWN, $100.00; ALTAMONT LANDSCAPES, INC., $227.97; AMERICAN ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTING, LLC, $10,196.40; ANDERSON, EMILY, $216.43; ANDERSON, JASON, $450.00; ANDERSON, SARA, $200.00; ANEW SEPTIC, $406.25; ANGELS WHEELS TRANSPORTATION LLC, $1,080.00; ANTERO AUTOMOTIVE & ALIGNMENT, $483.88; ANTERO HOMEOWNERS OWNERS ASSOC., $165.00; ANTERO SEPTIC INC., $80.00; ARGYS PLUMBING, INC., $544.21; ARK VALLEY HUMANE SOCIETY, $9,635.42; ASPEN LEAF PRINT & COPY LLC, $934.50; ATMOS ENERGY, $2,043.26; AUTO ZONE INC., $19.99; BAKER, DYLAN J., $423.00; BAKER, KEITH, $55.00; BAKER, WILLIAM B., $200.00; BALDRIGE, WILLIAM, $405.00; BARTON DESIGN INC., $1,124.00; BIG O TIRES #6162, $65.00; Bischoff Molly, $50.00; BISCHOFF, MICHAEL, $46.49; BOBCAT OF THE ROCKIES, $379.57; BOWN, GEOFF, $125.00; BRACKMANN, CAROLINE, $125.00; Buena Vista Ace Hardware, $528.00; BUENA VISTA ROASTERY, $129.50; BUENA VISTA SPORTSMAN’S CLUB, $500.00; BUSINESS OPTIONS MEDICAL BILLING LLC, $7,073.77; BUSINESS SOLUTIONS LEASING, $3,334.08; C.C. TREASURER & PUBLIC TRUSTEE, $125.35; Campbell, Katie, $40.00; CAPITAL ONE, $810.21; CATES, ZACH DBA YETI HOMES, $200.00; CDPHE                  (ASD-AR-B1), $596.00; CEBT, $257,595.62; CENTRAL COLORADO KITCHENS, $529.00; CENTRAL COLORADO TITLE & ESCROW, $428.00; CENTRAL RESTAURANT PRODUCTS, LLC, $529.00; CenturyLink, $2,473.73; CENTURYLINK QCC, $3,683.70; CHAFFEE COUNTY COMMUNITY FOUNDATION, $10,385.17; CHAFFEE COUNTY TREASURER, $542,771.16; CHAFFEE HOUSING AUTHORITY, $18,199.89; CHAFFEE PRINTING CENTER, $1,797.92; CHAFFEE TIRE & WHEEL, $589.90; CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS, $347.75; CHRISTOPHERSEN, DANI, $50.00; CITY SERVICE VALCON, $62,946.44; CMI, INC., $131.30; COCHRAN, KAREN, $125.00; COLLEGIATE PEAKS BANK, $553.36; COLO. DEPT OF HUMAN SERVICE, $3,750.00; COLO. DEPT OF REVENUE, $3,224.15; COLONIAL LIFE & ACCIDENT, $997.67; COLORADO CENTRAL TELECOM, $199.94; COLORADO COMPRESSED GASES, $562.00; COLORADO COUNTY CLERKS ASSOCIATION, $215.00; COLORADO ENERGY SYSTEMS, $1,248.56; COLORADO PAINT COMPANY II, LLC, $6,414.20; Congregational United Church, $225.00; CONSTRUCTION SOLUTIONS, LIMITED, $13,088.00; CONTRERAS, MARCIE, $45.00; COPPER, DEE DEE, $40.00; COSCARELLA, BRANDY, $175.00; CRAWFORD AUTO PARTS, $84.58; CURGUS, MARJO, $200.00; DAGNER SCHLUTER MITZNER WERBER, LLC, $3,214.50; DE VOY, DANE, $50.00; DENVER MANAGER OF FINANCE, $27,000.00; DFA DAIRY BRANDS, LLC, $853.24; DIESSLIN STRUCTURES, INC., $33,719.24; DISTRICT ATTORNEY OFFICE, $43,232.27; DIVISION OF OIL & PUBLIC SAFETY, $90.00; DOUMAS, THOMAS, $200.00; DUNN, SUSAN H., $43.75; DYNAMIC PROGRAM MANAGEMENT, LLC, $1,947.00; E-470 EXPRESS TOLL, $9.60; EATON, MARC, $300.00; ESO SOLUTIONS, INC., $111.00; EVIDENT, INC., $1,543.06; Evolution Edges, $6,369.48; FAMILY FRIENDLY COURT, $262.00; FAMILY SUPPORT REGISTRY, $300.00; FELT, GREG, $117.64; FESENMEYER, JERRY A., $3,600.00; FIDELITY, $241.67; FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, $50.00; FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH OF SALIDA, $225.00; FLANAGAN, CINDY, $144.00; FOX, THOMAS W., $487.50; FRANCO, CASSONDRA, $940.75; FRANKLIN, APRIL, $100.00; FREMONT HOME CARE, $720.00; FRONTIER MORTUARY SUPPLY, LLC, $398.52; FULL SPECTRUM PAINTING, $450.00; GALLEGOS, ETHAN dba EnB JANITORIAL,LLC, $7,175.00; GCR TIRES & SERVICE, $8,563.24; GEERE, JARED, $405.00; GEN-TECH OF COLORADO,LLC, $1,676.50; GEORGIA GRACE EDWARDS, $500.00; GLOVAN, BRIAN, $21.58; GOBINS INC, $2,788.36; GOOGLE LLC, $456.54; GOVCONNECTION, INC., $83.95; GOVOS, INC, $1,250.00; GRAFIX SHOPPE, $307.90; GRANZELLA, RUSSELL, $204.06; GRAUER, KELLI, $50.00; GRAY, BECKY, $34.80; GUNDERMAN AUTO BODY, $7,806.00; GUNSMOKE CAR WASH, INC., $384.50; HADLEY TAYLOR, $900.00; HARFORD, PAUL, $127.91; HARRIS, DAMON L., $615.61; HAYES, SEAN, $125.00; HEART OF THE ROCKIES HOSPICE, $247.34; HEART OF THE ROCKIES RADIOLOGY, $49.00; HELD, HANK, $150.00; HELMKE, BETH, $55.00; HENRY SCHEIN INC., $7,811.17; Hiller, Nicole, $60.00; HMC NETWORKS, INC., $500.00; HOFFMANN, PARKER, WILSON & CARBERRY, PC, $1,139.50; HOME DEPOT PRO, $1,920.72; HRRMC, $3,730.00; HYLTON LUMBER CO., $78.24; IDENTIFIX, $1,428.00; IMPRESCO LLC, $1,828.97; Ingram, Rhonda, $69.67; JOHN DEERE FINANCIAL, $1,500.50; Jones, Kaitlyn, $95.00; JONES, KURT M., $475.98; JUBA, MEGAN, $1,198.75; KACHADOURIAN, TRACY, $50.00; KARIS COUNSELING, INC, $405.00; KIMBALL MIDWEST, $75.50; KNIGHT SECURITY SERVICES, $311.94; KOMARNSKY, ANTHONY W., $475.00; KONE PASADENA, $1,150.00; LADY, KATIE, $325.00; LAWSON PRODUCTS, INC., $537.51; LEGALSHIELD, $200.30; LIGHTHOUSE, $700.00; LIONSHEAD VENTURES, $1,200.00; LM KERSTING CONSTRUCTION, $7,295.29; LONGBERG, BECKY, $88.53; LORE, WILLIAM J., $130.46; LOWRY CONTRACTING, INC., $6,992.00; MAEZ, TYREL, $67.50; Manshiem, John W, $100.00; MARQUIS, KIM, $1,848.00; MARTIN, LISA, $205.68; MARTIN-RAY LAUNDRY SYSTEM, $1,015.58; MCCANDLESS TRUCK CENTER, $189.54; MCFARLAND OIL CO., INC., $27,751.42; McNeill, Kinnie, $655.00; MHC KENWORTH-COLO. SPGS., $4,271.85; MILES, STEVEN E, $2,217.90; MISHMASH ELECTRIC, INC., $125.00; MOBILE RECORD SHREDDERS, $180.00; Momar, INC, $201.04; MONTROSE WATER FACTORY, $524.50; MOONSTONE VENTURES, LLC, $1,625.00; MORTIMER, CHARLES, $200.00; MOUNTAIN BEVERAGE COMPANY, $409.15; MOUNTAIN MAIL, $2,592.85; NAY, MICHELLE, $258.37; NELSON, STEPHANIE, $390.48; NICOLETTI-FLATER ASSO., $550.00; NYBERG, NORMAN C., $1,050.00; OLSON, ELIZABETH, $125.00; O’REILLY AUTOMOTIVE, INC., $44.18; ORRILL, BEVERLY, $497.20; ORRILL, MIKE, $149.80; Osness, Reagan, $175.00; OTAK, $146.94; PALZKILL, CLAUDIA C, $360.00; Paschall, Nora, $37.50; Patagonia Health, Inc, $6,400.00; PEAK, JESS, $270.00; PELINO, INC., $4,430.56; PEOPLE SPEAK, LLC, $200.00; PERRIN, CASSANDRA, $43.00; PONCHA LUMBER, $354.13; POST, MARCELLA, $125.00; POWER EQUIPMENT COMPANY, $1,262.80; POWERS, $16,072.00; PRESSLY, LEANNE, $78.75; PRO V EXPRESS, $72.20; PROGRESSIVE ALARMS, $3,350.00; PSYCHOLOGICAL DIMENSIONS, $375.00; PUEBLO BANK & TRUST, $415.01; QUILL CORPORATION, $257.66; REDWOOD TOXICOLOGY LAB, INC., $75.00; REED, TARA, $1,237.50; REFRIGERANTS INC, $3,050.00; RICE, REBECCA, $50.00; ROBERTS, RICK, $50.00; ROEPKE, NEIL, $482.08; ROGERS, EILEEN, $93.32; ROSHAMBO, LLC, $450.00; RUGGED DEPOT, $19,832.00; RUNBECK ELECTION SERVICES, INC., $22,165.50; SAFEWAY / ALBERTSONS COMPANIES, LLC, $55.83; SALIDA ACE HARDWARE, $2,185.08; SALIDA AUTO PARTS, $2,149.76; SALIDA FIRE EXTINGUISHER, LLC, $446.00; SALIDA HOSPITAL DISTRICT, $4,520.17; SALIDA TECH, INC., $11,215.00; SANDERS, THOMAS, $125.00; SANGRE DE CRISTO ELECT., $1,304.40; SANOFI PASTEUR, INC, $1,658.79; SCANGA MEAT CO., $737.17; SCHLEICHER, KAYLA, $225.00; SCHMIDT, JANICE H., $125.00; SCHOLL, ALDEN, $225.00; SEAN’S LAWN CARE, $1,600.00; SELLARS PROJECT SPACE, $93,636.00; SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CO., $575.96; SHIP N THINGS, $61.98; SISNEROS, KATHERINE, $100.00; SKYLINE STEEL, $5,752.35; Smart Sense by Digi, $938.35; SNAP-ON TOOLS, $122.00; SOLOMON, LINDA, $40.00; SORUM TRACTOR COMPANY, $56.31; SOUTHERN COLORADO MORTUARY TRANSPORT LLC, $3,450.00; STAMM, MERIELLE, $1,566.57; STANDARD INSURANCE COMPANY, $3,708.61; STERICYCLE, INC., $175.66; SUNBELT RENTALS, INC., $2,106.09; THE FARICY BOYS, $113,228.88; THE WRIGHT, $1,000.00; TIMBERLINE MOTORSPORTS, $50.00; TN BAR CATTLE COMPANY, $57,350.00; TOLIN MECHANICAL SYSTEMS, $1,696.00; TOM, DANIEL, $50.00; TOTAL OFFICE SOLUTIONS, $135.69; TOWN OF BUENA VISTA, $128.61; TOWN OF PONCHA SPRINGS, $239.27; TRAVNICEK, PATRICIA, $125.00; TRILLIUM HOLDCO, LLC, $4,841.83; TRYG GROUP, LLC, $740.10; TURN KEY HEALTH CLINICS, LLC, $37,192.59; TWS AVIATION FUEL SYSTEMS, $1,454.37; U.S. BANK, $16,571.78; ULINE, $360.40; UMB CARD SERVICES, $79,928.46; UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY, $7,000.00; UNITED TRUCK & EQUIPMENT, $216.00; UPPER ARK VALLEY FOP #43, $1,630.00; URBONAS, WAYNE, $125.00; VALLEVONA, ROBERT A., $357.50; VENES, REBECCA, $45.34; VERIZON WIRELESS, $7,185.95; VISTA PROJECTS LLC, $1,360.00; WAGNER EQUIPMENT CO, $21,454.23; WEIDMANN, MARA, $225.00; WELLNESS SCREENING LLC, $313.02; WELSH, ANGIE, $60.00; WEST CENTRAL MEN. HEALTH, $222.75; WESTERN STATES FIRE PROTECTION CO., $1,282.50; WHITEHALL’S ALPINE BG, $606.64; WINSUPPLY OF SALIDA, INC., $472.94; WOLD, $23,575.76; WORLD FUEL SERVICES INC., $14,127.85; XCEL ENERGY, $10,469.65; $1,897,124.45 GREGORY W. FELT, CHAIRMAN Published in The Chaffee County Times October 20, 2022 Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
PROCEEDINGS FOR THE BOARD OF CHAFFEE COUNTY COMMISSIONERS RELATIVE TO THE ALLOWING OF BILLS FOR AUGUST 2022
Analysis | The Clearest Sign Yet Trump Doesnt Care That His Fraud Claims Are False
Analysis | The Clearest Sign Yet Trump Doesnt Care That His Fraud Claims Are False
Analysis | The Clearest Sign Yet Trump Doesn’t Care That His Fraud Claims Are False https://digitalarkansasnews.com/analysis-the-clearest-sign-yet-trump-doesnt-care-that-his-fraud-claims-are-false/ Donald Trump lost the presidential election in Georgia on Nov. 3, 2020 — but barely. The margin of his loss was narrower than any state except Arizona. The Associated Press didn’t call the state until more than a week later, after Joe Biden had already been identified as president-elect. Trump, however, has never recognized his defeat. Instead, he has consistently pushed back against that reality, including — a federal judge made clear this week — embracing claims about illegal voting that he knew to be false. Because for Trump, the issue was never whether the election was stolen, it was whether he could convince people it might have been. U.S. District Court Judge David O. Carter was tasked with evaluating a legal fight between Trump’s former attorney (and election-result-denying co-conspirator) John Eastman and the chair of the House select committee investigating the Capitol riot. Eastman sought to prevent certain emails from being turned over to the committee by claiming they were protected by attorney-client privilege. But communication related to the commission of a crime is not privileged, and Carter determined that there was evidence that several of the emails at issue were “sufficiently related to and in furtherance of a conspiracy to defraud the United States” — namely, to make knowingly false claims about fraud to get a federal court to block the Georgia results. In the days after the election, Trump filed a state lawsuit against Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger in Georgia’s Fulton County. In that complaint, Trump (through his attorneys) makes specific allegations of fraud, including that the state: “allowed as many as 2,560 felons with an uncompleted sentence to register to vote and to cast their vote” “allowed at least 2,423 individuals to vote who were not listed in the State’s records as having been registered to vote,” and “allowed as many as 10,315 or more individuals to vote who were deceased by the time of Election Day” Note that, even if true, none of this proves that Trump won. He lost Georgia by 11,779 votes, so Biden would have needed to won 88 percent of those votes for Trump to eke out a victory. Note, also, that the claims depend on assertions that come from a certified public accountant’s “statistical analysis” of the state vote, not actual evidence. It depended, for example, on matching first and last names and birth years of voters and felons — meaning that if there was both a John Smith born in 1970 who was a voter and a John Smith born the same year who is a felon who didn’t vote, the first John Smith is one of those 2,560 suspicious voters. Trump’s legal team eventually decided to withdraw the suit against Raffensperger. Instead, they planned to file a federal lawsuit against him and Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R). As that suit was being prepared, the emails reviewed by Carter reveal, there was a debate over whether to include the figures above. Eastman thought they shouldn’t. In one email, cited by Carter, he raised concerns about the “specific numbers in the paragraph dealing with felons, deceased, moved, etc.” In another, he was explicit about his concerns. “Although the President signed a verification for [the original complaint] back on Dec. 1, he has since been made aware that some of the allegations (and evidence proffered by the experts) has been inaccurate,” Eastman wrote. “For him to sign a new verification with that knowledge (and incorporation by reference) would not be accurate.” “Incorporation by reference” means that the federal filing (unlike the state one) wouldn’t explicitly cite the figures but, instead, cite them. Which is what ended up happening. The suit filed Dec. 31, 2020 — the day the above email was sent — makes similar claims about felons and dead people voting, including the original state complaint as evidence to that end. “Georgia election officials allowed unqualified individuals to register and vote in violation of O.C.G.A. $ 21-2-216;” — a section of Georgia legal code — “allowed convicted felons still serving their sentence to vote in violation of O.C.G.A. $ 21-2-216(b); … and accepted votes cast by deceased individuals, in violation of O.C.G.A. $ 21-2-23 l(a)-(b) and (d).” The evidence for those claims was the attached “copy of Verified Petition and exhibits collectively attached,” including the analysis from the accountant. But there was an important footnote; an effort, it seems, to accommodate Eastman’s concerns. “The facts and figures set forth in the state court action’s Verified Petition was presented to Plaintiff through the affidavits and expert opinions/reports attached to the Verified Petition” without access to state election files, it notes. So “the facts and figures submitted by affidavits and experts reports/opinions in the lower court and incorporated herein by reference, have been relied upon by Plaintiff only to the extent that such information has been provided to Plaintiff … Plaintiff has not sworn to any facts under oath for which he does not have personal knowledge or belief.” This is the crux of Carter’s point: in that email from Eastman, it’s made clear that the legal team knew the figures weren’t defensible and, more importantly, that the plaintiff — Trump — knew they weren’t. The footnote tries to get around this by claiming that if the information is incorrect, it was incorrect without Trump’s knowledge. But that’s not what Eastman said. Hence: a potential effort in Carter’s eyes to defraud the courts. Remember that this wasn’t occurring in a vacuum. It’s not as though Trump’s team was working behind the scenes and discovered that the CPA was wrong. The state — in the person of Ryan Germany, counsel to Raffensperger’s office — had already publicly debunked the claims made in the initial lawsuit, including at a hearing shortly before Christmas. So it’s not the case that Trump’s legal team was withholding their own discoveries. It’s that they were pretending that Trump was not aware of the public repudiation of his claims. And that’s just the legal dishonesty. A few days after the lawsuit was filed, Trump called Raffensperger in an attempt to get him to reverse the already-certified results in the state. In that call, he rehashed the same claims about dead voters and unregistered voters casting ballots — with Germany on the line. In other words, Trump tried to convince Germany that his campaign’s numbers were right and the actual state numbers wrong. Though, as Eastman revealed privately, he’d been informed that the data was wrong. There were, predictably, tweets aimed at putting pressure on Georgia officials from the outside. “Why haven’t they deducted all of the dead people who ‘voted’, illegals who voted, non Georgia residents who voted, and tens of thousands of others who voted illegally, from the final vote tally?” Trump wrote on Jan. 2. “Just a small portion of these votes give US a big and conclusive win in Georgia.” Gabe Sterling, the official in charge of elections, was visibly exasperated on the day after the call as he held a news conference again rebutting Trump’s false claims. In an effort to reinforce the validity of the election results in the state, Sterling presented a point-by-point rebuttal of what Trump was asserting — and which we now know he knew wasn’t true. After all, Trump’s false claims about fraud were legally shaky but rhetorically useful. Sterling had previously held a news conference noting that false claims of fraud in the state were spurring increasing threats against him, his staff and other officials. Trump, indifferent, pressed forward anyway. Three days later, he gave a speech in which he again cited the false numbers about fraud, the ones that had been debunked by the state more than once and which his own attorney appears to have privately revealed he knew to be false. “Over 10,300 ballots in Georgia were cast by individuals whose names and dates of birth match Georgia residents who died in 2020 and prior to the election,” Trump said to the crowd. “More than 2,500 ballots were cast by individuals whose names and dates of birth match incarcerated felons in Georgia prison. People who are not allowed to vote. More than 4,500 illegal ballots were cast by individuals who do not appear on the state’s own voter rolls.” All debunked. Trump didn’t care. “They defrauded us out of a win in Georgia, and we’re not going to forget it,” Trump said at another point. This was his speech at the Ellipse on Jan. 6, 2021. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Analysis | The Clearest Sign Yet Trump Doesnt Care That His Fraud Claims Are False
Pence On Whether He'd Vote For Trump In 2024: 'There Might Be Somebody Else I'd Prefer More' KION546
Pence On Whether He'd Vote For Trump In 2024: 'There Might Be Somebody Else I'd Prefer More' KION546
Pence On Whether He'd Vote For Trump In 2024: 'There Might Be Somebody Else I'd Prefer More' – KION546 https://digitalarkansasnews.com/pence-on-whether-hed-vote-for-trump-in-2024-there-might-be-somebody-else-id-prefer-more-kion546/ By Shawna Mizelle, CNN Former Vice President Mike Pence on Wednesday declined to say whether he would vote for former President Donald Trump if he secured the 2024 GOP presidential nomination. “Mr. Pence, if Donald Trump is the Republican nominee for president in 2024, will you vote for him?” Pence was asked while taking questions from students at Georgetown University. The former vice president paused and smiled slightly. “Well, there might be somebody else I’d prefer more,” he said, drawing laughter and applause from the audience. Pence has been coy about his plans for 2024. He has long been viewed as a potential aspirant for the Republican nomination, but has not formally declared a bid and would almost certainly face strong opposition from Trump, whose supporters he would need in a primary fight. In the Trump White House, Pence was fiercely loyal in public through the constant controversies that defined the administration, but in the wake of the January 6 riot at the US Capitol — in which Trump supporters chanted to hang the then-vice president — he has occasionally criticized his former boss, most notably in February, when he publicly denounced Trump’s election lies. “President Trump is wrong,” Pence said at the time, referring to the false claim that Pence, in his capacity as vice president, had the authority to unilaterally reject Electoral College votes. “I had no right to overturn the election.” Trump, for his part, has said Pence “very greatly disappointed me” on the day the electoral votes were certified. In the midterm season, Trump and Pence have occasionally found themselves in a proxy fight, supporting opposing candidates in Arizona, Georgia and Wisconsin. Trump campaigned with a slate of candidates who have parroted his lies about widespread fraud in the 2020 election as Pence attempted to steer the GOP’s focus away from relitigating 2020 and toward traditional conservative policies. Still, Pence has been careful not to completely tear himself away from Trump, who has strongly indicated that he intends to run a third presidential campaign. “You know, what I can tell you is I have every confidence that the Republican Party is going to sort out leadership,” Pence said on Wednesday, adding that his focus has been on the upcoming midterm elections in November. “But after that, we’ll be thinking about the future, ours and the nation’s.” Concluding his answer on who he would support for 2024, Pence said, “I’ll keep you posted, OK?” The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Pence On Whether He'd Vote For Trump In 2024: 'There Might Be Somebody Else I'd Prefer More' KION546
Kentucky Governor Candidate Charged After Chasing Nephew Who Flipped Him Off
Kentucky Governor Candidate Charged After Chasing Nephew Who Flipped Him Off
Kentucky Governor Candidate Charged After Chasing Nephew Who Flipped Him Off https://digitalarkansasnews.com/kentucky-governor-candidate-charged-after-chasing-nephew-who-flipped-him-off/ Republican candidate for governor Eric Deters has been charged with menacing and harassing communications related to a truck chase after a teenage nephew flipped him off near a family farm in Northern Kentucky. According to the criminal complaint and citation filed in the case, Deters on Oct. 3 allegedly chased the nephew with his truck throughout the Kenton County farm belonging to his brother and then sent harassing voicemails and texts to his sister-in-law. Deters is charged with one count of menacing and two counts of harassing communications, both Class B misdemeanors, along with third-degree criminal trespassing. His arraignment in Kenton District Court is scheduled for Nov. 9. Deters, a suspended attorney, filed to run for governor as a Republican late last year. He regularly posts videos on political topics and criticizes opponents on his “Bulldog Report” YouTube show. He also attended political fundraisers at the Kentucky Derby and former President Donald Trump’s Florida estate in hopes of winning his endorsement. More:Who’s in, who’s a maybe, who’s out: Our way-too-early look at 2023 Kentucky governor candidates Despite those efforts, Trump ultimately endorsed one of Deters’ Republican opponents — Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron. Deters did host a well-attended political rally at his farm this summer featuring speeches from two of Trump’s adult children. According to a police affidavit, Deters chased his nephew’s truck for over a mile through the farm after the juvenile gave him the middle finger. During the chase, his nephew called his father, who then called 911, the affidavit says. Officers spoke with a witness on the property who saw Deters’ pickup following his nephew’s at distances of as little as two feet and observed video showing Deters chasing the truck. The younger Deters, who admitted giving his uncle the bird, said he “purposefully drove past security cameras on the property for his own safety as he was being chased.” The affidavit goes on to say that police later spoke to Deters at his residence, where he “corroborated” his nephew’s version of events. Deters allegedly told officers his nephew was “lucky he didn’t get his — kicked” and used a derogatory term for cowardice to describe family members and used a slur for gay people. Deters told police his intent was to “scare the —- out of” his nephew and that he succeeded, according to the documents. More:Kentucky lawmakers push bill seemingly aimed at suspended ‘bad boy’ lawyer Eric Deters The complaint goes on to describe Deters’ ensuing communications with his brother and sister-in-law, Jeremy and Julie Deters. In a voicemail and texts, Eric Deters repeatedly questioned the sexuality of his brother and nephew and warned that if his nephew flipped him off again he “will kick his —.” Deters’ brother said that he and his father had both told him in April 2020 that he was not allowed to be on the farm property where the chase occurred. In two statements filed by Eric Deters responding to the complaint, he again questions his brother’s sexuality and uses another derogatory term for his sister-in-law, while claiming he was never prohibited from the farm property. Deters also stated that he never rammed or touched his nephew or his truck. The Kenton County officer stated that Deters was not lawfully on the property, his communications served no legitimate purpose other than to “harass, annoy, and alarm” his sister-in-law, while chasing his nephew’s truck at a close distance placed him “in reasonable apprehension of imminent physical injury and his statements indicate he intended to place (him) in such fear.” Asked to respond to the new charges, Deters sent The Courier Journal a video of his Oct. 7 “Bulldog Report” video titled “I Don’t Take Crap From Punks or Anyone!” in which he recounts the incident and repeatedly insults his relatives, though he deleted it shortly after. He then sent a new 20-minute video recounting the incident and his estrangement with his family members, saying “I didn’t do anything wrong.” More news:Republican candidate for the Kentucky House kicked off ballot in Louisville Last year Deters was charged with carrying a concealed deadly weapon when he allegedly had a loaded pistol in his carry-on luggage while going through security at the Cincinnati airport. According to court documents in that case, Deters attempted pretrial diversion but was unsuccessful due to never turning anything in to court officials. A hearing in that case is scheduled for December. Deters is also in litigation against former Trump aide Corey Lewandowski and his attorney Chris Wiest, involving a dispute over a contract to provide campaign consulting. Reach reporter Joe Sonka at jsonka@courierjournal.com and follow him on Twitter at @joesonka.  Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Kentucky Governor Candidate Charged After Chasing Nephew Who Flipped Him Off
Ukraine Will Curb Electricity Under Strain From Russian Attacks
Ukraine Will Curb Electricity Under Strain From Russian Attacks
Ukraine Will Curb Electricity Under Strain From Russian Attacks https://digitalarkansasnews.com/ukraine-will-curb-electricity-under-strain-from-russian-attacks/ Image Residents of Staryi Saltiv, in Ukraine’s eastern Kharkiv region, using a Starlink satellite dish and generator to connect to the internet and charge their phones on Monday.Credit…Ivor Prickett for The New York Times KYIV, Ukraine — Nationwide curbs on electricity usage came into force across Ukraine early Thursday, after more than a week of Russian aerial attacks have pummeled the country’s energy infrastructure and prompted rolling blackouts. Ukraine’s energy system has suffered more attacks over the past 10 days than during the previous eight months of the war, according to Ukrenergo, the country’s electric utility. The difficult belt-tightening comes after President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Russian assaults had knocked out a third of the country’s power stations over the past week, just as the weather is beginning to turn colder, raising fears that the strikes on vital services could set off a humanitarian crisis. The government has ordered Ukrainians to minimize their electricity use from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m., signaling a new phase of the war in which people could lack basic services as winter approaches. Ukrenergo warned in a statement on the Telegram messaging app of rolling outages lasting up to four hours on Thursday and urged Ukrainians to charge their electrical devices. “Please make sure that you have charged phones, power banks, water, flashlights and batteries by 7 a.m. tomorrow,” it said. Most of Kyiv’s electric tram lines were replaced with buses on Thursday in an attempt to help conserve electricity, Vitaly Klitschko, the city’s mayor, said. He appealed to residents to avoid using microwave ovens and electric kettles, according to a post on Telegram. He told shop owners to limit lighting on signs and screens. The city also turned on its heating network on Thursday, Mr. Klitschko said, “taking into account the weather conditions and the need to save electricity (so that residents of Kyiv do not heat their homes with air conditioners and electric heaters).” Last week, Russia launched a large air campaign with missiles and drones, targeting critical infrastructure in Ukraine. On Oct. 10, electricity went out in more than 10 cities from Kyiv to Kharkiv after a flurry of missile strikes that Ukrainian officials said was intended to incapacitate the nation’s energy system. Russia said the shelling was in response to a truck bomb that damaged a critical bridge linking Russia and Crimea. The recent strikes have destroyed 30 percent of Ukraine’s power stations and caused “massive blackouts across the country,” Mr. Zelensky said on Tuesday, and Ukrenergo said the attacks since Oct. 10 had damaged more of the country’s energy system than strikes throughout the previous eight months. A government minister, Oleksii Chernyshov, said on Tuesday that 408 sites in Ukraine had been struck in the recent attacks, including 45 energy facilities. Many of the attacks have also hit thermal energy plants that generate steam for heating homes and businesses. On Wednesday, three additional energy facilities were destroyed. In his nightly address, Mr. Zelensky encouraged Ukrainians to take the new restrictions seriously, reassuring listeners that scheduled blackouts would be shortened if enough energy is conserved. “This requires our joint efforts,” he said. “Tomorrow they are needed even more than before.” Energy in Ukraine is highly centralized, though power stations can operate independently, so the country can be divided into “islands” of energy even when connections between them are damaged, experts on the country’s system have said. But while the system has some resilience, they expect that it will take weeks to fully repair. And new strikes have continued near daily, with several pieces of infrastructure hit on Wednesday and air raid sirens over much of the country on Thursday warning of possible attacks. The World Health Organization has warned of the potential for a spiraling humanitarian crisis, given that a lack of access to fuel or electricity “could become a matter of life or death if people are unable to heat their homes.” Image Protesters gathered outside Iran’s Embassy in Kyiv after Russia used Iranian-supplied explosive drones to attack the city center on Monday.Credit…Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times BRUSSELS — The European Union imposed a fresh round of sanctions aimed at Iran on Thursday, this time over providing drones that Russia has used to strike battlefields and civilian targets in Ukraine. The sanctions will target the company that manufactures Shahed-136 drones, diplomats said, as well as three individuals. The measures were passed by all E.U. member countries through a written procedure, which concluded Thursday. The bloc said it was imposing the measures on Tehran “for undermining or threatening the territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence of Ukraine.” It also signaled that it intends to impose “restrictive measures” against a two more individuals and two other entities on the same grounds. Dmytro Kuleba, Ukraine’s foreign minister, welcomed “the EU’s prompt action following my appeal on Monday to impose sanctions on Iran for helping Russia kill Ukrainians and damage our energy infrastructure.” The United States and United Kingdom have also been mulling the prospect of bringing sanctions against Iran over the drones used by Russia in Ukraine. Britain’s foreign minister, James Cleverly, was expected to make an announcement on the issue later Thursday. The state department said it will “not hesitate” to bring sanctions against Iran over weapons transfers to Russia. Moscow denies it is using Iranian-made drones in Ukraine. Russia’s foreign ministry said Thursday the West was seeking to put “pressure” on Tehran. Iran has denied supplying Russia with drones for use in Ukraine. Josep Borrell Fontelles, the E.U’s top diplomat, said on Monday that the European Union was looking for “concrete evidence” of Iran’s role in the drone strikes in Ukraine. The latest sanctions add to other punitive measures the bloc has imposed on Iran for reasons unrelated to the war in Ukraine. This week, the European Union added two entities and several individuals, including two key figures in Iran’s morality police and the country’s information minister, to its sanctions list over the recent violent crackdown on peaceful antigovernment protesters. On Wednesday, Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm, called Russia’s targeted strikes on Ukraine’s civilians and infrastructure “war crimes.” “The international order is clear. These are war crimes,” Ms. von der Leyen told European lawmakers gathered in the French city of Strasbourg. “Targeted attacks on civilian infrastructure with the clear aim to cut off men, women, children of water, electricity and heating with winter coming — these are acts of pure terror.” Image A destroyed armored vehicle rusted next to a road near the front lines on the Kherson region or Ukraine last month.Credit…Jim Huylebroek for The New York Times Authorities installed by Russia in the occupied southern Ukrainian region of Kherson said on Thursday that they had relocated thousands of civilians from the strategically important regional capital, as Ukraine steadily takes back territory controlled by Moscow. The authorities, whom the Ukrainian government denounces as traitors, said that they are evacuating civilians for humanitarian reasons, but some military analysts said that the operation could be a prelude to a withdrawal of Russia’s military forces from the city of Kherson. Kyiv has described the relocation effort as “a propaganda show” designed to scare civilians with claims that Ukraine would shell the city, which was seized in March, early in Russia’s invasion, when it became the only regional capital to fall to the Russians. Some 5,000 people have already left the city of Kherson, Kirill Stremousov, the proxy deputy governor of the region said on the Telegram messaging app. That number could not be independently verified, but Russian-backed officials have said they intend to move as many as 60,000 civilians to the eastern side of the Dnipro River. Video posted by local authorities on Telegram showed scores of people with suitcases lining up to board a ferry, apparently to cross the Dnipro. City authorities in Aleshki, a district where people are being moved across the river from Kherson, said on Telegram that people should pack identity documents, food for up three days, toiletries and clothes. Ukraine says it has protected civilians during its counteroffensive. President Volodymyr Zelensky said that residents in occupied territory in the south and east of the country should “try to leave.” “The occupiers will try to recruit men into their army,” Mr. Zelensky said in an overnight speech. “Please avoid it as much as you can.” He said that parallel recruitment efforts were taking place in Donetsk and Luhansk, two provinces in the east of the country that Moscow has also annexed. Kherson is a key target of Ukraine’s counteroffensive. The region is one of four Ukrainian provinces that connect Russia by land to the Crimean Peninsula, which Moscow has held since 2014. President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on Wednesday declared martial law in the four provinces, including Kherson, Donetsk and Luhansk, after illegally annexing them this month. The city of Kherson, where Russia has stationed thousands of troops, allows Russian forces to operate on the western side of the Dnipro River, which divides the country into two. Almost all the territory Russia holds in Ukraine is on the eastern side, leaving it vulnerable on the western bank, and Ukrainian forces have repeatedly shelled the bridges close to the city. Many Ukrainians ...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Ukraine Will Curb Electricity Under Strain From Russian Attacks
Thursday Briefing: What Russias Martial Law Declaration Means In Ukraine; Liz Truss Resignation; Adderall Shortage; And More
Thursday Briefing: What Russias Martial Law Declaration Means In Ukraine; Liz Truss Resignation; Adderall Shortage; And More
Thursday Briefing: What Russia’s Martial Law Declaration Means In Ukraine; Liz Truss Resignation; Adderall Shortage; And More https://digitalarkansasnews.com/thursday-briefing-what-russias-martial-law-declaration-means-in-ukraine-liz-truss-resignation-adderall-shortage-and-more/ 1 Russia declared martial law in parts of Ukraine yesterday. Where? Four regions illegally claimed by Russian President Vladimir Putin after staged referendums last month — Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia. What this does: It could create legal cover for abuses by Russia’s military. But Moscow doesn’t entirely control the regions, so it’s not clear if it can fully implement the new rules. 2 Donald Trump knew his voter-fraud claims in Georgia were baseless, a judge said. The details: The former president was aware that numbers he was pushing related to the 2020 election were wrong — but he signed legal documents with them anyway, the judge said. How the judge knows: Emails that Trump’s allies and the House committee investigating the Capitol attack have been fighting over. The judge ruled yesterday that some of the messages must be made public. What else to know: The Jan. 6 committee is expected to ask Trump to testify soon. 3 British Prime Minister Liz Truss resigned this morning. Why? Since she took office six weeks ago, her financial plan tanked the economy, her poll numbers sank to the worst in recorded history and she lost two top cabinet ministers. What happens now? There will be a new prime minister next week following a vote to elect a new Conservative Party leader, Truss said. 4 There’s a nationwide shortage of Adderall. Why? One of the largest producers of the ADHD medication has been experiencing “manufacturing delays,” the FDA said last week. How bad is it? Some pharmacies can’t fill prescriptions. People have been forced to go off the medication or switch treatments — both of which can make managing daily life difficult. 5 The pregnancy drug Makena should be pulled from the market, experts said. What is it? Introduced in 2011, Makena is designed to reduce the risk of preterm birth, a leading cause of infant mortality in the U.S. What’s the problem? It doesn’t work, FDA experts said yesterday. The panel rejected arguments that it should remain available for high-risk groups including some Black women. What’s next? The FDA will decide whether to withdraw the drug in the coming months. 6 Oceans are warming faster than ever. Netflix will crack down on password-sharing early next year. And now … composting is easier than you think — and good for the environment: Here’s how to start. Plus, you should clean your toothbrush holder and 10 other germ hot spots. Want to catch up quickly with “The 7” every morning? Download The Post’s app and turn on alert notifications for The 7 or sign up for the newsletter. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Thursday Briefing: What Russias Martial Law Declaration Means In Ukraine; Liz Truss Resignation; Adderall Shortage; And More
Weather Permitting: Cold Temperatures Give Way To Beautiful Weekend In Fayetteville Area MsnNOW
Weather Permitting: Cold Temperatures Give Way To Beautiful Weekend In Fayetteville Area MsnNOW
Weather Permitting: Cold Temperatures Give Way To Beautiful Weekend In Fayetteville Area – MsnNOW https://digitalarkansasnews.com/weather-permitting-cold-temperatures-give-way-to-beautiful-weekend-in-fayetteville-area-msnnow/ Weather Permitting: Cold temperatures give way to beautiful weekend in Fayetteville area  msnNOW Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Weather Permitting: Cold Temperatures Give Way To Beautiful Weekend In Fayetteville Area MsnNOW
Existing Home Sales Fall To A 10-Year Low In September As Mortgage Rates Soar
Existing Home Sales Fall To A 10-Year Low In September As Mortgage Rates Soar
Existing Home Sales Fall To A 10-Year Low In September, As Mortgage Rates Soar https://digitalarkansasnews.com/existing-home-sales-fall-to-a-10-year-low-in-september-as-mortgage-rates-soar/ Real estate broker Rebecca Van Camp places a “Sold” placard on her sign in front of a home in Meridian, Idaho, on Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2020. Darin Oswald | Tribune News Service | Getty Images Existing homes are selling at the slowest pace since September 2012, with the exception of a brief drop at the start of the Covid 19 pandemic. Sales of previously owned homes fell 1.5% in September from August to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.71 million units, according to a monthly survey from the National Association of Realtors. That marked the eighth straight month of sales declines. Sales were lower by 23.8% year over year. Sharply higher mortgage rates are causing an abrupt slowdown in the housing market. The average rate on the 30-year fixed home loan is now just over 7%, after starting this year around 3%. That is making an already pricey housing market even less affordable. Despite the slowdown in sales, inventory continues to drop. There were 1.25 million homes for sales at the end of September, down 0.8% compared with September 2021. At the current sales pace, that represents a 3.2-month supply. Six months is considered a balanced supply. “Despite weaker sales, multiple offers are still occurring with more than a quarter of homes selling above list price due to limited inventory,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the NAR. “The current lack of supply underscores the vast contrast with the previous major market downturn from 2008 to 2010, when inventory levels were four times higher than they are today.” Tight supply continues to put pressure on home prices. The median price of an existing home sold in September was $384,800, an increase of 8.4% from September 2021. Prices climbed at all price points. This makes 127 consecutive months of annual increases. Prices are cooling, however. September marked the third straight month-to-month price decline, which usually fall this time of this year. They’re falling harder this year, though, particularly on the lower end of the market, where inventory is much leaner. Homes priced between $100,000 and $250,000 dropped 28.4% from a year ago, while sales of homes priced between $750,000 and $1 million declined 9.5%. Homes did sit on the market slightly longer in September, an average of 19 days, up from 16 days in August and 17 days in September 2021. Higher mortgage rates aren’t just spooking potential buyers. They’re keeping sellers on the sidelines as well, which adds to the inventory crunch. “Homeowners love their 3% mortgage rate, and they don’t want to give that up,” Yun said. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Existing Home Sales Fall To A 10-Year Low In September As Mortgage Rates Soar
New Rehabilitation Hospital To Open In December Under New Agreement Announced By Mercy And Lifepoint Rehabilitation
New Rehabilitation Hospital To Open In December Under New Agreement Announced By Mercy And Lifepoint Rehabilitation
New Rehabilitation Hospital To Open In December Under New Agreement Announced By Mercy And Lifepoint Rehabilitation https://digitalarkansasnews.com/new-rehabilitation-hospital-to-open-in-december-under-new-agreement-announced-by-mercy-and-lifepoint-rehabilitation/ ST. LOUIS & BRENTWOOD, Tenn., October 20, 2022–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Mercy and Lifepoint Rehabilitation, a business unit of Lifepoint Health, today announced a joint venture agreement for the new Mercy Rehabilitation Hospital South. The new facility is scheduled to open by the end of the year on the campus of Mercy Hospital South. Lifepoint Rehabilitation will manage the day-to-day operations of the $37 million, two-story, standalone 50-bed acute rehabilitation hospital. The hospital will provide care for adults recovering from conditions such as neurological disease, injury to the brain or spinal cord and other debilitating illnesses or injuries. It will have two units – one catering to the needs of brain injury patients, including stroke victims, and the other serving general acute rehabilitation needs. “We want to meet the needs of our community, which let us know they need improved access to acute rehab care here in south county,” said Sean Hogan, president of Mercy Hospital South. “That became even more critical during the pandemic, when we were forced to cut the number of patients we could serve by half because we could have no more than one patient per room due to COVID-19. Not only will we now be able to care for more patients, every patient will have a private room.” The new rehab hospital will replace the existing Mercy Rehabilitation Services – South located within Mercy Hospital South. “This new facility will greatly benefit our rehab patients by providing them access to the latest technology and equipment available. That includes an outdoor courtyard with a pickleball court and other amenities that provide a little fun during the rehabilitation process,” Hogan said. Mercy Rehabilitation Hospital South will be the sixth hospital operated jointly by Mercy and Lifepoint Rehabilitation, formerly Kindred Rehabilitation Services. This successful partnership started 15 years ago with Mercy Rehabilitation Hospital St. Louis and now has a footprint across three states, with additional locations in Springfield, Missouri; Fort Smith, Arkansas; and two in Oklahoma City. “We are pleased to build on our relationship with Mercy and increase access to rehabilitation services in the St. Louis area,” said Donna Flannery, regional vice president of operations for Lifepoint Rehabilitation. “Our partnership and this new facility will increase the community of therapists, nurses and other healthcare professionals dedicated to providing high-quality inpatient rehabilitation services and passionate advocacy for patients in south St. Louis County.” About Mercy Mercy, one of the 25 largest U.S. health systems and named the top large system in the U.S. for excellent patient experience by NRC Health, serves millions annually with nationally recognized quality care and one of the nation’s largest Accountable Care Organizations. Mercy is a highly integrated, multi-state health care system including more than 40 acute care, managed and specialty (heart, children’s, orthopedic and rehab) hospitals, convenient and urgent care locations, imaging centers and pharmacies. Mercy has 900 physician practices and outpatient facilities, 4,000 Mercy Clinic physicians and advanced practitioners, and more than 40,000 co-workers serving patients and families across Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma. Mercy also has clinics, outpatient services and outreach ministries in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. About Lifepoint Rehabilitation With more than 30 freestanding inpatient rehabilitation facilities (IRFs) across 18 states, Lifepoint Rehabilitation is a partner of choice for many major hospital systems in the creation of joint venture operations that are industry-leading in clinical and financial outcomes. Through our IRFs and more than 100 acute rehabilitation units (ARUs), Lifepoint Rehabilitation brings proven rehabilitation management and services expertise to help our patients recover and return home quickly from a number of conditions, including strokes, brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, orthopedic injuries, neurological conditions, amputations and trauma. Lifepoint Rehabilitation is a business unit of Brentwood, Tennessee-based Lifepoint Health. About Lifepoint Health Lifepoint Health is a leading healthcare provider that serves patients, clinicians, communities and partner organizations across the healthcare continuum. Driven by a mission of making communities healthier®, the company has a growing diversified healthcare delivery network comprised of more than 50,000 dedicated employees, 62 community hospital campuses, more than 30 rehabilitation and behavioral health hospitals and 170 additional sites of care, including managed acute rehabilitation units, outpatient centers and post-acute care facilities. Through its innovation strategy, Lifepoint Forward, the company is developing meaningful solutions to enhance quality, increase access to care, and improve value across the Lifepoint footprint and communities across the country. For more information about the company, visit www.LifepointHealth.net. View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20221020005414/en/ Contacts Joe Poelker Senior Media Relations Specialist Mercy 314-525-4005 joe.poelker@mercy.net Aileen Bennett AVP, Communications Lifepoint Rehabilitation (615) 920-7668 aileen.bennett@LPNT.net Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
New Rehabilitation Hospital To Open In December Under New Agreement Announced By Mercy And Lifepoint Rehabilitation
Arkansas Aiming For Final Four In Musselman's Fourth Year
Arkansas Aiming For Final Four In Musselman's Fourth Year
Arkansas Aiming For Final Four In Musselman's Fourth Year https://digitalarkansasnews.com/arkansas-aiming-for-final-four-in-musselmans-fourth-year/ FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — With two consecutive Elite Eight appearances in tow, Arkansas’ hopes for the Final Four aren’t just a pipe dream. Coach Eric Musselman, heading into his fourth season in charge of the Razorbacks, has two returning players from last year’s rotation, only one of which is a starter in guard Devo Davis. But he pulled in the No. 2 class in the nation, headlined by projected lottery pick and first-team preseason All-SEC guard Nick Smith Jr. He also picked up five players via the transfer portal to complete the reload. Expectations aren’t just high locally, either. Arkansas was tabbed No. 10 in the AP Top 25. Musselman knew he would have to have that conversation with his team about being the hunted. “We already have a target on our back,” he said. “I would love to say that whatever the polls say, making two Elite Eights back to back, that’s something we haven’t talked to our team much about, but it’s something we will start to.” Musselman’s biggest project, at least early, is determining how best to distribute minutes among a roster filled with talented youngsters and experienced veterans. He had to do something similar last year, too, as Arkansas dropped five of six games at one point from mid-December to early January before the team won 14 of its next 15 and earned a No. 4 seed in the NCAA Tournament. HITTING THE LOTTERY Arkansas isn’t short on next-level talent. Smith is a projected top-10 pick in nearly every 2023 NBA Draft board. Freshman guard Anthony Black is predicted to be a first-rounder. And swingman Jordan Walsh is currently listed as a borderline first-round choice next spring. NEW-LOOK VETS The Arkansas strength during the preseason was at guard and wing as the frontcourt remained a work in progress. Forward Jalen Graham transferred from Arizona State where he was an All-Pac-12 selection. He’s joined by former Missouri forward Trevon Brazile, twin centers Makhi and Makhel Mitchell from Rhode Island and reigning American Athletic Conference Sixth Man of the Year Ricky Council IV from Wichita State on the wing. BEST SINCE An NCAA Tournament appearance in 2022-23 would be the third in four years for Musselman. The Razorbacks were on the bubble in the 2019-20 season, Musselman’s first year at the helm, before the postseason was canceled because of COVID-19. Arkansas hasn’t made three straight NCAA tournaments since 2005-08. OLD GUYS Davis and forward Kamani Johnson are the only two regulars returning for Arkansas. Davis, a junior, has spent much of his career as the team’s starting point guard. He averaged 8.3 points and was second on the team with 104 assists last year, starting about half the team’s games. Johnson is in his second year with the Razorbacks after transferring from Little Rock two seasons ago. He averaged just eight minutes ago in 26 games, but Musselman is expecting Johnson’s aggression to carry over in likely more minutes. “His offensive rebound rate is incredible,” Musselman said. “His free throws attempted per touch and offensive rebounding rate are at a really, really high level.” SCHEDULE Arkansas opens the regular season Nov. 7 at home against North Dakota State while nonconference foes include Oklahoma, Baylor, Louisville and either Texas Tech or Creighton. SEC play begins Dec. 28 at LSU. ___ More AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25 Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Arkansas Aiming For Final Four In Musselman's Fourth Year
Trump Claim Of Crime Of Century Fizzles In 3-Year Probe
Trump Claim Of Crime Of Century Fizzles In 3-Year Probe
Trump Claim Of ‘Crime Of Century’ Fizzles In 3-Year Probe https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-claim-of-crime-of-century-fizzles-in-3-year-probe-3/ WASHINGTON (AP) — Former President Donald Trump once predicted that a special prosecutor appointed during his administration would uncover “the crime of the century” — a conspiracy to sink his 2016 campaign. Yet here are the results of the three-year probe by prosecutor John Durham: two trial acquittals — the latest on Tuesday — and a former FBI attorney sentenced to probation. That has fallen far short of Trump supporters’ expectations that Durham would reveal a “deep state” plot behind the U.S. government’s investigation into ties between Russia and Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. The outcome has led to scrutiny over the purpose of Durham’s appointment by former Attorney General William Barr, who tasked him with sussing out misconduct in the Trump-Russia probe. It also has raised questions about whether or when the current attorney general, Merrick Garland, might move to rein in Durham’s work or hasten its completion. “You really measure the success of an investigation by what it uncovers in terms of pernicious activity, and he’s uncovered nothing,” said Stephen Saltzburg, a George Washington University law professor and former senior Justice Department official. There are no signs Durham plans to charge anyone else in his investigation. He is expected to produce a report at some point, but it’s unclear whether he will identify any significant misconduct or errors beyond those already reported by the Justice Department’s watchdog. Barr gave Durham a broad mandate in 2019 to hunt for wrongdoing by the FBI or other agencies in the early days of their investigation into potential coordination between the Trump campaign and Russia. At the time, Durham was the U.S. attorney in Connecticut with decades of Justice Department experience, including investigating CIA interrogations of terror suspects. Trump supporters cheered the appointment, and not just because of Durham’s bona fides. The appointment was made shortly after the conclusion of an investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller, which found substantial contacts between Russians and Trump associates but did not allege a criminal conspiracy between them. In December 2019, a Justice Department inspector general report concluded that the Russia investigation was opened for a legitimate reason but identified numerous errors in how it was conducted — giving Trump and his supporters an avenue of attack and optimism over Durham. But by the end of 2020, there were signs Durham’s investigation was losing momentum. One of his top prosecutors resigned without explanation from the Justice Department. Months later, Barr told The Wall Street Journal that he did not believe there had been improper activity during the Russia investigation by the CIA, even though suspicions about the intelligence community had helped prompt Durham’s appointment in the first place. The year ended with just one criminal case — a guilty plea by an FBI lawyer who admitted doctoring an internal email related to the surveillance of a former Trump campaign adviser. Kevin Clinesmith was sentenced to probation, rather than prison. Notably, the case involved conduct uncovered in an earlier investigation by the inspector general, rather than by Durham’s team. Two other criminal cases, also narrow in nature, faltered. After deliberating for just a few hours, a jury in May acquitted Michael Sussmann, a lawyer for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign. He had been accused of lying to the FBI during a meeting in which he presented the bureau’s top lawyer with information about Trump he thought should be investigated. On Tuesday, a jury acquitted Igor Danchenko, a Russian analyst at a U.S. think tank who’d been accused of lying to the FBI about his role in the creation of a largely discredited dossier — a compendium of unproven assertions that sought to tie Trump to Russia and whose creation was funded by Democrats. During the trial, he attacked the credibility of FBI agents who were his own witnesses. Despite the lack of convictions, Durham has still managed to cast an unflattering light on aspects of the Russia investigation. The Danchenko trial, for instance, centered on the origins of the dossier, which helped form the basis of secret surveillance applications the FBI filed to monitor the communications of ex-Trump campaign aide Carter Page. Even so, Page was one of numerous threads investigated by the FBI, and the dossier did not initiate the Russia probe. The allegations from Durham’s probe have also not erased the core finding of the Mueller probe — that Russia wanted Trump elected and that Trump’s team welcomed the help — nor have they swayed jurors. “While Durham essentially tried to put the FBI itself on trial through these prosecutions by pointing to missteps and errors in the early Trump-Russia probe, the cases painted the FBI as more victim than perpetrator and evidence of any orchestrated scheme by FBI agents to steer the investigation for political purposes never materialized,” Robert Mintz, a New Jersey lawyer and former federal prosecutor, wrote in an email. The Justice Department declined to comment about Durham’s future, including how much longer his team might continue or when he might produce a report. Weeks before he resigned, Barr designated Durham as a special counsel to ensure his investigation would continue in the Biden administration. A spokesman for Durham declined to comment on criticism of the work. Garland and senior Justice Department leaders, perhaps careful to avoid the perception of meddling in such a politically charged investigation, have taken a hands-off approach to Durham’s work. Before Sussmann was indicted, his attorneys appealed to senior department officials in hopes of preventing a charge, according to a person familiar with the matter who insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversations. But the Justice Department rebuffed the protest, allowing the case to proceed. Now, though, there is rising pressure not only on Durham to wrap up but on Garland, as attorney general, to urge him along. “I think he was very wise to let this run its course,” Saltzburg said of Garland. “I believe the course has been run. It’s over. I believe what Merrick Garland should say to Durham is, it’s time to submit your report and go home.” ——— By ERIC TUCKER Associated Press Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Claim Of Crime Of Century Fizzles In 3-Year Probe
Judge: Trump Knew Vote Fraud Claims In Legal Docs Were False
Judge: Trump Knew Vote Fraud Claims In Legal Docs Were False
Judge: Trump Knew Vote Fraud Claims In Legal Docs Were False https://digitalarkansasnews.com/judge-trump-knew-vote-fraud-claims-in-legal-docs-were-false/ Former President Donald Trump signed legal documents challenging the results of the 2020 election that included voter fraud claims he knew to be false, a federal judge said in a ruling Wednesday. U.S. District Court Judge David Carter in an 18-page opinion ordered the release of those emails between Trump and attorney John Eastman to the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. He said those communications cannot be withheld because they include evidence of potential crimes. “The emails show that President Trump knew that the specific numbers of voter fraud were wrong but continued to tout those numbers, both in court and to the public,” Carter wrote. Though the judge’s conclusion has no practical bearing on a separate Justice Department investigation into efforts to overturn the election, any evidence that Trump signed documents he knew to be false could at minimum be a notable data point for criminal prosecutors trying to sort out culpability for far-ranging efforts to undo the results. The judge specifically cited claims from Trump’s attorneys that Fulton County in Georgia had improperly counted more than 10,000 votes of dead people, felons and unregistered voters. Those false allegations were part of a filing that Trump’s legal team made in Georgia state court on Dec. 4, 2021. Later that month, Eastman warned in a message that Trump had been made aware that “some of the allegations (and evidence proffered by the experts)” in that Georgia filing “has been inaccurate.” Yet even after the message from Eastman, Trump and his team filed another legal complaint that had “the same inaccurate numbers,” the judge wrote. Trump under oath verified the complaint was true to the best of his knowledge. Carter wrote that the emails are “sufficiently related to and in furtherance of a conspiracy to defraud the United States.” Representatives for Trump and Eastman did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A spokesperson for the Jan. 6 committee declined to comment on the ongoing litigation. The ruling is the latest development in a monthslong legal battle between Eastman — a conservative lawyer and lead architect of Trump’s last-ditch efforts to stay in office — and congressional investigators. Eastman has been trying to withhold documents from the committee on the basis of attorney-client privilege claims. The committee has argued that there is a legal exception allowing the disclosure of communications regarding ongoing or future crimes. And Carter has mostly agreed, ordering the release of hundreds of emails to the House committee since the spring. In a stunning ruling in March, the judge had asserted that it is “more likely than not” that Trump committed crimes in his attempt to stop the certification of the 2020 election. Carter in his ruling Wednesday said the messages he has reviewed from Eastman and other attorneys show that the “primary goal” for some of their litigation was to stop the certification of President Joe Biden’s election win. The totality of the evidence makes clear that “Trump filed certain lawsuits not to obtain legal relief, but to disrupt or delay the January 6 congressional proceedings through the courts,” the judge wrote. The emails from Eastman are part of the House committee’s investigation into a multi-part plan by Trump and his allies to overturn the 2020 election and the ensuing violence at the Capitol. The release of the emails could be critical for the committee as it enters the last few months of its probe when lawmakers will have to decide whether to send a criminal referral against Trump and his allies to the Justice Department. The judge ordered Eastman to give the documents to the committee by the afternoon of Oct. 28. Associated Press writer Eric Tucker contributed in Washington. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Judge: Trump Knew Vote Fraud Claims In Legal Docs Were False
Trump Deposed In E. Jean Carroll Defamation Lawsuit
Trump Deposed In E. Jean Carroll Defamation Lawsuit
Trump Deposed In E. Jean Carroll Defamation Lawsuit https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-deposed-in-e-jean-carroll-defamation-lawsuit/ Democracy Now! doesn’t belong to any corporation, government or political party. Our daily news hour belongs to you, our listeners, viewers and readers. You’re the reason we exist. As we face the twin threats of climate chaos and authoritarianism, we need your help more than ever to hold the powerful to account and amplify the voices of scientists, activists and organizers who are working to save the planet.Right now, a generous donor will TRIPLE all donations to our daily news hour. That means your gift of $25 is worth $75 to Democracy Now!Please do your part to keep our independent journalism going strong. Every dollar counts. Thank you so much, and stay safe. -Amy Goodman We rely on contributions from you, our viewers and listeners to do our work. If you visit us daily or weekly or even just once a month, now is a great time to make your monthly contribution. Please do your part today. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Deposed In E. Jean Carroll Defamation Lawsuit
Judge: Trump Knowingly Made False Legal Claims About Election
Judge: Trump Knowingly Made False Legal Claims About Election
Judge: Trump Knowingly Made False Legal Claims About Election https://digitalarkansasnews.com/judge-trump-knowingly-made-false-legal-claims-about-election/ There is no credible debate over John Eastman’s central role in trying to help Donald Trump overturn his 2020 defeat. The notorious Republican lawyer was a principle architect of the former president’s scheme, making Eastman a key target for Jan. 6 investigators. As regular readers may recall, this has led to months of legal fights over Congress’ ability to subpoena the lawyer’s records, which Eastman has claimed are protected by attorney-client privilege. The bipartisan select committee has pushed back, arguing that communications between attorneys and clients are not protected if they’re discussing committing crimes. In March, U.S. District Court Judge David Carter agreed, concluding, “Based on the evidence, the Court finds it more likely than not that President Trump corruptly attempted to obstruct the joint session of Congress on January 6, 2021.” As we’ve discussed, this was an extraordinary moment — there’s no modern precedent for a sitting federal court to conclude that a former president likely committed a felony — and it led to some additional disclosures. That said, the court ruling applied to a set of communications from a specific time period, and the larger legal fight over other Eastman’s emails is ongoing. Indeed, as NBC News reported, that fight continues to go poorly — not only for the controversial lawyer, but also for the former president he tried to help. A federal judge on Wednesday ordered lawyer John Eastman, a key figure in former President Donald Trump’s challenges to the 2020 election results, to turn over 33 new documents to the House Jan. 6 committee, including a number that the judge found are exempt from attorney-client privilege because they relate to a crime or an attempted crime. The problem for Eastman is that his privilege claims simply aren’t working because of the “crime-fraud exception”: The lawyer and his client were discussing plans to commit crimes, so their communications can’t be legally shielded. As NBC News report added, in yesterday’s instance, the judge concluded that Eastman, in one of the relevant email exchanges, said that Trump was aware that the number of voter fraud cases his team was alleging in a federal lawsuit challenging the election results in Georgia was “inaccurate.” But, the judge said, Trump signed off on the suit, “swearing under oath” that the numbers were correct, anyway. The closer one looks at the details, the more brutal they appear. At issue is a written exchange from December 2020, when Team Trump prepared to use inflated fraud numbers as part of a Georgia lawsuit. Eastman raised “concerns” about including dubious data, adding that Trump had been “made aware” that some of the claims weren’t true. Team Trump nevertheless proceeded. “Trump and his attorneys ultimately filed the complaint with the same inaccurate numbers without rectifying, clarifying, or otherwise changing them,” Carter wrote, adding, “President Trump, moreover, signed a verification swearing under oath that the incorporated, inaccurate numbers ‘are true and correct’ or ‘believed to be true and correct’ to the best of his knowledge and belief.” Ordinarily, some in Trump’s position might claim at this point that he signed the materials in good faith, working under the assumption that he’d been given accurate information from those around him. But that won’t work in this instance: Trump was warned that the inflated data wasn’t accurate, and Trump and his team disregarded the truth. At a Jan. 6 committee hearing last week, Republican Rep. Liz Cheney reminded Americans, “[O]ur nation’s federal judges are sworn to do impartial justice to preserve our Constitution and preserve our union. Dozens of these judges have been addressing January 6 cases, and many have given us plain, unmistakable warnings about the direction of our republic.” Six days later, a federal judge wrote, “The emails [Eastman has tried to hide] show that President Trump knew that the specific numbers of voter fraud were wrong but continued to tout those numbers, both in court and to the public. The Court finds that these emails are sufficiently related to and in furtherance of a conspiracy to defraud the United States.” As for what to expect as a result of such findings, my colleague Lisa Rubin explained late yesterday, all of this is likely to be “of great interest to at least two law enforcement investigations: those of the Justice Department and the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office. And the Fulton County folks should be especially interested given that in both categories of criminality — obstruction and conspiracy — the examples Judge Carter provided concern Georgia.” Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an MSNBC political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “The Impostors: How Republicans Quit Governing and Seized American Politics.” Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Judge: Trump Knowingly Made False Legal Claims About Election
Post Politics Now: Biden Heading To Pa. To Visit Rebuilt Bridge Raise Money For Fetterman
Post Politics Now: Biden Heading To Pa. To Visit Rebuilt Bridge Raise Money For Fetterman
Post Politics Now: Biden Heading To Pa. To Visit Rebuilt Bridge, Raise Money For Fetterman https://digitalarkansasnews.com/post-politics-now-biden-heading-to-pa-to-visit-rebuilt-bridge-raise-money-for-fetterman/ Today, President Biden is heading to the battleground state of Pennsylvania with two aims: to highlight the impact of the infrastructure bill he signed into law last year and to help Democrat John Fetterman raise money in one of the most competitive Senate races in the country. Biden’s first stop is the site of a bridge that collapsed in Pittsburgh nine months ago that is rapidly being rebuilt. He’ll then head to Philadelphia to join Fetterman, who faces Republican celebrity physician Mehmet Oz. In Washington, the House select committee investigating the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, is expected to issue a subpoena for testimony and documents from Donald Trump before the end of the week, setting up what could be a prolonged legal battle with the former president. Your daily dashboard 11 a.m. Eastern time: Biden departs the White House en route to Pittsburgh. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre will brief reporters on board Air Force One. Listen live here. 2:15 p.m. Eastern: Biden delivers remarks in Pittsburgh on infrastructure. Watch live here. 7 p.m. Eastern: Biden joins Fetterman at a reception in Philadelphia. Got a question about politics? Submit it here. After 3 p.m. weekdays, return to this space and we’ll address what’s on the mind of readers. Analysis: Jim Jordan ramps up investigation into FBI over domestic terrorism Return to menu House Judiciary Committee Republicans are ramping up their investigation of the FBI even before they know whether they’ll control the chamber in the next Congress. Writing in The Early 202, The Post’s Leigh Ann Caldwell and Theodoric Meyer say that Jill Sanborn, former executive assistant director of the National Security Branch at the FBI during the Biden administration, has offered to sit for a transcribed interview with House Republicans, led by Rep. Jim Jordan (Ohio), to discuss the bureau’s focus on “domestic violent extremism,” according to the letter obtained by The Early. On our radar: Biden heading to the battleground state of Pennsylvania Return to menu With 19 days until the midterms, President Biden is heading to the battleground state of Pennsylvania on Thursday to highlight the infrastructure law he signed last month and to help raise money for Senate Democratic candidate John Fetterman, who is in a competitive race against Republican celebrity physician Mehmet Oz. Biden’s first stop is Pittsburgh, where he plans to visit the site of the Fern Hollow Bridge, which collapsed in late January. On the day it collapsed, Biden had already planned to be in Pittsburgh to talk about infrastructure. Before delivering his remarks, he made an unscheduled stop at the bridge site. On our radar: Oprah Winfrey seeking to give Stacey Abrams a boost Return to menu Media mogul Oprah Winfrey is seeking to give a boost to the Georgia gubernatorial campaign of Stacey Abrams with a planned appearance at a virtual event with the Democratic nominee Thursday after sending a fundraising solicitation on her behalf the day before. “I can’t wait for you to hear our conversation and get to know Stacey even better,” Winfrey said in an email blast Wednesday. “Stacey is a once-in-a-generation leader who needs our support to win.” Winfrey appeared with Abrams during the closing weeks of her 2018 campaign, and she is among the high-profile backers rallying around Abrams in this year’s rematch with Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R). Noted: ‘There might be somebody else I’d prefer more,’ Pence says of a 2024 Trump White House run Return to menu Not long ago, they ran the country together. Now former vice president Mike Pence has suggested he might not lend his support to his old boss, Donald Trump, if Trump runs in the next presidential election. The Post’s Adela Suliman reports that when asked whether he would back Trump in 2024, Pence took a long pause and, with a wry smile, told an audience at Georgetown University late Wednesday: “Well, there might be somebody else I’d prefer more.” Here’s more from Adela: It’s possibly the heaviest hint yet that the former veep might put himself in the running instead — fueling the possibility of a clash that has been the subject of Washington speculation since the tensions between the two leaders in the last days of the Trump administration. Shrugging off applause, Pence continued, “What I can tell you is, I have every confidence that the Republican Party is going to sort out leadership. All my focus has been on the midterm elections, and it’ll stay that way for the next 20 days.” “But after that, we’ll be thinking about the future, ours and the nations,” he added. “I’ll keep you posted.” You can read the full story here. On our radar: Trump’s Jan. 6 subpoena is expected soon. But what happens next? Return to menu The House select committee investigating the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, is expected to issue a subpoena for testimony and documents from Donald Trump before the end of the week, wading into what could be a prolonged and unprecedented legal battle with the former president. The Post’s Jacqueline Alemany writes that if Trump resists the subpoena, the committee faces hurdles in compelling him to comply that could end in a constitutional showdown, according to legal experts and congressional counsel with experience in congressional oversight and investigations. Per our colleague: Noted: Biden touting policies he hopes will resonate with voters Return to menu With President Biden’s approval rating hovering in the 40s, he has not received a lot of invites to campaign with embattled Democrats. But that is not stopping him from spending the week touting policies that he hopes will resonate with voters — though his stumping has mostly been in D.C. and without a candidate by his side, The Post’s Cleve R. Wootson Jr. writes. Per Cleve: On Tuesday, Biden announced that he is releasing 15 million more barrels of fuel from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, a move aimed at easing gas prices less than three weeks before the midterms. He brushed aside Republican claims that the move was political, noting that it was not the first time he’d ordered such a withdrawal. … In the final stretch before Election Day on Nov. 8, with early voting already underway in some states, Biden’s strategy seems to be to hit on one or two big campaign themes a day. On Tuesday, he spoke about abortion rights, saying that if Democrats gain seats in the Senate and maintain control of the House, the first item on his legislative agenda will be codifying Roe v. Wade — a promise aimed at people incensed by the Supreme Court’s decision in June to overturn the landmark 1973 case. On Thursday, the president plans to tout the infrastructure law at the site of a collapsed bridge in Pittsburgh. And he will head to Delaware on Friday to talk about how his administration has canceled thousands of dollars in student loans. The latest: In Oregon debate, Kotek pushes back against charges she wants to defund the police Return to menu By Camila DeChalus DeChalus Democratic Oregon gubernatorial nominee Tina Kotek faced attacks Wednesday from both of her opponents during a final televised debate, including accusations that she wants to “defund the police” — a charge she rebutted by saying she wants to hire more police officers across Oregon. “I’ve always supported our state police,” said Kotek, former speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives. “They’re both misrepresenting my record. I do support law enforcement.” The hour-long debate featuring Kotek, Republican nominee Christine Drazan and unaffiliated candidate Betsy Johnson was held just hours before mail-in ballots were expected to be sent to Oregonians for the November elections. Drazan and Johnson are also both former legislators. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Post Politics Now: Biden Heading To Pa. To Visit Rebuilt Bridge Raise Money For Fetterman
Whats Trending Today: October 20 2022
Whats Trending Today: October 20 2022
What’s Trending Today: October 20, 2022 https://digitalarkansasnews.com/whats-trending-today-october-20-2022/ News Published: Oct. 20, 2022, 7:52 a.m. In this 2022 image provided by PSE Healthy Energy, a gas stove is tested for benzene in California. Stoves in California homes are leaking the cancer-causing gas benzene, researchers found in a new study published on Thursday, Oct. 20, though they say more research is needed to understand how many homes have leaks. (PSE Healthy Energy via AP)AP A look at some of the top headlines trending online today including updates on Donald Trump, the war in Ukraine, stove health concerns and much more. Top stories Trump knew voter fraud claims were wrong, federal judge says as he orders John Eastman emails turned over (CNN) Trump questioned during deposition for defamation lawsuit (AP) U.S. accuses Iran of selling drones to Russia in violation of U.N. ban (CBS) Ukraine’s utilities threatened by Russia in war’s new phase (AP) Belarus says it is unable to pay off debt due to sanctions (Reuters) Even when off, gas stoves can leak benzene concentrations comparable to secondhand smoke (The Hill) Omicron subvariants reflect a ‘viral evolution on steroids’ (NBC) Other trending headlines Webb Telescope Captures New View of ‘Pillars of Creation’ (NY Times) US heating worries mount amid growing costs, uncertainty (AP) FDA panel votes to remove early pregnancy drug from market (Axios) Pumpkin spice foods cost up to 160% more than regular version (CBS) Matthew Perry Opens Up About His Addiction Journey with a New Memoir (People) If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Whats Trending Today: October 20 2022
Scientists Find First Known Neanderthal Family In Russian Cave
Scientists Find First Known Neanderthal Family In Russian Cave
Scientists Find First Known Neanderthal Family In Russian Cave https://digitalarkansasnews.com/scientists-find-first-known-neanderthal-family-in-russian-cave/ Scientists have uncovered for the first time the remains of a closely related Neanderthal clan, including a family — a father and his daughter — in a Russian cave, offering a rare window into ancient times. The clan was discovered in one of the largest genetic studies of a Neanderthal population to date, published this week in the journal Nature. Scientists suspect they perished together about 54,000 years ago — perhaps tragically, from starvation or a big storm — in the mountains of southern Siberia. They were living on a rocky cliff top on the outer reaches of Neanderthals’ known range, which extended from the Atlantic regions of Europe to central Asia. The social organization of Neanderthal populations is not well understood. The latest research suggests that in Siberia at least, Neanderthals lived in groups of 10 to 20 people — similar to present-day mountain gorillas, which are an endangered species. The study was carried out by a global team of scientists, including Svante Paabo, a Swedish geneticist who won the Nobel Prize for medicine this month for his work mapping our genetic ties to Neanderthals. Unlike many archaeological sites, which contain fossils built up over long periods, genetic studies on 11 Neanderthals found in the Chagyrskaya Cave — in the Altai Mountains, near the Russian border with Kazakhstan, Mongolia and China — showed many of them were close relatives, suggesting they all lived around the same time. “Chagyrskaya Cave is basically a moment in time 54,000 years ago when this community lived and died in this cave,” Richard G. Roberts, a scholar at the University of Wollongong in Australia and one of the co-authors of the study, said in an interview. “Most archaeological sites, things accumulate slowly and tend to get chewed over by hyenas or something else like that,” he said. “You don’t really get sites that full of material. It was packed full of bones, Neanderthal bones, animal bones, artifacts. It’s a moment, literally frozen in time.” The scientists used DNA extracted from fossils found in Chagyrskaya Cave and from two other Neanderthals found in a nearby cave to map out the relationships between the individuals and to search for clues on how they lived. Chagyrskaya Cave is perched high on a hillside, overlooking a flood plain where herds of bison and other animals once probably grazed, Roberts said. The researchers found stone tools and bison bones buried in the cave alongside the remains. Genetic data obtained from teeth and bone fragments showed that the individuals included a father and his daughter, along with a pair of second-degree relatives, possibly an aunt or an uncle, a niece or nephew, Roberts said. The father’s mitochondrial DNA — a set of genes passed from mothers to their children — was also similar to two of the other males in the cave, he said, indicating they probably had a common maternal ancestor. “They’re so closely related, it’s like a clan really living in this cave,” he said. “The thought that they could go on for generations upon generations seems unlikely. I think probably they all died very closely in time. Maybe it was just a horrendous storm. They are in Siberia, after all.” The study also revealed that the genetic diversity of Y chromosomes (which are passed down only through the male line) was a lot lower than that of the mitochondrial DNA in the individuals, which the authors said suggests that Neanderthal females were more likely to migrate than males. That pattern is also seen in many human societies, where women marry and move away with their husband’s family before they have children. Previous work by Paabo, the Swedish geneticist, has shown that Neanderthals mixed with prehistoric humans after they migrated out of Africa, and the vestiges of those interactions live on in the genomes of many present-day people. During the pandemic, he found that a genetic risk factor associated with severe cases of covid-19 was passed down from Neanderthals, carried by about half of people in South Asia and about 1 in 6 in Europe. The authors say the sample size of the latest study is small and may not be representative of the social lives of the entire Neanderthal population. “If we could just reproduce [the study] in a couple of other places, then we’d really have a grasp on how Neanderthals ran their lives, maybe some indication as to why they went extinct and we didn’t,” said Roberts, the Australian scholar. “We’re so similar. So why are we the only ones left around on the planet?” Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Scientists Find First Known Neanderthal Family In Russian Cave
Fair Fare
Fair Fare
Fair Fare https://digitalarkansasnews.com/fair-fare/ Two junior high school students share barbecue nachos from H2Que BBQ at the Arkansas State Fair on Monday. The fair “boasts a delectable array that ranges from the outstanding to the outrageous, with not only wild and crazy eats but substantial and healthy ones, too,” says food writer and influencer Kat Robinson. (Courtesy Photo/Kat Robinson) From epic stuffed turkey legs to extravagantly crafted smoothies served in vessels made from large fruits, this year’s Arkansas State Fair has plenty to tempt and delight food lovers. The 82nd Arkansas State Fair is underway in Little Rock, and alongside competitions, the livestock show, and the enormous midway full of amusement rides, you’ll find one of the most diverse and tasty selections of fair fare offered across the United States. While other state fairs may go for the shock and awe of seeing who can create the weirdest fried foods, ours boasts a delectable array that ranges from the outstanding to the outrageous, with not only wild and crazy eats but substantial and healthy ones, too. That hasn’t always been the case. Fourteen years ago, the hubbub was all about the new addition to carnival food making the rounds — the Pig Licker, chocolate-covered strips of bacon. It was unique amidst corn dogs, funnel cakes and cotton candy that had long been the standard fare. There were a few standouts, like the long-serving Paizi’s Gyros from Fort Smith, which still offers a variety of gyros, pita and even a new rice bowl dressed with loads of fresh vegetables and, if you’d like, feta cheese. Variety, though, is now our state fair’s fare. This year’s additions include the Laotian operation Happy Lao out of Des Moines. The Cavan family’s homemade crab wontons and eggrolls are a delightful addition — but it’s their made-in-the-fruit tropical smoothie cups that have garnered high attention. Happy Lao offers hollowed-out pineapples and melons and fills them with fresh fruit smoothies, adding in such fruits as mango, cantaloupe, honeydew and strawberries on request. This is the neatest beverage you’ll find at the fair. Bryan’s Sirloin Tips has also joined in the fun. The trailer from Indiana offers skillet-cooked tips, mushrooms, peppers and onions, and red skin potatoes — without any sort of batter. There are also perennials such as Pat’s Kitchen out of North Little Rock, which has once again won this year’s Best Tasting award in the Tasty Tom Awards, the Arkansas State Fair competition where each of the food vendors who wish to joins in to put out their best offerings for sampling. Pat’s won with both its standards — such as deep fried spaghetti and meatballs on a stick and fried lasagna — and a new entry this year, deep fried saltwater taffy. L&M Concessions of Little Rock has also come up with a succession of hits. This year’s offering from Larry and his crew is deep fried pineapple rings. But Larry’s other outrageous choices, like the chili cheese sweet dog, a hog dog dipped in funnel cake batter, deep fried, split and covered in chili and cheese, has also received much attention. And the vendor’s bacon cheeseburger funnel cake has turned heads and brought plenty of attention to the stand. Cold delights like Wonderstick’s Caramel Corn Crunch, soft-serve ice cream with caramel corn and syrup, were big the first few days when the temperature was warmer. Now that we’ve properly entered fall’s brisk days, gumbo from Larry’s Gator-on-a-Stick and warm cups of elote with cream and chili powder from Don’s Elote are in order. And yes, you can get hot chocolate on the midway. Price increases have been noticed across the board. The price for a turkey leg this year, no matter which vendor you visit, is $18, reflecting the record prices for turkey across the United States. The most expensive dish this year is the $35 “Hot Mess,” served by H2Que BBQ of Jonesboro — a large turkey leg stuffed with pulled pork, baked beans, tortilla chips, nacho cheese sauce and jalapenos — a truly massive combination that weighs more than 3 pounds. Good Arkansas home cooking is always popular at our fair. Millie’s Fish-N-Shrimp of Little Rock has added crab cakes to its delectable fried-to-order catfish and shrimp. Boss Hog’s, which has a stand at Gate 5 near the Food Court and another at the south end of the midway, has a fine selection of soul food sides like mustard greens, yams and hot water cornbread. And you can visit the Big Show Diner every day for a daily lunch special that includes rounds of meatloaf, chicken spaghetti and possum pie. The Arkansas Cattlemen’s Association has taken over the Midway Cafe by the Swine Barn and is serving 4-ounce steaks for breakfast and lunch — including a steak sandwich with caramelized onions, provolone cheese and horseradish sauce. You can also have a steak biscuit with egg and cheese in the morning. This year, Arkansas Made is the name of the game in the Arts and Crafts Building. Post Familie wines are available by the glass. There are also freeze-dried candies, handmade fried pies, jams, jellies and even honeycomb to take home. You can eat healthy at the fair, too. There are many places where you can get vegetables that haven’t been battered, deep fried or covered in chocolate. L&M Concessions offers hot roasted corn on the cob and baked potatoes cooked on a grill made from an old pickup truck. Bryan’s Sirloin Tips also offers dishes of sauteed mushrooms and paper boats of fresh cooked veggies. Mickey’s Grill’s beef and chicken kebabs are lightly seasoned, and there’s even the Boki European Food Truck, which offers a healthy plate of chicken teriyaki, vegetables and rice. The best thing that’s happened to the Arkansas State Fair is the addition of Lunch at the Fair, where you can park and enter for free between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. The idea first came as a way to help food vendors, but it has grown into a great way to invite folks working downtown to come see what they may be missing on the entire fairgrounds. Any weekday lunchtime, the Food Court is absolutely packed with people wearing everything from sweatpants to business suits. The Arkansas State Fair continues through Oct. 23. For more information on admission, concerts and the schedule, visit ArkansasStateFair.com . And if you’d like to discover the more than 200 different fair food items offered this year, please visit TieDyeTravels.com. Kat Robinson is a blogger, an author, a food historian and a longtime food influencer in Arkansas. Email her at [email protected]  TieDyeTravels.com or visit her website at TieDyeTravels.com. Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Fair Fare
Letters For Oct. 19
Letters For Oct. 19
Letters For Oct. 19 https://digitalarkansasnews.com/letters-for-oct-19/ The Virginia Gazette hit a home run when they began incorporating “Community Photos” in the newspaper. It is an excellent avenue for news and increased visibility for service organizations and charities with most of them focusing on the underserved in James City County and Greater Williamsburg. On behalf of the James City Lions Club, thank you especially for highlighting our club’s service activities in the “Community Photos” in the paper. Our club has experienced both a growth in membership and an increase in volunteerism. Assuming other clubs or organizations are similarly affected, our entire community is enhanced. Patti Ralabate, president, James City Lions Club ___ I am grateful to Dr. Christine Llewellyn for drawing attention to research that strongly suggests contraception does in fact offer real promise as a practical and humane means to control deer population. However effective a bow-and-arrow might have been prior to John Smith’s arrival, it doesn’t seem to work that well now, and we’re a bit too close to one another here to let anyone blaze away with an AR-15 — seemingly the modern-day deer hunter’s weapon of choice. Unfortunately, it is not clear that contraception is a viable alternative to culling just yet. The Humane Society of the United States website states, “At this time, most fertility control programs for deer are multi-year research-based projects and require significant scientific justification and oversight in order to be carried out in the field.” I am sure that Dr. Llewellyn would agree that it would be a fine thing if researchers at the College put together a fundable project focused on the particular challenges of contraception as the principle means of deer control in our area. John Alewynse, Ph.D., Wiliamsburg ___ Citizens in Virginia’s 1st Congressional District are fortunate to have Rob Wittman representing them in Washington. First elected in 2007, he has demonstrated a commitment to support his constituency and the Constitution. His voting record speaks for itself, he opposes those measures that are poorly written and likely to result in wasteful unnecessary spending; we have only to look at the shameful administration and abuses of potentially good programs; in September the Department of Justice charged 47 individuals in a $250 million fraud activity and the fraud and careless dispersion of funds for unemployment during COVID was in the billions. When he does not support a particular “popular” program, it is often one that is not fiscally acceptable. We need more representation on both sides of the aisle to apply this kind of thinking in crafting legislation. He is a champion of the Chesapeake Bay, knowledgeable about water quality, fisheries, and other natural resource issues. He is a member of the House Armed Services Committee; he consistently challenges the Defense Department to meet the reality of the current and future threats facing the United States. As a Vietnam veteran I appreciate his support for pro-veteran legislation as well as assistance for individual veterans needing assistance. As an American, I appreciate his commitment to keeping our nation militarily strong and fiscally responsible. If more of our representatives were to apply the same focus instead of dividing us we would be a stronger unified nation. I am proud to continue to vote for him. Arthur Garrison, Williamsburg ___ Democrats try to control the voters by proposing bills with great sounding names but with preposterous, dangerous precedent. Look at HR 7688 labeled the Consumer Price Gouging Act. This act would have discouraged investment in our own resources and energy independence. In fact, even President Obama’s former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors, Jason Furman, slammed the bill as “dangerous and misguided nonsense.” Yet, Elaine Luria and all but four Democrats voted for it. Don’t listen to propaganda. Vote for Rob Wittman who saw through this misguided bill and many more. Rob Wittman also voted against Nancy Pelosi’s January 6th commission which specifically omitted including any Republicans on the committee … partisan? You bet! Why not a non-partisan committee investigation? Ask Democrats who voted in lock step for this unfair proposal. Scott Zimmerman, James City County ___ Thomas Jefferson wrote, “The whole art of government consists in the art of being honest.” This honesty can be measured by the effort our elected representatives expend to educate citizens on motions up for a vote. Without open communication, good government falters. In February, I sent an email to our mayor and the rest of the City Council regarding my concerns about a proposed multimillion-dollar project to install parking sensors downtown. I gave five reasons why I thought that the project was unnecessary and too expensive. I suggested that our officials do more to educate the public and gain their informed consent or disapproval. Of the five representatives, only two, Ted Maslin and Caleb Rogers, bothered to reply. And Ted led the effort to table the motion. That is why Mr. Maslin must be reelected. James Tobin, Williamsburg ___ Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Letters For Oct. 19
What Tennessee Getting Its Mojo Back Could Mean For Arkansas Recruiting Other Nuggets
What Tennessee Getting Its Mojo Back Could Mean For Arkansas Recruiting Other Nuggets
What Tennessee Getting Its Mojo Back Could Mean For Arkansas Recruiting + Other Nuggets https://digitalarkansasnews.com/what-tennessee-getting-its-mojo-back-could-mean-for-arkansas-recruiting-other-nuggets/ photo credit: Twitter/@OndreEvans With respect to Arkansas football snapping its three-game skid at BYU, the game of the week — and possibly the year — took place in Knoxville, where Tennessee knocked off Alabama with a last-second field goal and set off a wild celebration. The Volunteers are enjoying the season the Razorbacks were hoping for, ending their long losing streak against the Crimson Tide that dated back to 2006 and starting 6-0 for the first time since 1998 with a Heisman Trophy contender at quarterback. Unlike the other orange ’T’ school, it certainly seems as though Tennessee is “back.” While the Volunteers are in the SEC East and don’t play Arkansas on an annual basis any more, that could impact the Razorbacks’ efforts on the recruiting trail. After all, it wasn’t that long ago that Tennessee routinely crossed the Mississippi River and raided the top players from the Natural State. According to Best of Arkansas Sports’ research, the Volunteers signed eight players out of Arkansas between 1997-2005, including at least one every year from 2001-05. Before sending the likes of Jarius Wright, Greg Childs, Chris Gragg and Treylon Burks to Fayetteville, the small town of Warren in south Arkansas produced a trio of Tennessee signees: Bret Smith and Roshaun Fellows in 2003 and Ricardo Kemp in 2005. Slick Shelley out of Fort Smith Southside was also part of that 2005 class. Jonesboro sent Reggie Coleman (1997) and Greg Jones (2002) to Tennessee and Augusta produced James Turner (2004), but most notably, Clarendon’s Cedric Houston signed with the Volunteers in 2001. (Houston is now an assistant coach at Clarendon High.) As Tennessee slipped from relevance in college football, though, the Razorbacks flipped the script. In recent years, they’ve gone into the Volunteer State and landed heralded recruits — most notably wide receiver-turned-tight end Trey Knox. More recently, Arkansas signed three Tennessee natives in 2021, defensive backs Anthony Brown and Jaylen Lewis and offensive lineman Patrick Kutas, and have one committed in 2022, four-star offensive lineman Luke Brown. Considering it’s a border state, head coach Sam Pittman would probably like those recruiting efforts to continue. According to Rivals’ database, the Razorbacks have offered 10 players from Tennessee in the 2024 class. Included among that group are three prospects who have enough interest in Arkansas that they have visited Fayetteville: four-star wide receiver Brandon Heyward from Oak Ridge, three-star wide receiver Ondre Evans from Nashville and three-star wide receiver Markeis Barrett from Knoxville. However, each of them has since checked out the Volunteers, as well, with Barrett in attendance for the big win over Alabama and Evans tweeting about Tennessee after the game. A resurgent Tennessee program, especially one that competes for an SEC title and College Football Playoff spot, could make it a lot harder for Pittman and his staff to make headway in the state and perhaps even get players of Knox’s caliber in the future. Another state the Razorbacks have hit hard on the recruiting trail is Alabama, with three commitments from the Yellowhammer State in the 2023 class. Although none of them are four-star prospects, they are high three-stars and pushing for that designation. For further proof that they are good players, look no further than the state of Alabama’s 40-man roster for the 36th annual Alabama-Mississippi All-Star Game. Included among the 16 SEC commits on the team are each of the future Razorbacks: wide receiver Davion Dozier, safety TJ Metcalf and cornerback Dallas Young. Metcalf and Young come from schools — Gardendale and Pinson Valley, respectively — that have produced players who’ve participated in the prestigious game within the last two years, but Dozier is just the second player from Moody to be selected. The first was Alabama defensive end signee Larry Paul in 1997. Other Alabama-born Razorbacks who have played in the event include defensive back Orlando Watters in 1990, running back Chrys Chukwuma and linebacker Quinton Caver in 1996, offensive lineman Zac Tubbs in 2002 and defensive tackle Darius Philon in 2011 (more about Philon’s cousin as a recruit below). Arkansas Baseball Lands Another 2023 Commit Dave Van Horn already has the No. 1 recruiting class for 2023, but even though it’s getting late in the process for college baseball, he’s still actively looking to add to it. Last week, Best of Arkansas Sports mentioned the Razorbacks landed their 11th top-100 recruit for the class in third baseman Nazzan Zanetello from Missouri. They followed that up by securing another somewhat local prospect, as Diego Ramos announced his commitment last Thursday. He is a right-handed pitcher from Vian, Okla., who actually played with Zanetello and fellow Arkansas commit Dylan Questad at the Area Code Games in San Diego back in August. They were each members of the White Sox roster. Ramos also pitched in various events this summer that put him on the mound at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City and Fenway Park in Boston. At the latter of those, his fastball was 89-91 mph. More recently, though, he sat 91-94 mph while pitching for the Sandlot Baseball program in Tulsa and less than a week later, he committed to Arkansas. Other Arkansas Recruiting Nuggets ~Fresh off a visit to Fayetteville for the Red-White Game, five-star small forward Ron Holland appears to be trending toward Arkansas. In fact, on Wednesday, HawgBeat basketball recruiting analyst Jackson Collier put in a FutureCast for the Razorbacks to land Holland. Click here (premium) to read his explanation for the pick. ~Keeping things on the hardwood, 2024 top-50 prospect Labaron Philon included Arkansas in his top eight Monday morning. The point guard out of Baker High School in Mobile, Ala., is also considering Alabama, Auburn, Cincinnati, Kansas, Michigan, Ole Miss and Tennessee. He is a cousin of former Arkansas football standout Darius Philon. ~In-state linebacker Brian Huff, a 2024 prospect at Valley View High School in Jonesboro, picked up an offer from LSU on Tuesday. It’s the fourth Power Five program to offer him, joining Arkansas, Missouri and Oklahoma State. ~The WWBA World Championships in baseball were earlier this month in Jupiter, Fla., and several future Razorbacks participated. Even though he’s not one of the 11 top-100 commits in the 2023 class, Texarkana’s Ty Waid was arguably the most impressive hitter at the entire event. “What impresses me about Waid…is that he’s a big guy and (has) such a short swing,” Perfect Game VP of Player Personnel David Rawnsley said. “You can think of those big guys, they take big cuts, they’re looking for the power. He’s been so well-coached and adjusted to keeping his swing short. He’s just a solid hitter. … That’s a swing that’s going to really translate right away at the next level.” ~Another Arkansas baseball recruit worth mentioning is 2024 commit Sam Lee from Montgomery, Texas. His future is on the diamond, but the outfielder has also proven to be electric on the gridiron as a receiver and returner. Here’s a look at a couple of plays he made in Lake Creek’s 51-3 win over Rudder last week, improving to 8-0 on the season: *** More coverage of Arkansas recruiting and more… Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
What Tennessee Getting Its Mojo Back Could Mean For Arkansas Recruiting Other Nuggets
Fox News CEO Had Strong Doubts About Trump's Election-Fraud Claims NYT Report Says. The Network Pushed Them Anyway.
Fox News CEO Had Strong Doubts About Trump's Election-Fraud Claims NYT Report Says. The Network Pushed Them Anyway.
Fox News CEO Had Strong Doubts About Trump's Election-Fraud Claims, NYT Report Says. The Network Pushed Them Anyway. https://digitalarkansasnews.com/fox-news-ceo-had-strong-doubts-about-trumps-election-fraud-claims-nyt-report-says-the-network-pushed-them-anyway/ Fox News’ CEO privately doubted Donald Trump’s election fraud claims, The NYT reported.  The network pushed Trump’s baseless claims the 2020 was stolen from him through fraud.  It faces a multibillion dollar lawsuit over the claims from election machines company Dominion.  Loading Something is loading. Thanks for signing up! Access your favorite topics in a personalized feed while you’re on the go. Fox News CEO Suzanne Scott privately doubted Donald Trump’s debunked claims of mass fraud in the 2020 election, but the network continued to broadcast them, The New York Times reported.  Fox is currently battling a $1.9 billion lawsuit from Dominion Voting Systems, which accuses it of spreading baseless claims that Dominion machines were used as part of a plot to deprive Trump of victory in 2020. According to a Dominion attorney at a recent court appearance, Scott sent an email expressing doubt about the election-fraud narrative shortly after the 2020 election. She is said to have warned against “giving the crazies an inch” by promoting the claims.  The Times reported further examples, saying that in meetings Scott was also critical of the election-denial claims. One unnamed Fox staffer told the Times that Scott described herself as being in disbelief at how many people she considered rational believed that it was possible to stop Joe Biden taking office.  Scott’s claims about the election are likely to figure prominently in Dominion’s case, with the company arguing that the network broadcast the fraud claims despite knowing them to be false. A date for the trial has been set for April. Fox News championed Trump’s presidency, but came under intense pressure from the former president and his aides after calling Arizona for Biden, a turning point on election night from which Trump never recovered. Afterwards, Fox News hosts and Trump allies pushed election-fraud claims on the network, often unchallenged.  In a statement to The Times, Fox News defended Scott’s record at the network and said that the discussion of the election fraud claims on the network was protected under the First Amendment.  “There is nothing more newsworthy than covering the president of the United States and his lawyers making allegations,” Fox News Media said in a statement to the Times.  Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Fox News CEO Had Strong Doubts About Trump's Election-Fraud Claims NYT Report Says. The Network Pushed Them Anyway.
Trump Knew Voter Fraud Claims Were Wrong Federal Judge Says As He Orders John Eastman Emails Turned Over
Trump Knew Voter Fraud Claims Were Wrong Federal Judge Says As He Orders John Eastman Emails Turned Over
Trump Knew Voter Fraud Claims Were Wrong, Federal Judge Says As He Orders John Eastman Emails Turned Over https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-knew-voter-fraud-claims-were-wrong-federal-judge-says-as-he-orders-john-eastman-emails-turned-over/ (CNN) — A federal judge on Wednesday ordered the release of emails from John Eastman, a former Donald Trump attorney, to House investigators, saying the communications were made in furtherance of a crime related to Trump’s efforts to subvert the 2020 election. “The emails show that President Trump knew that the specific numbers of voter fraud were wrong but continued to tout those numbers, both in court and to the public,” Judge David O. Carter wrote. “The Court finds that these emails are sufficiently related to and in furtherance of a conspiracy to defraud the United States,” he added. Carter, who sits on the federal district court in central California, already released many of Eastman’s emails from around January 2021 to the House select committee investigating the US Capitol attack, but the two sides were still arguing over 562 additional documents from Eastman’s Chapman University email account. For eight of the 500-plus Eastman documents the judge was examining, the judge said that the materials could be released because they fit in the so-called crime-fraud exception, which allows disclosure of otherwise privileged materials if the communications were related to or in furtherance of illegal or fraudulent conduct. Four of the documents were from email threads discussing prospective election litigation. In them, Carter wrote, “Dr. Eastman and other attorneys suggest that — irrespective of the merits — the primary goal of filing is to delay or otherwise disrupt the January 6 vote.” Carter’s new order cited one email where Trump’s attorneys state that “merely having this case pending in the Supreme Court, and not ruled on, may be enough to delay consideration of Georgia.” “This email, read in context with other documents in this review, make clear that President Trump filed certain lawsuits not to obtain legal relief, but to disrupt or delay the January 6 congressional proceedings through the courts,” the ruling stated. “The Court finds that these four documents are sufficiently related to and in furtherance of the obstruction crime,” it adds. CNN has reached out to representatives for Trump and Eastman for comment. Four other emails that the judge is ordering disclosed “demonstrate an effort by President Trump and his attorneys to press false claims in federal court for the purpose of delaying the January 6 vote.” Carter pointed to litigation that Trump filed challenging the election results in Georgia. The judge went on to cite a December 2020 email where Eastman said that Trump had been made aware that some of the allegations made in a early December state court election challenge were inaccurate. According to Carter, Eastman wrote in the December 30, 2020, email: “Although the President signed a verification for [the state court filing] back on Dec. 1, he has since been made aware that some of the allegations (and evidence proffered by the experts) has been inaccurate. For him to sign a new verification with that knowledge (and incorporation by reference) would not be accurate.” Yet Trump and his attorneys went on to file a federal lawsuit referencing the same inaccurate numbers, Carter said. The federal lawsuit Trump’s attorneys filed did not incorporate the numbers in the body of the complaint, but rather, the lawsuit included as an attachment the state court election challenge. Trump filed it, as Carter noted, without “rectifying, clarifying, or otherwise changing” the bogus fraud numbers. The federal lawsuit filed by Trump also included that a footnote that Carter characterized as a Trump “attempt to disclaim his responsibility over the misleading allegations.” Trump said in the footnote he was only relying on the figures that that had been presented to him. “But, by his attorneys’ own admissions, the information provided to him was that the alleged voter fraud numbers were inaccurate,” Carter said Wednesday. Carter’s findings that Trump and Eastman “knowingly” misrepresented voter fraud numbers in federal court will bolster the committee’s investigation into the former President’s election reversal gambits. The committee has repeatedly argued that a core tenet of Trump’s plan to overturn the 2020 election results was to file frivolous lawsuits intended to delay certification of the results in key swing states. The judge’s ruling echoes that sentiment. The revelation of the emails also comes as the Justice Department as well as the local prosecutor in Atlanta have launched their own criminal probes looking at the 2020 election schemes. Eastman must also hand over portions of materials related to his proposal for then-Vice President Mike Pence to disrupt certification of the 2020 election on January 6, 2021, the judge ordered Wednesday. Thirty-three documents were ordered disclosed in total, under the new order, which set a deadline for doing so for October 28. Earlier this month, the committee argued that Eastman has been “consistently unreliable” as he’s tried to protect his communications from the ongoing probe and that the investigators should now get access to more emails from one of his work email accounts. © 2022 Circle City Broadcasting I, LLC. | All Rights Reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Knew Voter Fraud Claims Were Wrong Federal Judge Says As He Orders John Eastman Emails Turned Over
Trump Answers Questions During Deposition In E. Jean Carroll Lawsuit
Trump Answers Questions During Deposition In E. Jean Carroll Lawsuit
Trump Answers Questions During Deposition In E. Jean Carroll Lawsuit https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-answers-questions-during-deposition-in-e-jean-carroll-lawsuit/ (CNN) — Former President Donald Trump appeared Wednesday for a deposition as part of the defamation lawsuit brought by former magazine columnist E. Jean Carroll. Last week, a federal judge cleared the way for Trump’s testimony saying the former President had already taken steps to delay the case and he “should not be able to run out the clock.” “We’re pleased that on behalf of our client, E. Jean Carroll, we were able to take Donald Trump’s deposition today. We are not able to comment further,” said a spokesperson for Kaplan Hecker & Fink, the law firm representing Carroll. Lawyers for Trump have not responded to a request for comment. It is not clear what Trump said during the deposition, which was taken at his Mar-a-Lago resort. Carroll sued Trump in 2019 for defamation after he denied her claim that he raped her in a New York department store in the mid-1990s. She was scheduled to sit for her deposition last Friday. The legal stakes for Trump were recently raised when Carroll said she intends to sue him next month under a new New York State law that allows victims of sexual assault to sue years after the attack. His testimony in the defamation case could be used in a future lawsuit. The defamation case has been in legal limbo for over a year. Trump and the Justice Department argued Trump was a federal employee and his statements denying Carroll’s allegations were made in response to reporters’ questions while he was at the White House. They argued the Justice Department should be substituted as the defendant, which, because the government cannot be sued for defamation, would end the lawsuit. Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled against Trump and DOJ. They appealed. Last month a federal appeals court in New York ruled that Trump was a federal employee when he denied Carroll’s claim of rape and sexual assault. However, the federal appeals court asked the Washington, DC, appeals court to determine if Trump was acting within the scope of his employment when he made the allegedly defamatory statements. If the DC court finds in favor of Trump, then the Justice Department would likely be substituted as a defendant and the case dismissed. The DC appeals court has not yet taken up the matter and it is unclear if or when they will. This year Trump was ordered by a New York State judge to sit for a deposition with the New York attorney general’s office. Trump refused to answer questions, citing his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Last month the New York attorney general’s office filed a $250 million lawsuit against Trump, his eldest children and the Trump Organization for allegedly defrauding lenders and insurers through false financial statements. Trump has denied any wrongdoing and said the lawsuit was politically motivated. In civil cases if someone declines to answer questions the jury is allowed to apply an adverse inference against the person when deciding their potential liability. Last year Trump sat for a deposition for a civil lawsuit brought by protestors who claimed they were injured outside of Trump Tower during his first presidential campaign. He is also expected to testify in another civil lawsuit relating to a marketing campaign by the end of the month. © 2022 Circle City Broadcasting I, LLC. | All Rights Reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Answers Questions During Deposition In E. Jean Carroll Lawsuit