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Shooting Outside NY GOP Governor Nominee's Home Sharpens Debate Over Crime And Guns KESQ
Shooting Outside NY GOP Governor Nominee's Home Sharpens Debate Over Crime And Guns KESQ
Shooting Outside NY GOP Governor Nominee's Home Sharpens Debate Over Crime And Guns – KESQ https://digitalarkansasnews.com/shooting-outside-ny-gop-governor-nominees-home-sharpens-debate-over-crime-and-guns-kesq/ By Gregory Krieg, CNN A shooting that wounded two teenagers on the property of Rep. Lee Zeldin, the Republican nominee for governor of New York, was a disturbing development in a campaign that has seen him hammer Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul over public safety and a controversial bail reform law enacted more than three years ago. The random incident Sunday afternoon outside his Long Island house — his two 16-year-old daughters were inside, terrified but uninjured — provided Zeldin with an opportunity, however personally unwelcome, to sharpen his message on an issue for which concerns cross party lines and potential solutions have often defied typical partisan divides. “This is day after day after day,” Zeldin told Fox News on Monday. “And there are a lot of parents, there are a lot of families, dealing with this reality of rising crime in New York. For us, fortunately, my daughters knew exactly how to respond. But listen, they were just sitting there at the kitchen table doing homework and bullets started going off all around them.” An ally of former President Donald Trump, Zeldin has mostly run a one-issue campaign focused on crime and his criticism of the 2019 Democratic-led enactment of a bail reform law that made it more difficult for judges to keep some suspects behind bars. The law has been amended twice, but Republicans and some Democrats have pushed for more substantial revisions. While the backlash is real, Zeldin’s ability to parlay it into a winning message remains in doubt. He has struggled to break through with voters in deep-blue New York and Hochul has used his opposition to new gun restrictions to undermine his “soft on crime” attacks. Zeldin entered the general election at a clear disadvantage. There are more than twice as many registered Democrats in New York as Republicans, whose party has been hollowed out by a generation of cascading defeats. The last GOP victory in a statewide election came in 2002, when Gov. George Pataki won his third term in office. Hochul, nominally an incumbent after replacing disgraced former Gov. Andrew Cuomo following his resignation last year amid a sexual harassment scandal, has distanced herself from her predecessor, but not the state’s Democratic donor apparatus, and has trounced Zeldin in fundraising. Zeldin has employed familiar GOP attacks against Hochul over the economy and inflation, but like other Republicans around the country, he sees an opening on the criminal justice front. Last November, months after he entered the GOP primary, Republicans won a pair of district attorney races in the New York City suburbs. In Nassau County, the incumbent Democratic executive was also unseated by a Republican. The backlash to bail reform played a central role in GOP messaging in those races. Zeldin has followed that roadmap. Perhaps, some critics suggest, too closely for a candidate whose path to an upset win requires a strong performance in the suburbs and upstate, but also a significant dent in the blue wall of New York City. For her part, Hochul has largely focused her broadsides against Zeldin on his ties to Trump and his opposition to abortion rights. (Zeldin has said he would not seek to change state law guaranteeing access to the procedure.) When pressed on the bail reform law, Hochul has pointed to the amendments passed by the legislature. Zeldin’s efforts to make hay over the controversy has been hamstrung by cash woes. Short on money, he turned to Trump for a fundraiser in early September. The event netted Zeldin’s campaign a reported $1.5 million but underscored a fundamental conundrum — Trump, and his wing of the Republican Party, are crucial drivers of campaign funds, but close public ties to them can be self-defeating in a state the former President lost by 23 points in 2020. “I don’t think Zeldin is in an impossible situation. In fact, I think he’s going to do better than expected,” said Kenneth Sherrill, a professor emeritus of political science at Hunter College. “But the campaign has been totally negative, hasn’t presented any positive reasons for supporting him. He says nothing about his record in prior offices. He says nothing about issues other than to attack. At some point, he has to explain why he’s a desirable alternative to Hochul.” Zeldin has found an unwilling ally of sorts in New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat who, though he endorsed Hochul, has pilloried the state’s bail reform law and demanded lawmakers hold a special session in Albany to further restrict rules over pretrial detention. His ask was rejected. But Zeldin and Adams break sharply on gun violence, with the mayor — along with Hochul — pushing for stricter regulations on firearms. Zeldin criticized a new round of gun control measures passed in Albany and signed by Hochul this past summer that sought to circumvent a recent Supreme Court decision striking down some restrictions on concealed carry outside the home. “I think we need to separate a law-abiding New Yorker who wants to safely and securely carry a firearm for, solely, their self-defense and the criminals who want to carry firearms illegally and commit offense after offense after offense, harming others, and then because of the system in New York, they end up back on the street,” Zeldin told Fox News in an interview from early July. A federal court last week blocked enforcement of large chunks of the law. The ruling is being appealed by the state attorney general’s office. Early Sunday evening, Hochul tweeted a conciliatory note in response to the incident involving Zeldin’s family. “I’ve been briefed on the shooting outside of Congressman Zeldin’s home. As we await more details, I’m relieved to hear the Zeldin family is safe and grateful for law enforcement’s quick response,” Hochul said from her campaign’s Twitter account. The shooting marked the second time Zeldin has been thrust into the headlines by an act of violence. The first came over the summer, when a man wielding a sharp object accosted him onstage at a campaign event near Rochester. Zeldin was not hurt, and the alleged attacker was promptly subdued and arrested. Asked about the shooting on Monday, Hochul reiterated to reporters that her office had “sent our message right away” that the state police would be made available if desired to aid in the investigation. “It’s a reminder, we all have to work together to get guns off the streets,” she added. “And so I will continue, as I’ve been on this journey as governor, to do everything we can to ensure that our streets are safe. That is one of my highest priorities.” The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Shooting Outside NY GOP Governor Nominee's Home Sharpens Debate Over Crime And Guns KESQ
No. 12 West Texas A&M Welcomes SWOSU For Non-Conference Matchup West Texas A&M University Athletics
No. 12 West Texas A&M Welcomes SWOSU For Non-Conference Matchup West Texas A&M University Athletics
No. 12 West Texas A&M Welcomes SWOSU For Non-Conference Matchup – West Texas A&M University Athletics https://digitalarkansasnews.com/no-12-west-texas-am-welcomes-swosu-for-non-conference-matchup-west-texas-am-university-athletics/ Match Notes  Live Stats ( SWOSU ) Watch Live   CANYON, Texas – The West Texas A&M Lady Buffs are back in action at The Box on Tuesday, Oct. 11, to go head-to-head to Southwestern Oklahoma State. First serve is set for 6 p.m. against the Bulldogs in Canyon.   LIVE COVERAGE A live stream and stats will be provided by the WT Communications department.  The match will be streamed on the Lone Star Conference Digital Network.  Fans will be able to purchase a $10 daily pass that will give them access to all contests on the network that day as well as access to previously aired games from the current season for 24 hours.    Fans can also purchase a $50 volleyball season pass that will give them access to all Lone Star Conference volleyball matches.  In addition to live and archived streaming options, viewers will have the option to purchase and download games from the 2022 season for $10 each.   SCOUTING THE COMPETITION Southwestern Oklahoma State SWOSU comes to Canyon with a 10-9 overall record and 6-3 in Great American Conference under 11-year head coach Josh Collins.  With the Bulldogs, Collins has guided SWOSU to a 157-151 overall record and one GAC Tournament Championship. The Bulldogs were selected to finish second in the GAC Preseason Poll.    The Lady Buffs lead the all-time series 14-1 including 8-1 in Canyon.  In their last matchup, WT defeated the Bulldogs 3-1 at the BritKare Lady Buff Classic to expand their win streak out to two.     As a team, the Bulldogs are hitting .213 with 13.1 kills per frame led by Lacy Mott. The sophomore from Waxahachie, Texas product has totaled 242 kills (3.51/set) on 594 attempts with 93 errors to hit .251. Terez Chavez paces the offense with 438 assists (6.26/set) while Maicee Morgan has a team-high 28 aces. Mott also leads the team in digs with 218 (3.16/set) and Zoey Sparks has 71.0 blocks on the year.    LAST TIME OUT WT remains undefeated in Lone Star Conference play after recording a pair of sweeps over Midwestern State and Texas Woman’s last weekend.  Torrey Miller hit .206 on the weekend with 24 kills and 11 errors while Blair Moreland and Ainsley Malis combined for 56 assists to pace the offense. Abi Nash had a career-high six aces against the Mustangs.  Emma Patterson led the back row with 47 digs and Torrey Miller and Kayla Elliott each had four blocks.   A LOOK AT THE NUMBERS For the third straight week, WT ranks second in the conference in attack percentage at .250 while leading the league in assists per frame (12.35).  The Lady Buffs also are second in kills average (13.58), third in blocks average (2.32) and opponent hitting percentage (.145).    The Lady Buffs are represented in the Top 10 of every individual leaderboard ranking as high as second. Freshman Taytum Stow is second in hitting percentage (.350) and blocks per frame (1.24) while junior outside Torrey Miller is third in kills average (3.92) and points (4.52/set). Stow ranks 14th in Division II in blocks per set while Miller ranks in the top 30 in kills per set and points per set.    AROUND THE LONE STAR  With the pair of sweeps over the weekend, WT took the reins of the top spot in the LSC standings with a perfect 8-0 league record.  DBU (7-1) sits in second in the conference rankings followed by Texas A&M International (5-1), St. Mary’s (6-2), Angelo State (6-2), UT Tyler (5-3), UT Permian Basin (5-3) and Lubbock Christian (5-5) rounding out the top eight. The top eight programs from the conference will advance to the league tournament on Nov. 10-12 hosted on the campus of the top seed.    IN THE POLLS Wayne State remains the national leader with a perfect 21-0 record, earning all possible 47 first-place votes while MSU Denver ranks second and Concordia-St. Paul comes in at third.  Tampa stands fourth in the nation followed by Minnesota Duluth, St. Cloud State, Southwest Minnesota State, Nebraska-Kearney, Alaska Anchorage, and Washburn rounding out the Top 10.    The South Central Region has five schools represented in the national standings led by MSU Denver in second along with WT (12th), Regis (16th), Colorado Mesa (20th), and Colorado School of Mines (23rd) while Colorado State-Pueblo and Dallas Baptist are receiving votes.    WT HEAD COACH KENDRA POTTS Kendra Potts is in her fourth season at the helm of Lady Buff Volleyball with an overall 73-20 (.785) record and 45-10 (.818) in league play.  Potts led her alma mater to the program’s 14th NCAA Elite Eight Appearance after capturing the South Central Regional title to become the sixth head coach in program history to guide WT to the Elite Eight.    MAKING HISTORY Following the LSC opening weekend, WT swept the LSC weekly awards for the first time since 2011 as Ainsley Malis was named the Setter of the Week while Torrey Miller and Taytum Stow earned Offensive and Defensive Player of the Week honors.  The trio became the first Lady Buffs to sweep the weekly honors since Nov. 2, 2011, with Ashley Davis, Erin Dougherty, and Lacy Hayes where WT finished 34-3 overall.    HOME DOMINANCE WT houses one of the best home environments in the country across all of NCAA volleyball.  The WTAMU Fieldhouse, best known as “The Box” is home to 20 Lone Star Conference Championships, 14 regional titles and three NCAA Division II National Championships.  At “The Box”, the Lady Buffs are 515-83 since 1980 for an incredible winning percentage of 86.1% and 90.4% during conference play.    BRITKARE COURT WT Athletics proudly announced a new state-of-the-art court for the historic home of Lady Buff Volleyball thanks to a generous gift from BritKare Home Medical that highlighted the 2021 season.   ­BritKare Court at The Box features a top-line Taraflex court surface that is widely used in Division I arenas, professional volleyball and was most recently featured at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.     UP NEXT WT will hit the road this weekend to take on UAFS in Fort Smith, Ark. on Friday, Oct. 14 before traveling to Oklahoma City to go head-to-head with Oklahoma Christian on Saturday, Oct. 15. Following the adventures in Arkansas and Oklahoma, the Lady Buffs will play a midweek matchup at Lubbock Christian on Wednesday, Oct. 19.    FOLLOW THE LADY BUFFS Fans can follow and stay up to date on all the Lady Buff action on online and on social media.  Follow the Lady Buffs on Twitter (@WTVolleyball), Instagram (@ladybuffvolleyball), Facebook (@WTVolleyball) and now Tik Tok (@WestTexasAMVB).    Players Mentioned #16 Kayla Elliott MB 6′ 0″ Redshirt Junior #31 Torrey Miller OH 5′ 11″ Sophomore #25 Emma Patterson DS/L 5′ 5″ Freshman #14 Blair Moreland S/OH 5′ 11″ Freshman #13 Abi Nash OH 5′ 9″ Junior #9 Ainsley Malis S 5′ 7″ Sophomore #4 Taytum Stow MB 6′ 3″ Freshman Players Mentioned #16 Kayla Elliott 6′ 0″ Redshirt Junior MB #31 Torrey Miller 5′ 11″ Sophomore OH #25 Emma Patterson 5′ 5″ Freshman DS/L #14 Blair Moreland 5′ 11″ Freshman S/OH #13 Abi Nash 5′ 9″ Junior OH #9 Ainsley Malis 5′ 7″ Sophomore S #4 Taytum Stow 6′ 3″ Freshman MB Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
No. 12 West Texas A&M Welcomes SWOSU For Non-Conference Matchup West Texas A&M University Athletics
U.N. Publicly Rejects Russia's Call For Secret Vote On Ukraine
U.N. Publicly Rejects Russia's Call For Secret Vote On Ukraine
U.N. Publicly Rejects Russia's Call For Secret Vote On Ukraine https://digitalarkansasnews.com/u-n-publicly-rejects-russias-call-for-secret-vote-on-ukraine/ UNITED NATIONS, Oct 10 (Reuters) – The United Nations General Assembly voted on Monday to reject Russia’s call for the 193-member body to hold a secret ballot later this week on whether to condemn Moscow’s move to annex four partially occupied regions in Ukraine. The General Assembly decided, with 107 votes in favor, that it would hold a public vote – not a secret ballot – on a draft resolution that condemns Russia’s “illegal so-called referenda” and the “attempted illegal annexation.” Diplomats said the vote on the resolution would likely be on Wednesday or Thursday. Only 13 countries on Monday opposed holding a public vote on the draft resolution, another 39 countries abstained and the remaining countries – including Russia and China – did not vote. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Russia had argued that Western lobbying meant that “it may be very difficult if positions are expressed publicly.” During the meeting on Monday Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia questioned the push to condemn Moscow. “What does this have to do with peace and security or trying to settle conflicts?” said Nebenzia, describing it as “yet one more step towards division and escalation, which I’m sure is not something the absolute majority of states in this room need.” After the General Assembly decided on Monday that it would hold a public vote on the draft resolution, Russia immediately tried to get the body to reconsider the issue, but it overwhelmingly failed. Moscow has moved to annex four partially occupied regions in Ukraine – Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia – after staging what it called referendums. Ukraine and allies have denounced the votes as illegal and coercive. The draft U.N. General Assembly resolution calls on states not to recognize Russia’s move and reaffirms the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine. The United Nations headquarters building is pictured with a UN logo in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., March 1, 2022. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo ‘TRAIL OF BLOOD’ Ukraine’s U.N. Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya called on countries to defend the principles of the founding U.N. Charter. “A trail of blood is left behind the Russian delegation when it enters the General Assembly and the hall is filled up with the smell of smoldering human flesh. That’s what we have tolerated in Syria. That’s what is happening today in Ukraine,” he told the General Assembly on Monday. Russia rained cruise missiles on busy Ukrainian cities on Monday in what the United States called “horrific strikes”, killing civilians and knocking out power and heat with its most widespread air attacks since the start of the war more than seven months ago. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken pressed the international community earlier on Monday to make clear that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s actions were “completely unacceptable.” “Now is the time to speak out in support for Ukraine; it is not the time for abstentions, placating words, or equivocations under claims of neutrality. The core principles of the U.N. Charter are at stake,” Blinken said in a statement. Russia vetoed a similar resolution in the 15-member Security Council last month. It has been trying to chip away at its international isolation after nearly three-quarters of the General Assembly reprimanded Moscow and demanded it withdraw its troops within a week of its Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine. The moves at the United Nations mirror what happened in 2014 after Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimea. At the Security Council Russia vetoed a draft resolution that opposed a referendum on the status of Crimea and urged countries not to recognize it. The General Assembly then adopted a resolution declaring the referendum invalid with 100 votes in favor, 11 against and 58 formal abstentions, while two dozen countries didn’t take part. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Michelle Nichols; Editing by Alistair Bell and Rosalba O’Brien Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
U.N. Publicly Rejects Russia's Call For Secret Vote On Ukraine
OPEC Cut Spurs U.S. Hedging But Against Lower Oil Prices
OPEC Cut Spurs U.S. Hedging But Against Lower Oil Prices
OPEC Cut Spurs U.S. Hedging – But Against Lower Oil Prices https://digitalarkansasnews.com/opec-cut-spurs-u-s-hedging-but-against-lower-oil-prices/ A model of 3D printed oil barrels is seen in front of displayed stock graph going down in this illustration taken, December 1, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo NEW YORK, Oct 10 (Reuters) – The decision by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies last week to cut oil production has spurred a flurry of activity in the options market – but with more U.S. bettors opting for a bearish stance, data from CME Group showed. OPEC+, as the group is known, decided on Wednesday to cut its target by 2 million barrels per day (bpd), including voluntary production curbs by Saudi Arabia and other nations. Oil futures have risen over 7% since to five-week highs, as the move was seen as putting a floor under the market. However, the U.S. oil options market skewed toward buying of put options, used to either bet on or protect against downside movement. There are several reasons why this can happen, including worry about weaker demand, or because the cheapness of those options made it an opportune time for oil companies to buy to protect against downside. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com “I would classify the put buying as hedges,” said Bob Iaccino, chief market strategist and co-founder of Path Trading Partners. “Demand is still expected to be weak and get weaker given the overall economic picture… so it’s just massive, massive hedging in case the downside develops.” Trading volumes for U.S. crude futures puts and calls for November delivery gained over 40% to Wednesday, the day of the OPEC+ meeting, from Tuesday, data from CME Group showed. Volume in puts rose to 25,615 for the U.S. crude futures November contract on Wednesday, 10,922 more than the during the previous session, CME Group said. By contrast, there were 19,473 call options – bets on a higher price – purchased that day. “The put-to-call skew actually moved out in favor of the put after the OPEC decision,” said Bob Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho in New York. On Thursday and Friday, volumes in puts totaled 15,579 and 25,771, respectively, while volumes in calls totaled 16,087 and 42,291, CME Group data showed. Trading spiked on Friday after the White House suggested last week it was reviewing its relationship with Saudi Arabia, and as it seeks ways to reduce OPEC’s control over energy prices. In the futures market, crude spreads widened on Friday, with near-term contracts rising at a faster rate than later-dated contracts. That signals renewed worry about current supply, which is more of a bullish indicator. “There is plenty of supply uncertainty going into 2023 and let’s also not forget that there is also a lot of demand uncertainty given the macro outlook,” said Warren Patterson, head of commodities research at ING. The spread between international benchmark Brent expiring in December 2022 versus December 2023 climbed more than 12% to over $13 per barrel on Friday, highest since June, Refinitiv Eikon data showed. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com Reporting by Stephanie Kelly, Florence Tan and Noah Browning; editing by David Gaffen and Marguerita Choy Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Stephanie Kelly Thomson Reuters A New-York-based correspondent covering the U.S. crude market and member of the energy team since 2018 covering the oil and fuel markets as well as federal policy around renewable fuels. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
OPEC Cut Spurs U.S. Hedging But Against Lower Oil Prices
Photos: The Black Keys 'Dropout Boogie' Tour Hits Los Angeles
Photos: The Black Keys 'Dropout Boogie' Tour Hits Los Angeles
Photos: The Black Keys 'Dropout Boogie' Tour Hits Los Angeles https://digitalarkansasnews.com/photos-the-black-keys-dropout-boogie-tour-hits-los-angeles/ PHOTOS: The Black Keys ‘Dropout Boogie’ Tour Whips Up a Frenzy at the Forum in Los Angeles The Black Keys, Forum LA, 2022 The Black Keys released their 11th studio album, Dropout Boogie, back in May. Since early July, guitarist/singer Dan Auerbach and drummer Patrick Carney have been out on the road with their backing band, celebrating the new record and, of course, playing a handful of classics and hits from their career, which to date has won them five Grammy Awards (among 14 nominations), tens of millions of song streams, fans around the world and a legacy as one of the most successful bands in rock music for the past two-plus decades. The tour stopped through the Kia Forum in Los Angeles this past Saturday, Oct. 8 with special guests Band of Horses and the Velveteers, and saw the Black Keys play six songs from their acclaimed 2010 album, Brothers, which is widely considered their breakthrough record after five albums of mostly “underground” acclaim. Elsewhere in the set were songs from other albums — including 2021’s Delta Kream, a collection of covers of blues classics that inspired the duo along the way to superstardom. The set list: I Got Mine Howlin’ for You Fever Tighten Up Your Touch It Ain′t Over Gold On The Ceiling Stay All Night (Junior Kimbrough cover) Poor Black Mattie (R.L. Burnside cover) Goin’ Down South (R.L. Burnside cover) Poor Boy Long Ways From Home (John Fahey cover) Crawlin’ Kingsnake (John Lee Hooker cover) Have Love, Will Travel (Richard Berry cover) Lo/Hi Everlasting Light Next Girl Ten Cent Pistol Your Team Is Looking Good Wild Child She’s Long Gone Encore: Little Black Submarines Lonely Boy Remaining dates on the Dropout Boogie tour: Oct. 10: Phoenix, AZ – Ak-Chin Pavilion Oct. 13: Rogers, AR – Walmart AMP Oct. 15: Houston, TX – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion Oct. 17: Austin, TX – Moody Center ATX Oct. 18: Dallas, TX – Dos Equis Pavilion Enjoy a gallery of photos from the Los Angeles gig below, courtesy of Jerome Brunet. The Black Keys: (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) (Image: © Jerome Brunet) Band Of Horses, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) Band Of Horses, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) Band Of Horses, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) Band Of Horses, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) Band Of Horses, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) Band Of Horses, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) Band Of Horses, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) The Velveteers, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) The Velveteers, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet)  The Velveteers, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) The Velveteers, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) The Velveteers, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) The Velveteers, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) The Velveteers, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) The Velveteers, Forum LA, 2022 (Image: © Jerome Brunet) Post navigation Related Posts Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Photos: The Black Keys 'Dropout Boogie' Tour Hits Los Angeles
Northeast Arkansans For Animals Provides Low Cost Clinic
Northeast Arkansans For Animals Provides Low Cost Clinic
Northeast Arkansans For Animals Provides Low Cost Clinic https://digitalarkansasnews.com/northeast-arkansans-for-animals-provides-low-cost-clinic/ JONESBORO, Ark. (KAIT) – A deadline is approaching for those who want to register for a low-cost vaccination clinic. Northeast Arkansans for Animals is hosting a vaccination clinic on Saturday, October 15 and said the deadline to register was 6 p.m. on Wednesday, October 12. Director Wannda Turner said the clinic will provide a variety of shots. “We see dogs and cats for four hours and they get rabies, five in one, Bordetella, Three in One and a heartworm test. Each of those are only ten dollars apiece. So, at the most they’ll spend is 40 dollars.” She said this clinic is important for those who needed the low cost because not keeping up with shots could cause them to lose their pets. “State law says your dog or cat must be current on rabies or you can get fined. We have managed to keep rabies out of Craighead County for 16 years,” Turner said. She said the support from many has allowed the organization to give back in the form of life-saving clinics. “I just want to say that without the community’s support, the volunteers, Jonesboro Animal Control, the City of Jonesboro — we would not be able to have done 150 clinics in 16 years.” Turner said that she’s happy to provide the service for those who may not be able to afford it, as it can sometimes mean the difference between having or not having a pet. “At the end of the clinic, by the time we get everything picked up, we’re all exhausted but it’s the best exhausted I ever am,” she said. For anyone wanting to bring their pets to the clinic, pre-register by 6 p.m. Wednesday, October 15. No walk-ins will be allowed. The link is https://form.jotform.com/222633527594158. Copyright 2022 KAIT. All rights reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Northeast Arkansans For Animals Provides Low Cost Clinic
City Accepting Items For New Wilson Park Promenade
City Accepting Items For New Wilson Park Promenade
City Accepting Items For New Wilson Park Promenade https://digitalarkansasnews.com/city-accepting-items-for-new-wilson-park-promenade/ Bicycle chains, gears and brake rotors were recently embedded into the concrete surrounding a new water fountain at Gregory Park in Fayetteville. (Flyer photo/Todd Gill) City officials are asking for interesting items that can be incorporated into a new promenade at Wilson Park. The items will be embedded into concrete in select areas for decoration and as part of a scavenger hunt for children. The work is part of a series of planned projects that parks officials hope will lead to more interaction with the stream that runs through the park. Aside from the new streamside promenade, plans also include a new social hub, new trails and new creek crossings. Items should be flat, durable and weather resistant, similar to the metal bicycle chains, gears and brake rotors that were recently embedded into the concrete surrounding a new water fountain at Gregory Park. From the city: Small items like coins will be easy to use, while items larger than a baking sheet may be difficult to incorporate into the design. Anyone who has items to donate should take them to the Parks and Recreation office at 1455 S. Happy Hollow Road. Officials said they can’t guarantee everything will be used, but the more variety the better. For questions about the project, call 479-444-3488. A closer look at the embedded bicycle parts at Gregory Park. (Flyer photo/Todd Gill) Flyer Newsletter The latest headlines from the Fayetteville Flyer, delivered straight to your inbox. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
City Accepting Items For New Wilson Park Promenade
Helping Hand Of Greater Little Rock Serves Hundreds A Week
Helping Hand Of Greater Little Rock Serves Hundreds A Week
Helping Hand Of Greater Little Rock Serves Hundreds A Week https://digitalarkansasnews.com/helping-hand-of-greater-little-rock-serves-hundreds-a-week/ Helping Hand of Greater Little Rock serves hundreds a week  KATV Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Helping Hand Of Greater Little Rock Serves Hundreds A Week
Analysis | Welcome Home Marjorie Taylor Greene
Analysis | Welcome Home Marjorie Taylor Greene
Analysis | Welcome Home, Marjorie Taylor Greene https://digitalarkansasnews.com/analysis-welcome-home-marjorie-taylor-greene/ The first time The Washington Post wrote about Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) was in the context of what made her exceptional: She was an avowed adherent of QAnon. And not just of the this guy Q has some interesting thoughts variety; rather, Greene celebrated that “there’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to take this global cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles out” with Donald Trump in the White House. This was June 2020, and Greene had simply made it to the runoff in the Republican primary. The article was caveated with ifs about winning the primary and then the general, but it was clear what path she was on. Reporter Colby Itkowitz contacted members of the Republican leadership — including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) and the conference’s chair, Liz Cheney (Wyo.) — but they weren’t interested in offering comment. What seemed to be afoot was that the Republican House caucus was adding another member to its fringe, someone who’d occasionally make headlines for saying something embarrassing or introducing some weird, doomed piece of legislation. That sense was probably reinforced when Greene, as a new member of the chamber, quickly generated headlines for past comments about leading Democrats; the Democratic majority stripped her of any committee assignments, moving her from backbench to no bench. But that was not the path Greene was destined to follow. Past members of the right-wing fringe who earned spots in Congress responded largely by folding into the white noise of the legislative process. Perhaps in part because Greene so explicitly had no part in that process — or, more likely, because she never had any interest in it in the first place — Greene helped create a new style of fringe Republican legislator. She wasn’t former Texas congressman Ron Paul (R) wanting to eradicate the Federal Reserve and she wasn’t former Iowa congressman Steve King (R) advocating hard-line immigration policies well before Trump. She understood that the platform had more value for communications purposes than legislative ones. In essence, election to Congress simply gave Greene a louder megaphone to attack the aforementioned cabal (even if she described them differently now). It allowed her to join her power with other fringe House members, such as Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), to engage in an effort that’s equal parts trolling and exaggeration. Trump loved Greene from the outset, and her unwavering fealty to him has earned her the ability to hitch herself to him repeatedly. Trump rallies now regularly feature speeches from the first-term congresswoman from rural Georgia. This is not because she is broadly popular. YouGov recently conducted polling for the Economist that asked people to evaluate a range of Republicans, from members of the media to politicians. Trump was the most popular among Republicans, followed by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Fox News’s Tucker Carlson. Far fewer Republicans have an opinion of Greene than those more-famous names, but even if we adjust the responses, evaluating favorability just among those with an opinion, Greene was seventh of seven. Yet, as the Associated Press reported Monday, Greene has been increasingly welcomed back into the mix with the Republican establishment. When McCarthy announced the party’s midterm agenda in Pennsylvania last month, Greene was seated right behind him. “Greene’s political currency stretches beyond her massive social media following and her ability to rake in sizable sums from donors,” the AP’s Lisa Mascaro reported. “Her proximity to Trump makes her a force that cannot be ignored by what’s left of her mainstream GOP colleagues.” This is the point: She may not be broadly popular or influential, but she is influential in a place that other Republicans aren’t. She’s popular with a set of Republicans who are antagonistic to people such as Kevin McCarthy. Greene: Biden’s 5 million illegal aliens are on the verge of replacing you, your jobs, and your kids in school. Coming from all over the world, they’re also replacing your culture pic.twitter.com/eRJwUlq11J — Acyn (@Acyn) October 9, 2022 It’s not entirely clear that McCarthy is extending an olive branch to the fringe. It’s that he can’t afford to let the fringe agitate at the fringe. In the minority (though perhaps not exclusively then), there’s more power in Greene’s approach to serving in the House — shouting into microphones and maintaining an omnipresence in conservative media — than in simply trying to come up with doomed legislation. Greene has some of that, certainly, but it’s often the case that she uses the policy documents to boost her media position and not the opposite. (She’s offered up innumerable impeachment articles, including several targeting President Biden.) McCarthy, of course, has his own ambitions. If Republicans regain the majority in November, he’d like to be speaker of the House. Allying with Greene and Gaetz and that cadre of legislators will make such an ascension more likely. But it means that his party again shifts to the right, as it has over and over since at least 2010. In 2011, after the tea party wave brought a new contingent of conservatives to Washington, the New York Times profiled McCarthy’s tricky job in corralling their votes as majority whip. That’s still his job today but with a frequently more-extreme caucus. (And spotty success.) Cheney, freed from the shackles of protecting the Republican caucus, is no longer refraining from comment on Greene. In August, she said she’d rather work with Democrats than with Greene. Of course, by that point she was freed of political shackles entirely, having lost her bid for reelection to a Trump-endorsed Republican primary opponent. When she was conference chair, Cheney would often stand behind McCarthy as he spoke to the media. Cheney is no longer behind McCarthy. Greene is; her time in exile is coming to an end. Consider the shift just since 2020. In two years’ time, who will be standing in the background as the leader of the GOP makes an announcement about policy and direction? More importantly, who will the leader be who is making the announcement? Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Analysis | Welcome Home Marjorie Taylor Greene
Facebook Posts Claimed Donald Trump Was Back On Twitter Following News That Billionaire Latest Tweet By PolitiFact | LatestLY
Facebook Posts Claimed Donald Trump Was Back On Twitter Following News That Billionaire Latest Tweet By PolitiFact | LatestLY
Facebook Posts Claimed Donald Trump Was Back On Twitter Following News That Billionaire … – Latest Tweet By PolitiFact | 🔎 LatestLY https://digitalarkansasnews.com/facebook-posts-claimed-donald-trump-was-back-on-twitter-following-news-that-billionaire-latest-tweet-by-politifact-%f0%9f%94%8e-latestly/ The latest Tweet by PolitiFact states, ‘Facebook posts claimed Donald Trump was back on Twitter following news that billionaire Elon Musk revived a deal to buy the social media platform. …’ Socially Team Latestly| Oct 11, 2022 02:21 AM IST Facebook posts claimed Donald Trump was back on Twitter following news that billionaire Elon Musk revived a deal to buy the social media platform. https://t.co/Ln7JSSivuS— PolitiFact (@PolitiFact) October 10, 2022 (SocialLY brings you all the latest breaking news, viral trends and information from social media world, including Twitter, Instagram and Youtube. The above post is embeded directly from the user’s social media account and LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body. The views and facts appearing in the social media post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY, also LatestLY does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.) Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Facebook Posts Claimed Donald Trump Was Back On Twitter Following News That Billionaire Latest Tweet By PolitiFact | LatestLY
DHS Seeks Volunteers To Process Ukrainians; Critics Fear rubber-Stamp
DHS Seeks Volunteers To Process Ukrainians; Critics Fear rubber-Stamp
DHS Seeks Volunteers To Process Ukrainians; Critics Fear ‘rubber-Stamp’ https://digitalarkansasnews.com/dhs-seeks-volunteers-to-process-ukrainians-critics-fear-rubber-stamp/ Homeland Security is rushing to recruit volunteers from within its ranks to vet Americans who want to sponsor Ukrainians fleeing their country amid the ongoing war with Russia. The move is the latest sign that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services is overwhelmed by the demands the Biden administration is placing on it, according to former officials who worry that the raw recruits are being sought to “rubber-stamp” all applications. The volunteers are supposed to carry out the Biden administration’s plan to welcome 100,000 Ukrainian migrants by connecting them with sponsors who have vowed to make sure the newcomers are financially supported and don’t become a burden on taxpayers. Volunteers will check out the would-be sponsors’ claims of financial backing. “This critical work ensures that U.S.-based supporters are vetted by USCIS and are able to support Ukrainian beneficiaries, who are seeking to be paroled into the United States,” USCIS, a Homeland Security agency, said in its plea for help. Rob Law, former head of USCIS’s policy and strategy office in the Trump administration, said the call for volunteers shows the Biden team doesn’t “take the vetting seriously.” He said there are people at USCIS who are trained to do this kind of work already, but they are working on other Biden administration priorities, like pushing to grant more green cards more quickly. That’s why the agency had to put out its cattle call for the Ukrainians. “They’re just taking any willing body that’s employed at the agency and giving them 10 minutes of training and ‘Here you go,’” Mr. Law said. President Biden vowed to welcome Ukrainians with what’s known as “parole,” a permit to live and work in the U.S. for two years. It’s the same power used to bring 77,000 Afghans to the U.S. during the Biden administration’s chaotic airlift last year. But unlike the Afghans, the Ukrainians are supposed to be sponsored by a U.S. citizen or legal resident who commits to supporting them financially for their duration here, providing housing assistance, health care and help in applying for government benefits or enrolling children in school. Sponsors must prove they have sufficient income or funds to last the duration of parole and must surmount a background check to make sure there are no risks of human trafficking or exploitation. Arriving Ukrainians don’t have to prove they’ve received a COVID-19 vaccination, but they do have to attest that they had a medical exam. They are not required to submit documentation before arrival. Once here, they can apply for work permits, which entitle them to some taxpayer benefits. USCIS declined to answer questions about the training the volunteers will get to vet the support applications, though it appears the lessons will be brief: The solicitation email that went out to employees called it “an initial training” and said volunteers would “start processing reviews the day after training has taken place.” The agency says it has received 142,000 requests from would-be supporters. About 100,000 Ukrainians have been authorized to come, and more than 64,000 have already been admitted under the effort, known as Uniting for Ukraine. Another 99,000 Ukrainians have been admitted since March 24 through pathways outside Uniting for Ukraine. USCIS wouldn’t say why it needed to turn to volunteers to help out, but it’s become a frequent solution under the Biden administration as the agency struggles to handle the workload Mr. Biden has foisted on it. That includes welcoming Afghans during last year’s airlift and helping with the border migrant surge that began at the start of the Biden administration. Even as it takes on the new tasks, USCIS says it’s struggling financially and has had to ask Congress for an infusion of cash. USCIS is supposed to be funded through fees paid by immigrants themselves. Biden officials have blamed the Trump administration for leaving the agency in financial straits. But Mr. Law said the call for volunteers is more evidence that the problem wasn’t Mr. Trump’s management, but rather taking on too many missions it’s not prepared for. “There is institutional failure within USCIS,” Mr. Law said. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
DHS Seeks Volunteers To Process Ukrainians; Critics Fear rubber-Stamp
Winter Holiday Travel: Pounce Now On Flights Or Roll The Dice?
Winter Holiday Travel: Pounce Now On Flights Or Roll The Dice?
Winter Holiday Travel: Pounce Now On Flights Or Roll The Dice? https://digitalarkansasnews.com/winter-holiday-travel-pounce-now-on-flights-or-roll-the-dice/ (CNN) — The high prices, the canceled flights, the booked-up lodging and rental cars. The summer of travel chaos still seems hot and fresh somehow. But it’s time to look forward, for there’s another crunch time looming less than two months away: the 2022 winter holiday travel season. So put away your T-shirts, break out your sweaters and get ready for the winter holidays. Here’s what to know: When should I buy tickets for winter holiday flights? Decision-making on when to buy airline tickets seems more complicated that ever. Prices change daily, even hourly. The staffing and capacity ramifications of the pandemic are still being felt. But October is probably the best window of opportunity. In other words, NOW. “Typically … travelers tend to start planning their holiday travel too late, and they miss out on some of the best prices available,” said Hayley Berg, lead economist at Hopper, the planning and booking travel app. And she told CNN Travel she is seeing people waiting later than ever to seal the deal during the pandemic rebound. “For the holidays in particular, that’s a real problem because now is actually the best time to be booking your Thanksgiving and Christmas travel,” Berg said. Hopper suggested in an email to wait no later than mid-October. It’s not just a pricing issue, Berg said. She also noted another risk by waiting: “Flights may be sold out completely on the dates you want to fly.” The worst time to book? ‘The last minute’ Scott Keyes, the founder of flight deals and travel advice site Scott’s Cheap Flights, told CNN Travel the very best deals were actually this past summer (remember that for 2023). But don’t be discouraged this year, he said. “The second best time to be booking your flights is now — because the worst time to book them is to wait until the last minute,” Keyes said. “If you haven’t booked those flights already and you’re really hoping to travel over the winter holidays, try to get it booked in the next week or two.” Keyes thinks air fares are likely to get more expensive, not less, as we get closer to Thanksgiving and Christmas. Phil Dengler, a co-owner of the travel resource The Vacationer, uses a popular fall holiday as his guide. “I view Halloween as the cutoff date for getting a reasonable price on a Thanksgiving flight, but aim to get booked before then,” Dengler said in an email interview. “After Halloween, prices will increase considerably as Thanksgiving gets closer. For Christmas flights, you should really book before Thanksgiving, but the best deals are between now and Halloween.” An Alaska Airlines flight arrives at Los Angeles International Airport on October 2. How you time your ticket purchase can depend on a lot of personal factors in addition to airline prices. AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/Getty Images The auto and travel club AAA had different pricing data for Thanksgiving air fares. Based on booking data from 2019, 2021 and 2022 so far, AAA found the lowest average fares just seven to 14 days before Thanksgiving, with the highest prices 28 to 60 days before the holiday. However, the data also showed prices rising in the last seven days before the holiday. So should you wait? A lot depends on personal circumstances such as your budget and how flexible you are with your flying plans, AAA told CNN Travel. If you don’t have a lot of wiggle room, it might not be worth the risk to wait for a chance at a lower fare. “Airlines have fewer flights than they did in 2019, which means fewer options for consumers,” said AAA’s Paula Twidale, senior vice president of travel. “With staff shortages and capacity being at its peak, you run the risk of being delayed or even missing flights, particularly if weather plays into the equation.” What are the best days to fly for Thanksgiving? Expedia shared some insights on when to travel for Thanksgiving (Thursday, November 24): To save money, the travel company suggested waiting until Monday (November 21) to depart instead of Saturday (November 19) and Sunday (November 20), “as the weekend is the most expensive time to start your Thanksgiving week trip.” Average ticket prices for Monday are more than 30% lower than Saturday and nearly 15% cheaper than Wednesday (November 23), it said. As for returns, Expedia said Friday (November 25) is the cheapest date. Coming back Monday (November 28) instead of Sunday (November 27) could save from 5% to 10%. Hopper also suggests flying Thanksgiving Day if you can, offering savings of around $100 off peak prices. Plus planes should be less crowded. Keyes said the Thanksgiving weekend comes with a bonus. “Thanksgiving is the hidden best week for international travel,” Keyes said. Why is that? Christmas and New Year’s are celebrated worldwide and thus come with global demand, but Thanksgiving is just a US holiday, he said. Domestic flights are pricey, but not international ones. “You find some incredible deals all throughout Europe over Thanksgiving week.” He said that on one price check this week, he found cheaper fare from New York City to Lisbon, Portugal ($429 round-trip, than to Cedar Rapids, Iowa ($567 round-trip). What are the best days to fly for Christmas? Hopper had advice on when to travel for Christmas (Sunday, December 25): For departure, it said travelers can save $120 off peak prices by departing the Monday (December 19) or Tuesday (December 20) before Christmas. Leaving on Christmas Eve could save people about $100 this year, Hopper estimated. The site said avoid flying out Thursday (December 22) or Friday (December 23), as those will be the most expensive travel days. For returns, the Tuesday (December 27) or Wednesday (December 28) after Christmas Day could save you $40 per ticket. It said avoid coming back on Monday (December 26), New Year’s Day or January 2, the most expensive return dates. Some other tips from the experts Have your ducks in a row: “Preparation is the best way to reduce stress when flying over Thanksgiving and Christmas,” Dengler said. “If possible, book a nonstop flight early in the morning” on a lower-volume travel day. He also advised not checking a bag if possible. Treat yourself: If you fly several times a year or more and value a low stress level, Keyes suggested getting a credit card that includes “compelling perks.” That includes access to special airport lounges that get you away from the crowds and offer free food, drinks and even massages. Avoid the rush: If you’re driving, Twidale said leave early in the morning before rush hour or after 8 p.m. If you need a rental car, reserve it early to lock into the rate and pay in advance to save money. If you’re flying but driving to the airport, book parking spaces. She also suggested enrolling in TSA Pre-check to bypass long security lines. Hotels: Berg said if you’re headed to a big city (think New York, Chicago, etc.), you are likely to get a better deal if you wait until just a few days before your arrival date to book the room. The caveats: This is for people who aren’t dead set on a certain hotel or specific neighborhood. And for smaller cities, she said people should still book earlier as choices are limited. Top image: The United Airlines ticket counter at Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Virginia on Christmas Eve 2021. (Eric Lee/Bloomberg via Getty Images) Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Winter Holiday Travel: Pounce Now On Flights Or Roll The Dice?
Our Bubble Has Been Burst: Older Storm Victims Face An Uncertain Future
Our Bubble Has Been Burst: Older Storm Victims Face An Uncertain Future
‘Our Bubble Has Been Burst’: Older Storm Victims Face An Uncertain Future https://digitalarkansasnews.com/our-bubble-has-been-burst-older-storm-victims-face-an-uncertain-future/ FORT MYERS, Fla. — More than two decades ago, Jane and Del Compton stumbled upon Fort Myers while on vacation in southwest Florida. This was where they would retire, they decided on the spot, in a place where they could grow old in peace and sunshine. They bought a double lot with a mobile home and a few small luxuries: a fan with a remote and his-and-hers televisions so she could follow her soap operas and he could watch cowboy shows. But Hurricane Ian ravaged their piece of paradise, soaking the photos from four decades of marriage, destroying their car and leaving them without a place to live. They had no homeowner’s insurance; their policy was canceled in June because of the age of their home, a 1978 model. Now the Comptons — she at 77, he at 81 — are resigned to abandoning their retirement dream. They will return to their native Louisville, Ky., in the coming weeks to stay with their daughter and figure out their next steps, though they are loath to leave their beloved church community and friends. Spending their twilight years in Florida seems suddenly out of reach. “We have talked about it, we have argued about it, we have screamed about it, we have cried about it,” said Ms. Compton, sitting outside the church where the couple has stayed with the one box of sentimental treasures they managed to salvage. “Our bubble has been burst.” Official tallies of deaths related to the storm suggest that older Americans died in disproportionate numbers: Of the 87 victims (out of 123 overall in the United States) for whom an age or approximate age has been released, 61 of them were at least 60 years old. Many victims were found dead at their homes. But Ian not only killed more older people; it also created uniquely wrenching situations for those who survived. Even if they can afford to rebuild, those people may not have the time or energy required for such a difficult task and the prospect of tighter building codes might make that more expensive than ever. Many, like the Comptons, live on fixed incomes, lack flood insurance or purchased their homes before the housing boom of the last decade, when the region was far more affordable. Recapturing their paradise may not be possible — a cruel and abrupt blow. Image Some residents of Pine Island, on Florida’s southwestern Gulf Coast, were taken to the mainland after Hurricane Ian.Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times Image Hurricane Ian destroyed many of the homes on Pine Island.Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times In interviews, several residents said they had defiantly ridden out the storm in the homes they had poured their savings into, partly to ensure they could easily begin cleaning up the damage. Richard Hoyle, 75, moved with his wife to Pine Island, near Fort Myers, in December, after she asked to move to the region from the mountains of Tennessee. He had insisted that they stay through the hurricane, but the storm surge lapped the second flight of stairs to their home, and they watched boats fly across the canal in winds that topped 150 miles per hour. “We’d already decided, this is our retirement home, and we’ll stay and fight for it,” said Mr. Hoyle, a former Marine and firefighter. “I’m glad that we stayed — some battles are worth fighting.” Likewise, Garland Roach, 79, said he had no intention of leaving his badly damaged home in a modest neighborhood of North Fort Myers, where the lone palm tree in his front yard was now surrounded by drain pipes, siding and other debris. “My daughter wants me to come back to Ohio, and I told her I would in my ashes,” he said, adding that he was hoping the Federal Emergency Management Agency or the National Guard would provide a tarp for his mangled roof. “I couldn’t last another winter up there with my arthritis.” Image Richard Hoyle, 75, who rode out the storm on Pine Island with his wife, is committed to staying. Credit…Callaghan O’Hare for The New York Times Two deaths from the storm, Florida officials said, were men in their 70s who shot themselves after seeing the destruction to their property. “I think it’s a breaking point for a lot of people,” said Carol Freeman, 75, pausing as she cleaned the muddied floor of her home on Pine Island, which was ravaged by the storm. Since the hurricane, Ms. Freeman, a retired postal worker who lives with her parrot, Jose, had been without power, forced to use baby wipes to keep clean and, at least once, eat a donated military-style meal for dinner. She had spent days debating whether it was worth staying. It may be time, she said, to return to her native Chicago after about four decades on the island. “Too old to be doing this,” she said. Some retirees who wintered on the Gulf Coast are already planning their exits from the state. In Fort Myers Beach, an island town that attracted tourists and Midwestern snowbirds, entire groups of friends were gathering recently to inspect the wreckage — and to start mourning the end of their Florida lives. At Gulf Cove, a mobile home community near the base of a bridge, residents were trying to salvage belongings from their ruined properties. Some said that they expected that the patch of waterfront land where they had cultivated tight-knit friendships over the years would be sold to developers and razed. “Even if something miraculous happened that we could get back together, there are a lot of couples in their 80s or 90s,” said one of the residents, Deb Macer, 69. “They’re just not going to come back.” Image Damaged homes in Fort Myers Beach.Credit…Callaghan O’Hare for The New York Times Image Hurricane Ian ruined the piece of paradise that Del and Jane Compton had found in Florida. Credit…Callaghan O’Hare for The New York Times Before the hurricane, days in their neighborhood had a familiar, comforting rhythm. The retirees who lived there planned coffee hours and daily walks over the bridge to Estero Island. Ms. Macer planned crafting get-togethers and her husband, Stacy, 70, was known as the community handyman. “I fear it’s gone,” said their friend Paul Wasko, 75. “This way of life is gone.” Cindy and Steve Duello had barely begun fulfilling their dream of retiring here. Frequent walks and bike rides around Fort Myers Beach had kept them feeling vibrant and healthy well into their 60s. They fussed over their orchids, mingled with neighbors and taught their grandchildren to scour the beach for prized heart-shaped rocks. At the center of it all was a modest two-bedroom house on Albatross Street, the gathering place since the 1980s for four generations of Duellos. “It was only 1,200 square feet, but it was our mansion,” said Ms. Duello, 68. Ian left much of Fort Myers Beach a flattened, unrecognizable ruin, and the Duello house saturated with seawater. Days after the storm, the Duellos made their way to the island, saw their destroyed home and realized that the town could not be rebuilt in time for them to enjoy it again. “It won’t return in our lifetime,” Ms. Duello said, through tears. “I can feel this has already aged me.” Image “I think it’s a breaking point for a lot of people,” said Carol Freeman, 75, who lives on Pine Island.Credit…Callaghan O’Hare for The New York Times For some older Floridians, the storm created a world with no good options: They could not imagine leaving the state at this stage of their lives, yet their homes were gone, perhaps forever. In Naples, about 40 miles south of Fort Myers, the River Park neighborhood was a scene of despair on Thursday. Workers and homeowners were lugging soaked items out of homes, building giant heaps of debris on the curb. Rosalie Bulger, 73, was in her living room, surveying what was left of the stucco one-story house where she had lived for 35 years. The smell of mold and rot was overpowering. “I am numb,” she said as workers wearing N95 masks moved her belongings into the driveway: glassware, decorative pots, a rack of brightly colored dresses. Ms. Bulger was enjoying a life with the comforts of family close by: Her daughter and son-in-law lived in the bungalow next door. As she looked around at her ruined belongings, she said she would depend on God to help her figure out what to do next, though she could not imagine how long it would take — if ever — for her house to be habitable again. “I’m not going,” she said of the notion that she would join relatives or friends in another state. “But we can’t live here anymore, either.” Image Debris and destruction left behind in Fort Myers Beach.Credit…Johnny Milano for The New York Times Image Linda Stevens in her grandson’s room in Tampa, Fla., after she was evacuated from Pine Island. Credit…Zack Wittman for The New York Times After her husband died last year on Mother’s Day, Linda Stevens, 75, decided to live permanently on Pine Island, which had offered many people a far more affordable sanctuary than the wealthier homes on nearby Sanibel Island. She and her husband had traded the harsh winters of Maine for days by the water on the island’s northern end. She loved their new life: the friends from church, the volunteering, the lush scenery. Ian was Ms. Stevens’s first hurricane, sending her huddling with neighbors after the traffic jam of evacuees deterred her from leaving the island. They cared for her, making sure she was fed and able to safely leave after days without power and running water. “If I was 50, I’d tough it out and say, I’m coming back. But I’m not 50 anymore,” Ms. Stevens said. “I will never live through another hurricane season.” Now, she is debating selling her house altogether or returning to the snowbird lifestyle, moving closer to one of her daughters and spending only the winter months in the area. But for the time being, she said, “I can’t make that decision. I’m still grieving.” ...
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Our Bubble Has Been Burst: Older Storm Victims Face An Uncertain Future
Rain Is Back In The Forecast For The First Time In Over Two Weeks
Rain Is Back In The Forecast For The First Time In Over Two Weeks
Rain Is Back In The Forecast For The First Time In Over Two Weeks https://digitalarkansasnews.com/rain-is-back-in-the-forecast-for-the-first-time-in-over-two-weeks/ The last time Little Rock saw measurable rain was September 25. The state remains under a high wildfire risk with nearly all over Arkansas’ 75 counties under burn bans. The Arkansas Forestry Division has all 75 counties in Arkansas under a HIGH wildfire risk. This means wildfires are easy to spark & spread and at a higher risk of becoming serious. For the few counties not under a current burn ban, recreational burning like bonfires & trash/yard waste burning should be avoided. Cigarettes should also be put out properly and safely. Drought conditions for part of Pulaski County are ‘extreme’ and extend farther north and west as of the latest drought update. Cities in central Arkansas under extreme drought conditions as of October 10 include: Little Rock, Maumelle, Jacksonville, Cabot, Conway, Vilonia, Morrilton and Greenbrier. Mountain View, Mena and Fort Smith are also under extreme drought conditions. The latest drought update released October 6, 2022 Little Rock experienced the most 100°F+ days since 2012 in July, and both August & September ended well below average in rainfall totals. August finished 1¾” below average in average rainfall with September ending 2.38″ below average in Little Rock. South Arkansas received higher rainfall totals earlier in the summer, but ended up drier in September. Nearly half of October has been rain-free. As of October 10, Little Rock is nearly 1¼” below average rainfall totals. The first shot for widespread rain arrives Wednesday, October 12, with forecast totals across the state below ¼”. A cold front will move through Arkansas approaching from the Southern Plains. Because of its fast-moving nature, high rainfall totals are not anticipated, but any rain will be welcome. While September is typically the driest month on a 30-year-average in Little Rock, October tends to trend wetter. A second cold front Sunday, October 16 will bring another shot of widespread rain across the state. With such a deficit of wet weather so far, not much (if any) of a dent in current drought conditions are anticipated in the near future. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Rain Is Back In The Forecast For The First Time In Over Two Weeks
'A Time Bomb': Anger Rising In A Hot Spot Of Iran Protests
'A Time Bomb': Anger Rising In A Hot Spot Of Iran Protests
'A Time Bomb': Anger Rising In A Hot Spot Of Iran Protests https://digitalarkansasnews.com/a-time-bomb-anger-rising-in-a-hot-spot-of-iran-protests/ SULIMANIYAH, Iraq (AP) — Growing up under a repressive system, Sharo, a 35-year-old university graduate, never thought she would hear words of open rebellion spoken out loud. Now she herself chants slogans like “Death to the Dictator!” with a fury she didn’t know she had, as she joins protests calling for toppling the country’s rulers. Sharo said that after three weeks of protests, triggered by the death of a young woman in the custody of the feared morality police, anger at the authorities is only rising, despite a bloody crackdown that has left dozens dead and hundreds in detention. “The situation here is tense and volatile,” she said, referring to the city of Sanandaj in the majority Kurdish home district of the same name in northwestern Iran, one of the hot spots of the protests. “We are just waiting for something to happen, like a time-bomb,” she said, speaking to The Associated Press via Telegram messenger service. The anti-government protests in Sanandaj, 300 miles (500 kilometers) from the capital, are a microcosm of the leaderless protests that have roiled Iran. Led largely by women and youth, they have evolved from spontaneous mass gatherings in central areas to scattered demonstrations in residential areas, schools and universities as activists try to evade an increasingly brutal crackdown. Tensions rose again Saturday in Sanandaj after rights monitors said two protesters were shot dead and several were wounded, following a resumption of demonstrations. Residents said there has been a heavy security presence in the city, with constant patrols and security personnel stationed on major streets. The Associated Press spoke to six female activists in Sanandaj who said suppression tactics, including beatings, arrests, the use of live ammunition and internet disruptions make it difficult at times to keep the momentum going. Yet protests persist, along with other expressions of civil disobedience, such as commercial strikes and drivers honking horns at security forces. The activists in the city spoke on the condition their full names be withheld fearing reprisals by Iranian authorities. Their accounts were corroborated by three human rights monitors. THE BURIAL Three weeks ago, the news of the death of 22-year old Mahsa Amini in the custody of the morality police in Tehran spread rapidly across her home province of Kurdistan, of which Sanandaj is the capital. The response was swift in the impoverished and historically marginalized area. As the burial was underway in Amini’s town of Saqqez on Sept. 17, protesters were already filling Sanandaj’s main thoroughfare, activists said. People of all ages were present and began chanting slogans that would be repeated in cities across Iran: “Woman. Life. Freedom.” The Amini family had been under pressure from the government to bury Mahsa quickly before a critical mass of protesters formed, said Afsanah, a 38-year-old clothing designer from Saqqez. She was at the burial that day and followed the crowds from the cemetery to the city square. Rozan, a 32-year old housewife, didn’t know Amini personally. But when she heard the young woman had died in the custody of the morality police in Tehran and had been arrested for violating the Islamic Republic’s hijab rules, she felt compelled to take to the street that day. “The same thing happened to me,” she said. In 2013, like Amini, she had ventured to the capital with a friend when she was apprehended by the morality police because her abaya, or loose robe that is part of the mandatory dress code, was too short. She was taken to the same facility where Amini later died, and fingerprinted and made to sign a declaration of guilt. “It could have been me,” she said. In the years since then Rozan, a former nurse, was fired from the local government health department for being too vocal about her views about women’s rights. After the funeral, she saw an elderly woman take a step forward and in one swift gesture, remove her headscarf. “I felt inspired to do the same,” she said. SUPPRESSION In the first three days after the burial, protesters were plucked from the demonstrations in arrest sweeps in Sanandaj. By the end of the week, arrests targeted known activists and protest organizers. Dunya, a lawyer, said she was one among a small group of women’s rights activists who helped organize protests. They also asked shopkeepers to respect a call for a commercial strike along the city’s main streets. “Almost all the women in our group are in jail now,” she said. Internet blackouts made it difficult for protesters to communicate with one another across cities and with the outside world. “We would wake up in the morning and have no idea what was happening,” said Sharo, the university graduate. The internet would return intermittently, often late at night or during working hours, but swiftly cut off in the late afternoon, the time many would gather to protest. The heavy security presence also prevented mass gatherings. “There are patrols in almost every street, and they break up groups, even if its just two or three people walking on the street,” said Sharo. During demonstrations security forces fired pellet guns and tear gas at the crowd causing many to run. Security personnel on motorcycles also drove into crowds in an effort to disperse them. All activists interviewed said they either witnessed or heard live ammunition. Iranian authorities have so far denied this, blaming separatist groups on occasions when the use of live fire was verified. The two protesters killed Saturday in Sanandaj were killed by live fire, according to the France-based Kurdistan Human Rights network. Protesters say fear is a close companion. The wounded were often reluctant to use ambulances or go to hospitals, worried they might get arrested. Activists also suspected government informants were trying to blend in with the crowds. But acts of resistance have continued. “I assure you the protests are not over,” said Sharo. “The people are angry, they are talking back to the police in ways I have never seen.” DISOBEDIENCE The anger runs deep. In Sanandaj the confluence of three factors has rendered the city a ripe ground for protest activity — a history of Kurdish resistance, rising poverty and a long history of women’s rights activism. Yet the protests are not defined along ethnic or regional lines even though they were sparked in a predominantly Kurdish area, said Tara Sepehri Fars, a researcher for Human Rights Watch. “It’s been very unique in that sense,” she said. There have been waves of protest in Iran in recent years, the largest in 2009 bringing large crowds into the streets after what protesters felt was a stolen election. But the continued defiance and demands for regime change during the current wave seem to pose the most serious challenge in years to the Islamic Republic. Like most of Iran, Sanandaj has suffered as U.S. sanctions and the coronavirus pandemic devastated the economy and spurred inflation. Far from the capital, in the fringes of the country, its majority Kurdish residents are eyed with suspicion by the regime. By the third week, with the opening of universities and schools, students began holding small rallies and joined the movement. Videos circulated on social media showing students jeering school masters, school girls removing their headscarves on the street and chanting: “One by one they will kill us, if we don’t stand together.” One university student said they were planning on boycotting classes altogether. Afsanah, the clothing designer, said that she likes wearing the headscarf. “But I am protesting because it was never my choice.” Her parents, fearing for her safety, tried to persuade her to stay home. But she disobeyed them, pretending to go to work in the morning only to search for protest gatherings around the city. “I am angry, and I am without fear — we just need this feeling to overflow on the street,” she said. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
'A Time Bomb': Anger Rising In A Hot Spot Of Iran Protests
Trump Attorney Speaks With Feds Amid Mar-A-Lago Docs Probe: NBC
Trump Attorney Speaks With Feds Amid Mar-A-Lago Docs Probe: NBC
Trump Attorney Speaks With Feds Amid Mar-A-Lago Docs Probe: NBC https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-attorney-speaks-with-feds-amid-mar-a-lago-docs-probe-nbc/ An attorney who signed statement asserting that former President Trump had returned all classified materials to the government months before the FBI’s Mar-a-Lago search spoke with federal investigators Friday, according to reporting from NBC News. Christina Bobb signed a June 3 letter as the custodian of records for Trump after his organization was served with a subpoena and asked to return all documents bearing classifications markings. According to NBC, Bobb spoke with investigators in Washington Friday, naming two other lawyers involved with the case. She did not speak to the grand jury convened for investigating Trump’s mishandling of the records. Bobb signed the statement after it was drafted by Trump attorney Evan Corcoran, who is representing the former president in the litigation to secure a special master to review the records seized at his Florida home. According to NBC, Bobb signed the statement after twice insisting on adding language that said all records had been returned “based upon the information that has been provided to me.” At the time, Trump’s team turned over 38 additional classified records. Investigators would go on to secure a warrant to search Mar-a-Lago, recovering more than 100 documents with classification markings, as well as more than 10,000 government records. The Justice Department cited the response to its May subpoena to cast doubt on the level of cooperation from the Trump team. “That the FBI, in a matter of hours, recovered twice as many documents with classification markings as the ‘diligent search’ that the former President’s counsel and other representatives had weeks to perform calls into serious question the representations made in the June 3 certification and casts doubt on the extent of cooperation in this matter,” they wrote in an August court filing. According to prior reporting from The New York Times, Corcoran drafted the June statement, giving it to Bobb to sign. In late September, Bobb told an anchor for Right Side Broadcasting Network that, while she had appeared on TV as an attorney for Trump in the days after the Mar-a-Lago search, she was not directly acting as Trump’s attorney during the search, a detail that makes it easier for her to interact with the Justice Department. “I think people were a little bit confused,” Bobb said during the appearance. “I am on President Trump’s legal team. I do work for him on election issues. I was never on the legal team handling this case, just to be clear on that. Which is why I came in as the custodian of records — because I wasn’t on that team.” The news of Bobb’s cooperation comes amid reports that another former attorney for Trump, Alex Cannon, refused to sign a similar declaration in February as he was unsure if it was true. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Attorney Speaks With Feds Amid Mar-A-Lago Docs Probe: NBC
Gas Buddy: Arkansas Weekly Gas Price Update
Gas Buddy: Arkansas Weekly Gas Price Update
Gas Buddy: Arkansas Weekly Gas Price Update https://digitalarkansasnews.com/gas-buddy-arkansas-weekly-gas-price-update/ Average gasoline prices in Arkansas have risen 19.5 cents per gallon in the last week, averaging $3.38 per gallon today, according to GasBuddy’s survey of 1,826 stations in Arkansas. Prices in Arkansas are 25.1 cents per gallon higher than a month ago and stand 47.1 cents per gallon higher than a year ago. The national average price of diesel has increased 18.0 cents in the last week and stands at $5.04 per gallon. “With OPEC deciding to cut oil production by two million barrels a day, we’ve seen oil prices surge 20%, which is the primary factor in the national average rising for the third straight week,” said Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy. According to GasBuddy price reports, the cheapest station in Arkansas was priced at $2.89 per gallon yesterday while the most expensive was $4.19 per gallon, a difference of $1.30 per gallon. The lowest price in the state yesterday was $2.89 per gallon while the highest was $4.19 per gallon, a difference of $1.30 per gallon. The national average price of gasoline has risen 13.8 cents per gallon in the last week, averaging $3.92/g today. The national average is up 22.5 cents per gallon from a month ago and stands 67.0 cents per gallon higher than a year ago, according to GasBuddy data compiled from more than 11 million weekly price reports covering over 150,000 gas stations across the country. Neighboring areas and their current gas prices: Memphis- $3.44/g, up 18.4 cents per gallon from last week’s $3.26/g. Little Rock- $3.34/g, up 23.3 cents per gallon from last week’s $3.10/g. Shreveport- $3.23/g, up 21.8 cents per gallon from last week’s $3.01/g. Information provided by GasBuddy.com. Have a news tip or event to promote? Email White River Now at news@whiterivernow.com. Be sure to like and follow us on Facebook and Twitter. And don’t forget to download the White River Now mobile app from the Google Play Store or the Apple App Store. Get up-to-date local and regional news/weather every weekday morning and afternoon from the First Community Bank Newsroom on Arkansas 103.3 KWOZ. White River Now updates are also aired weekday mornings on 93 KZLE, Outlaw 106.5, and Your FM 99.5.  Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Gas Buddy: Arkansas Weekly Gas Price Update
Newly Released Emails Debunk Trump And Allies' Attempts To Blame The GSA For Packing Boxes That Ended Up In Mar-A-Lago
Newly Released Emails Debunk Trump And Allies' Attempts To Blame The GSA For Packing Boxes That Ended Up In Mar-A-Lago
Newly Released Emails Debunk Trump And Allies' Attempts To Blame The GSA For Packing Boxes That Ended Up In Mar-A-Lago https://digitalarkansasnews.com/newly-released-emails-debunk-trump-and-allies-attempts-to-blame-the-gsa-for-packing-boxes-that-ended-up-in-mar-a-lago/ (CNN) — When the General Services Administration prepared to ship pallets of material to Florida for former President Donald Trump in July 2021, the federal agency asked Trump aide Beau Harrison to affirm what was in the boxes being shipped. Harrison, Trump’s former assistant for operations, was asked to affirm that everything packed and shipped to Florida was either “required to wind down the office of the Former President or are items that are property of the Federal Government,” so it could be covered by transition funding. Former presidents are allowed to take certain government materials and office equipment required to set up a permanent office away from the White House. But that does not include the sort of classified documents Trump took to Mar-a-Lago — which are at the center of an ongoing Justice Department criminal probe. Harrison, one of the handful of aides interviewed by federal investigators in the spring as they sought information on presidential records, returned a letter on “The Office of Donald J. Trump” letterhead stating what was in the boxes. The email exchange between GSA officials and Harrison is one of more than 100 pages of emails and documents newly released by the GSA that debunk claims from Trump and his allies that the government agency is to blame for packing the boxes containing classified documents that were later recovered by the FBI during the search of his Mar-a-Lago resort in August. The newly released emails also provide new details underscoring the rushed, chaotic nature of Trump’s transition after he spent two months exhausting numerous avenues trying to overturn the 2020 election. The emails make clear that the boxes had already been packed and sat shrink-wrapped in an empty office space in Arlington, Virginia, as GSA officials planned logistics to ship the five pallets of boxes — including 30 banker boxes similar to those recovered by the FBI at Mar-a-Lago — to Florida. The released communications, which were first reported by Bloomberg News, outline how boxes, including 1,400 pounds of “document boxes,” traveled from the White House to Florida, from inventories of the purchase of boxes and shipping materials to photos of the new office space Trump’s team would inhabit. It remains unclear whether anything in the boxes that GSA shipped contained the government documents in the 15 boxes sent to the National Archives in January or the tens of thousands of documents the FBI retrieved in August — materials now at the heart of the criminal investigation into the classified material found at Mar-a-Lago. But the new cache of email adds new detail showing how documents from the Trump administration made their way to Florida — and directly debunks attempts Trump and his allies have made to defend the former President by blaming GSA. In an interview on Fox News on August 12, four days after the FBI search, former Trump defense official Kash Patel claimed the GSA was responsible for the documents being at Trump’s Florida home. “Even if (the documents were) classified … they’ll never meet the burden of intent because the president didn’t pack it up and take it out himself, the GSA has said they did it and they made a mistake,” Patel said. The GSA has never said they packed the boxes. “They packed them,” Trump said in an interview with Sean Hannity on September 23. A spokesman for Trump did not directly address how these emails dispute claims made by the former president and allies, and instead attacked the Biden administration. “A routine and necessary process has been leveraged by power-hungry partisan bureaucrats to intimidate and silence those who have dared to support President Trump and his America First agenda,” said Trump spokesman Taylor Budowich. “Why? Because Democrats have done nothing to deliver for the American people and they are left scrambling to fabricate a new witch-hunt to distract from their abject failures.” A 300-pound portrait In emails throughout 2021, however, career officials at the GSA outlined to Trump’s aides what could and could not be included in the shipments GSA would send to Florida — underscoring that the federal agency was relying on Trump’s aides to assess the contents being shipped. While the transition team worked with the GSA to facilitate the move, concern inside the National Archives over missing presidential documents was growing. The National Archives alerted Trump’s lawyers in May 2021 that Trump’s letters with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un — and two dozen boxes of records — were missing. But documents were never raised in the logistics email exchanges. Instead, they focused at times on what items could and could not be shipped to Florida on the federal government’s dime. In particular, a 300-pound portrait of Trump that had been gifted to the former President led to multiple rounds of back and forth, with the GSA ultimately declining to ship the item, deeming it “personal property.” At one point, the GSA outgoing transition director sent the Trump aides guidance on what was allowed to be sent. “If the item is considered property of the Former President then it should not be shipped using Transition Funds. If the item is considered property of the Federal Government then it should go to NARA or GSA,” Kathy Geisler wrote in an email and attached the guidance on gifts. “I just wanted to make sure we had an understanding of what you are allowed to ship using Transition funds.” The gigantic portrait was sent to an aide’s home to eventually ship to the former President’s resort. In the email exchange, Trump’s director of correspondence Desiree Thompson Sayle asked Geisler to point out where in the federal code she was referring to. “I want to ensure that we are in compliance, and the attached appears to be general guidance on what gifts (foreign and domestic) can be accepted by a government employee or elected official,” she wrote. “Working with NARA and GSA, I am in full compliance with the final disposition of gifts. So much so, we are loading the large portrait received after the 21st on a Penske truck to transport to my house so I can put it on my moving van,” Sayle added. Missing deadlines and disorganization It wasn’t until mid-January — just nine days before President Joe Biden’s inauguration — that Trump’s staff began setting up a post presidential life for the former President following a plan signed off on by former chief of staff Mark Meadows. Following the same pattern of past presidential transitions, GSA would provide the funds and support to help with the transition and setting up a post-presidential office. Around the time Meadows signed the plan, White House aides described a chaotic and unsure environment with a President more focused on overturning the 2020 election than beginning his next chapter. These circumstances lead to a delayed, unorganized and nontraditional transition, made apparent in the trove of emails. The chaotic environment continued after Trump vacated the White House. In July 2021, a flurry of late-night emails show staff scrambling unsuccessfully to get the boxes sent off on the final night the outgoing team would be allowed to use transition funds to assist the move, eventually having to use other resources. After the boxes were to be picked up and Trump’s team had long gone to Florida, there was yet another snag in August — one pallet was the wrong size and couldn’t fit on the freight elevator. The event delayed the delivery again, the emails show, and resulted in an intern being flown back from the Sunshine State to repack the pallets and prepare them to be sent to Mar-a-Lago, where they finally arrived mid-September. “My intern is flying back to DC tomorrow, and he can repack the pallets in Crystal City,” Sayle wrote to GSA. “Before I send him to pick up a roll of shrink wrap from Uhaul and plan to head over, can you tell me if there is AC on the 12th floor?” CORRECTION: This story has been updated to correctly reference the General Services Administration. © 2022 Circle City Broadcasting I, LLC. | All Rights Reserved. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Newly Released Emails Debunk Trump And Allies' Attempts To Blame The GSA For Packing Boxes That Ended Up In Mar-A-Lago
Trump Lawyer Christina Bobb Points Finger At Colleague For we Returned All Documents Claim
Trump Lawyer Christina Bobb Points Finger At Colleague For we Returned All Documents Claim
Trump Lawyer Christina Bobb Points Finger At Colleague For ‘we Returned All Documents’ Claim https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-lawyer-christina-bobb-points-finger-at-colleague-for-we-returned-all-documents-claim/ Christina Bobb, a lawyer who signed the infamous letter certifying that former President Donald Trump had returned all sensitive documents, is reportedly pointing the finger at a fellow lawyer for drafting the false claim. The former TV anchor told federal investigators that Evan Corcoran, a more senior member of Trump’s legal team, ordered her to sign the statement falsely suggesting the former president had complied with a subpoena for the top-secret documents, NBC News reported Monday. The feds say they consider Bobb to be a witness, not a target, of the sprawling probe into Trump’s mishandling of the documents. “She is not going to be charged,” one source told NBC after Bobb’s grilling on Friday. Christina Bobb, inset, and former President Donald Trump. (AP; Social Media) Bobb’s cooperation moves Corcoran into the legal hot seat where he could potentially face charges or professional legal sanctions if he told a colleague to make false claims to federal authorities. The feds would want to know who, if anyone, instructed Corcoran to concoct the false statement. A previous lawyer for Trump has said he refused the former president’s demand that he make a similar false claim earlier. The June 3 letter from Bobb forms a key milestone in the investigation into the documents that Trump improperly took with him from the White House to Mar-a-Lago, his Florida resort home. The statement claimed that Trump no longer had any documents marked as classified and had complied with a grand jury subpoena demanding their return. In the weeks after receiving the statements, the feds determined it was not true. They proceeded to obtain a search warrant for parts of Mar-a-Lago. FBI agents found thousands of documents in the Aug. 8 search, including more than 100 highly classified ones, in the explosive search, confirming their evidence that the letter signed by Bobb was a lie. [ Trump reveals search of Mar-a-Lago estate in top-secret document search ] Trump has called the search a witch hunt designed to embarrass him ahead of his planned 2024 White House comeback run. He also says the seized documents belong to him, although only a tiny fraction are actually personal records. The former president has not offered any explanation why he took the top secret documents, which reportedly include spy reports about French President Emmanuel Macron and a description of an unnamed foreign nation’s nuclear capabilities. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Lawyer Christina Bobb Points Finger At Colleague For we Returned All Documents Claim
Vote To Extend Trump Media Merger Deadline Postponed Again
Vote To Extend Trump Media Merger Deadline Postponed Again
Vote To Extend Trump Media Merger Deadline Postponed Again https://digitalarkansasnews.com/vote-to-extend-trump-media-merger-deadline-postponed-again/ License Photo” height=”533″ src=”https://cdnph.upi.com/svc/sv/upi/2531665426429/2022/1/a05092c05ce42993d955a738844a704d/Vote-to-extend-Trump-Media-merger-deadline-postponed-again.jpg” title=”Former President Donald J. Trump, left, watches play at the 16th hole tee at LIV Golf Bedminster invitational, part of the new LIV Golf Invitational Series, at the Trump National Golf Club on July 29 in Bedminster, New Jersey. File Photo by Peter Foley/UPI | License Photo” width=”800″ Former President Donald J. Trump, left, watches play at the 16th hole tee at LIV Golf Bedminster invitational, part of the new LIV Golf Invitational Series, at the Trump National Golf Club on July 29 in Bedminster, New Jersey. File Photo by Peter Foley/UPI | License Photo Oct. 10 (UPI) — The special acquisition company set to merge with former President Donald Trump‘s media firm to take it public has again postponed a key shareholder meeting to vote on whether to extend the deadline for the merger. Digital World Acquisition Corp. announced in a press release that it is further adjourning its special meeting of stockholders “to solicit more votes toward the approval to further amend the company’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation.” The special meeting, which was scheduled for Sept. 6, was pushed back to Monday before the latest delay was announced. It is now slated for Nov. 3. “We continue to strongly believe that a stockholder vote to approve a one-year extension is important and in the best interests of our stockholders,” Patrick Orlando, the company’s CEO, said in a statement. “As of today, those who have voted have overwhelmingly voted ‘FOR’ the Extension Amendment, and we have added additional phone lines along with other resources to record the incoming participation.” The extension would require 65% of shareholders in DWAC to approve it and a failure to extend the merger deadline could force the special acquisition company to liquidate, CNBC reported. William Wilkerson, a senior vice president of operations at Trump Media, alleged that there have been securities violations involving the merger in a whistleblower complaint filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission in August. Wilkerson told the Miami Herald on Sunday that he questions the future of Trump’s Truth Social platform, that “one way or another, this company is going to go bankrupt” and that the social media site has become an “echo chamber” for the former president. Supporters of the former president have much riding on the merger with some sharing on Truth Social that they’d invested their life savings in the company. Shares in the company were down more than 5% on Monday after news of the delay. “Who knows? In any event, I don’t need financing, ‘I’m really rich!’ Private company anyone???” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social last month. The deal is also the target of a criminal and an SEC probe into possible securities violations, CNBC reported. Trump Media recently said the company has considered legal action against the SEC for delaying the completion of the merger. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Vote To Extend Trump Media Merger Deadline Postponed Again
Fact Check: Trump Falsely Claims George H.W. Bush Took Millions Of Documents To A Former Bowling Alley And Chinese Restaurant | CNN Politics
Fact Check: Trump Falsely Claims George H.W. Bush Took Millions Of Documents To A Former Bowling Alley And Chinese Restaurant | CNN Politics
Fact Check: Trump Falsely Claims George H.W. Bush Took Millions Of Documents To A Former Bowling Alley And Chinese Restaurant | CNN Politics https://digitalarkansasnews.com/fact-check-trump-falsely-claims-george-h-w-bush-took-millions-of-documents-to-a-former-bowling-alley-and-chinese-restaurant-cnn-politics/ Washington CNN  —  First, former President Donald Trump tried a false claim about the document-handling practices of former President Barack Obama. Now, Trump is making the same false claim about other former presidents. In August, after the FBI recovered classified documents and numerous other presidential records from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence and resort in Florida, Trump declared that Obama had taken millions of presidential documents to Chicago. The National Archives and Records Administration quickly debunked his assertion, explaining it was NARA itself, not Obama, that took the documents to a NARA-managed facility in the Chicago area. Then, at a rally in Arizona on Sunday, Trump not only repeated the false claim about Obama but added near-identical dishonesty about previous presidents George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton. Most dramatically, Trump said, “George H.W. Bush took millions of documents to a former bowling alley and a former Chinese restaurant; where they combined them. So they’re in a bowling alley slash Chinese restaurant.” Trump added, “A Chinese restaurant and a bowling alley. With no security and a broken front door.” Trump also claimed that “Bill Clinton took millions of documents from the White House to a former car dealership in Arkansas” and that “George W. Bush stored 68 million pages in a warehouse in Texas.” Facts First: All of these Trump claims are false. George H.W. Bush did not take millions of documents to a former bowling alley and Chinese restaurant. Rather, the National Archives and Records Administration took Bush’s presidential documents to this facility prior to the opening of the Bush presidential library in the same city. Trump’s claims about Clinton and George W. Bush are inaccurate in precisely the same way: NARA, not the former presidents themselves, put the documents in temporary storage at NARA-managed facilities at the former car dealership in Arkansas and the warehouse in Texas. And Trump was also wrong that there was “no security” at the facility where the elder Bush’s documents were housed: the facility was heavily secured, according to a news report at the time. So there is no equivalence between Trump’s handling of presidential documents and those of his predecessors. In the others’ cases, the presidential documents were in NARA’s possession and stored securely and professionally. In Trump’s case, the presidential documents found in haphazard amateur storage at Mar-a-Lago were in Trump’s own possession, despite numerous attempts by both NARA and the Justice Department to get them back. At the Sunday rally, Trump urged the authorities to “look into what took place” with George H.W. Bush and presidential documents. But there is nothing of substance to investigate: the National Archives and Records Administration has been forthright since the 1990s about where it temporarily stored Bush documents before his permanent library opened. In fact, the NARA official who was in charge of the transition of the Bush documents to the permanent library publicly joked about the temporary facility at the time. “I’ve told reporters this for the last four years: It’s not just a bowling alley; it’s a bowling alley and a Chinese restaurant,” David Alsobrook said. While the temporary College Station, Texas, location made for a fun story, there was nothing unusual about NARA’s use of such a building. NARA needs lots of space to house presidential documents before presidents’ permanent libraries are built, so it finds and modifies large nearby facilities that often have formerly housed other activities. Someone listening to Trump’s rally comments might have pictured documents from the first Bush administration being scattered carelessly in bowling lanes. But that’s not what happened. The Washington Post reported in 1993: “There aren’t any lanes anymore. No gutters, no pins, no beer. Thanks to a rush remodeling job after last November’s election, there are a few simple offices, a massive, fire-resistant vault and row after row of steel shelves filled with cardboard boxes and wooden crates.” There was also extensive security. The Associated Press reported in 1994: “Uniformed guards patrol the premises. There are closed-circuit television monitors and sophisticated electronic detectors along walls and doors. Some printed material is classified and will remain so for years; it is open only to those with top-secret clearances.” Robert Holzweiss, who began working on the George H.W. Bush library in 1996 and is now deputy director, told People magazine for an article in early 2022: “When I got involved the temporary facility for the Bush museum was in College Station, Texas, in an old bowling alley. Without the alleys it was perfect, it was like a warehouse. They just built a secure space within to house the classified material.” Bush died in 2018. His son Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor who ran against Trump in 2016 for the Republican presidential nomination, wrote on Twitter in response to Trump’s Sunday claim about the late president: “I am so confused. My dad enjoyed a good Chinese meal and enjoyed the challenge of 7 10 split. What the heck is up with you?” Trump’s claims at the rally about former presidents Clinton and George W. Bush are false for the exact same reason as Trump’s claims about Obama and the elder Bush are false. That former Balch Motor Company building in Little Rock, Arkansas, where millions of Clinton presidential documents were stored? Again, it was the National Archives and Records Administration that took the documents to this facility, which NARA managed, in advance of the opening of Clinton’s library in the same city. That warehouse in Lewisville, Texas where millions of the younger Bush’s presidential documents were stored? It was a NARA-managed facility, used to store documents while Bush’s permanent library was being readied in nearby Dallas. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Fact Check: Trump Falsely Claims George H.W. Bush Took Millions Of Documents To A Former Bowling Alley And Chinese Restaurant | CNN Politics
Amazon Sale: Prime Early Access Deals Live Roundup
Amazon Sale: Prime Early Access Deals Live Roundup
Amazon Sale: Prime Early Access Deals Live Roundup https://digitalarkansasnews.com/amazon-sale-prime-early-access-deals-live-roundup/ Refresh 2022-10-10T18:32:22.763Z (Image credit: Lenovo) Lenovo IdeaPad 3 11″ Chromebook: $219 $89.99 at Best Buy We’ve gotten pretty good at tracking down the best Chromebook deals, but every now and then, a deal will appear that simply stops us in our tracks. For example, take a look at this clearance offer from Best Buy that slashes a hefty $129 off the price of the Lenovo IdeaPad 3, a popular Chromebook with up to 10 hours of battery life, an ultra-fast AMD A6 processor, and an 11-inch HD display. All of this in a device that weighs only 2.42 pounds? Count us in.  2022-10-10T17:41:51.224Z (Image credit: Amazon) Amazon Fire HD 10 (2021): $149.99 $74.99 at Amazon If you’re in the market for a new tablet, you don’t need to wait until the Prime Early Access Sale to save some serious cash at Amazon. Right now, both the 32GB and 64GB versions of the Fire HD 10 tablet are half-off through the retailer, a discount that makes them cheaper than they’ve ever been! For less than $100, you’re getting a tablet with a lovely 1080p 10.1-inch display, 12 hours of battery life, and an octa-core processor that delivers impressively fast performance.  2022-10-10T17:05:00.573Z (Image credit: Sony) Sony 75″ XR Bravia Ultra HD Smart TV: $2,997.95 $1,298 at Walmart As we wait for Amazon’s sale to finally go live, Walmart is already out here with some of the best deals we’ve seen in months. Walmart’s sitewide rival sale is running through October 13th, and they’re slashing prices on loads of great tech, such as this stunning 75-inch smart TV that boasts enhanced Full Array LED technology, cognitive graphics and audio processing, and intelligent 4K upscaling so you always get the best viewing experience no matter what you’re watching. The TV is usually pretty steep at almost $3,000, so Walmart is taking a whopping $1,699 off the price tag. That’s a discount of 57%!  2022-10-10T16:42:36.705Z (Image credit: Nintendo) Nintendo Switch OLED (White): $339.90 $297.66 at Amazon The OLED version of the Nintendo Switch has been out for a while now, which means deals are becoming more common than ever before. You can currently grab one of these consoles from Amazon for just $297.66, a $42 drop from its regular retail price. Will the price drop even lower when the official sale goes live? Only time will tell, but in the meantime, we’re pretty happy with this budget-friendly deal. The console is the newest Switch to hit the market, coming complete with 64GB of internal storage, improved speakers, and a stunning 7-inch OLED screen.  2022-10-10T14:24:07.253Z (Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central) Google Pixel 6a | $449 $349 at Amazon The Pixel 6a was already very, very affordable at $449, but this Amazon deal sees $100 knocked off for the lowest price we’ve ever seen. Even with those free gift cards mentioned elsewhere on this page for the new Pixel 7, it’s still quite a pricey phone. So if you’re after something more budget-friendly, but still with a good few years of software and security updates ahead, then the 6a is a great call. 2022-10-10T13:53:46.678Z (Image credit: Apoorva Bhardwaj / Android Central) Save $200 on a Z Flip 4 Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 | $999 $799 at Best Buy Sorry, Amazon your sale price isn’t cutting it so far as it’s $53 more than this very tempting offer from Best Buy on one of our favorite phones of the year. The Flip 4 is $200 off right now and the best price we’ve seen without needing any sort of trade-in. The Flip 4 makes some neat improvements over last years model with a battery that lasts longer, a thinner hinge and better pictures. Bora Purple is just all sorts of gorgeous too. If you’d like to check out the trade-ins or network offers, head on over to our Galaxy Z Flip 4 deals rounup. 2022-10-10T13:34:40.459Z (Image credit: Chris Wedel / Android Central) Google Pixel 7 Pro with free $200 Amazon gift card – $899 Google Pixel 7 with free $100 Amazon gift card – $599 Our deals guru, Patrick, has been rounding up the best Pixel 7 preorders since the phone was shown off at a recent Google event. Truth be told, most of the best ones require you to trade in an old device to get the best prices. If you’re looking to buy outright (and don’t want to tie your soul to one of the pricey networks), then this is a great opportunity to get a cracking deal on an unlocked device. Rather than money off the phones, Amazon is throwing in an Amazon gift card for $100 with the Pixel 7 or $200 on the Pixel 7 Pro which will be very easy to spend over the next few months, especially with Black Friday coming next month. That’s the best offer we expect to see throughout this Amazon sale on the new phones, but we’d expect to see older Pixels and offers on Samsung phones tomorrow too. 2022-10-10T13:05:22.661Z (Image credit: Nick Sutrich / Android Central) Echo Show 5 | $84.99 $34.99 at Amazon Simply put the Echo Show is a smart speaker with a screen that has all sorts of extra uses. Video calling between other Echo Show devices is one of our favorites alongside the basics like using it for a clock, timers, photo displays, weather reports or even synced up to a smart doorbell’s camera. This model with a 5-inch display is great value at $50 off and is an excellent size for a bedside table. There is a larger 8-inch model, which might be a bit too big for the bedside, but fine on other surfaces around the home. It’s usually $129, which is a bit much compared to the 5-inch, but today you can get it for just $70 at Amazon. 2022-10-10T12:56:22.302Z (Image credit: Android Central) Amazon Echo Dot $39.99 $17.99 at Amazon If you’re yet to check out the world of smart speakers, this is an excellent deal. Or maybe you just need an extra Alexa speaker for one of the other rooms in your house? This is the last version of the Echo Dot in the puck design, newer models have a spherical design that produces better sound in all honesty as these ones can be a touch muffled. If you don’t mind spending $25 instead, you can get one of those 4th gen models over at Amazon’s full Echo sale. 2022-10-10T11:26:32.043Z (Image credit: Amazon) Kindle Paperwhite $139.99 $99.99 at Amazon The Kindle Paperwhite is $40 cheaper today, which brings it down to the same price as the entry-level Kindle. That’s a steal as you’re getting a much more modern design with a flush bezel-screen design that’s also waterproof. This generation of the Paperwhite also features the warm light feature usually reserved for much more expensive Kindles. If you’re going to buy a Kindle anytime soon, this is the one we’d go for. Check out Amazon’s full Kindle selection if you’d like to see the other models. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Amazon Sale: Prime Early Access Deals Live Roundup
Democrats Call Sen. Tubervilles Comments About Crime And Reparations Racist
Democrats Call Sen. Tubervilles Comments About Crime And Reparations Racist
Democrats Call Sen. Tuberville’s Comments About Crime And Reparations Racist https://digitalarkansasnews.com/democrats-call-sen-tubervilles-comments-about-crime-and-reparations-racist/ Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) falsely claimed that Democrats are “pro-crime” and only support reparations for Blacks whose ancestors were enslaved because those who “do the crime” are owed — a remark that has generated accusations of racism and criticism for dishonesty. While speaking at a rally in Minden, Nev., on Saturday headlined by former president Donald Trump, the senator and former football coach dismissed the oft-repeated Republican claim that Democrats were “soft on crime” and made the baseless statement that Democrats are “pro-crime.” Tuberville and Trump were campaigning for the state’s GOP candidates ahead of the November midterm elections. “They’re pro-crime,” Tuberville said. “They want crime. They want crime because they want to take over what you got. They want to control what you have. They want reparations because they think the people that do the crime are owed that.” He added a profanity. Although a handful of Democrats in Congress have expressed support for reparations for Black Americans who descended from people enslaved in the U.S., the Democratic Party as a whole does not support the idea. House Democrats have backed a bill that would create a commission to study reparations, but there has not been enough support in the Senate from Democrats or Republicans for the legislation. As a result, some prominent Democrats have encouraged President Biden to sign an executive order that would create the commission. While Biden has not signed an executive order, he backed plans to study reparations while campaigning for president in 2020, a position he has maintained since he took over the presidency. Tuberville and most Republicans contacted by The Washington Post remained silent about the comments Monday. But Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.), one of the two Black Republicans in the House, defended Tuberville by suggesting that Ariel Atkins, a Black Lives Matter Chicago activist, shares the lawmaker’s view. While some Democratic leaders denounced criminal activity in response to the May 2020 death of George Floyd, a Black Minneapolis resident, Atkins argued that looting is a form of reparations. “I don’t care if someone decides to loot a Gucci or a Macy’s or a Nike store, because that makes sure that person eats,” she said in August 2020 during a rally with more than 100 people who were arrested after looting in Chicago. “That makes sure that person has clothes. “That is reparations,” Atkins added. “Anything they wanted to take, they can take it because these businesses have insurance.” Donalds blames liberal lawmakers for this type of criminal activity and argued that Tuberville has a track record of caring more for Black people than members of the opposing party. “Crime is top of mind for Americans due to soft-on-crime policies and progressive prosecutors in liberal cities,” he told The Post on Monday. “As a coach and mentor to countless Black men, Tommy Tuberville has done more to advance Black lives than most people, especially in the Democratic Party.” But Bakari Sellers, an activist and civil rights attorney, criticized Tuberville for building his wealth as Auburn University’s head football coach from 1999 to 2008 while Black young men risked their health under his leadership. “Tommy Tuberville can go to hell, and let me tell you why,” Sellers said on CNN. “The fact is, he made tens of millions of dollars off unpaid Black men as a football coach. “He literally has the stature he has because people went out there and assumed the risk and incurred the risk of concussions, playing hard and everything,” he added. Rep. Kweisi Mfume (D-Md.), former president and CEO of the NAACP, said Sunday that Tuberville’s hateful comments could spur violence against Black people. “His comments are the most vicious, vile, repugnant, parochial, racist thing I’ve heard in a long, long time,” Mfume said on MSNBC. “People take that — the sick ones — and they figure that they have to do something to extend the senator’s philosophy. “I would hope that every elected official on both sides of the aisle condemns that,” the lawmaker added. “He is a bigot. And until he says something different, he will always be seen as a bigot.” NAACP President and CEO Derrick Johnson condemned Tuberville’s comments and highlighted criminal activity by some Trump supporters. More than 900 people protesting the results of the 2020 presidential election have been charged with crimes linked to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. “Senator Tuberville’s comments are flat-out racist, ignorant and utterly sickening,” Johnson said Monday in a statement. “His words promote a centuries-old lie about Black people that throughout history have resulted in the most dangerous policies and violent attacks on our community. We’ve seen this before from the far right, and we’ve seen what they can do when they take power. “Next time the senator wants to talk about crime, he should talk about Donald Trump’s hate-fueled rally on January 6, 2021. Perhaps the real criminals are in his orbit,” he added. The campaign committees for the two parties had no immediate comment Monday. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Democrats Call Sen. Tubervilles Comments About Crime And Reparations Racist
McCarthy Told 2 Officers In Private Meeting That Trump Had No Idea His Supporters Were Attacking Capitol On January 6 Newly Obtained Audio Shows
McCarthy Told 2 Officers In Private Meeting That Trump Had No Idea His Supporters Were Attacking Capitol On January 6 Newly Obtained Audio Shows
McCarthy Told 2 Officers In Private Meeting That Trump Had No Idea His Supporters Were Attacking Capitol On January 6, Newly Obtained Audio Shows https://digitalarkansasnews.com/mccarthy-told-2-officers-in-private-meeting-that-trump-had-no-idea-his-supporters-were-attacking-capitol-on-january-6-newly-obtained-audio-shows/ (CNN) — During a private meeting last summer, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy told two police officers who defended the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, and the mother of a third who died after the riot, that former President Donald Trump had no idea his supporters were carrying out the attack, according to newly obtained audio of the conversation. Testimony to the House Select Committee on January 6 revealed that Trump watched television for hours as the rioters engaged in a brutal fight with law enforcement. But McCarthy maintained Trump was unaware of the violence inside the Capitol when he spoke with Trump by phone that afternoon. He also appeared to take credit for getting the then-President to make a late-afternoon public statement urging his supporters to “go home,” according to one of the meetings’ attendees, then-DC Metropolitan police officer Michael Fanone. “I’m just telling you from my phone call, I don’t know that he did know that,” McCarthy said during the June 2021 meeting about Trump’s knowledge of the fighting, according to audio secretly recorded by Fanone at the time and detailed in his new book titled, “Hold the Line: The Insurrection and One Cop’s Battle for America’s Soul.” The District is a single-party consent jurisdiction for recordings, meaning it is legal for one party to record another without permission. CNN has reached out to McCarthy’s office for comment. The meeting came as a number of House Republicans were attempting to downplay or distort the facts of what took place on January 6, when Trump’s false claims of a stolen election triggered a deadly attack on the Capitol by a violent pro-Trump mob. It also took place as McCarthy was “backing off on a pledge to appoint Republicans to the special January 6 Committee,” Fanone writes, adding: “The only reason McCarthy had agreed to meet with us was because he’d been getting heat for refusing to see me.” Fanone said Monday morning that he wasn’t surprised by McCarthy’s comments in the meeting, arguing that he “saw how he had deviated from his original statements immediately after January 6 to seize upon the politics of the moment.” “But I’m glad I recorded it. That’s why I recorded it, was because I didn’t expect Kevin McCarthy to, No. 1, tell the truth; No. 2, recount the conversation accurately; and No. 3, I wanted to show people how indifferent lawmakers are, not just Republican lawmakers, but all lawmakers, to the actual American people that they are representing,” he told CNN’s Brianna Keilar on “New Day.” Audio demonstrates McCarthy’s refusal to condemn Trump While some details of the meeting were reported on the day it occurred, the newly released audio underscores just how quickly Trump regained his grip on the Republican Party following the January 6 attack despite an initial groundswell of bipartisan outrage over his unwillingness to denounce the violence as it was happening. McCarthy himself said he considered asking Trump to resign in the immediate aftermath of the attack, according to previously released audio of a private conversation between the House minority leader and other Republican lawmakers. Fanone, who was stun-gunned several times and beaten with a flagpole during the riot, had previously made several attempts to meet with the California Republican to discuss the insurrection before McCarthy ultimately agreed, according to his new book. Republicans, including McCarthy, had largely opposed efforts to examine the circumstances of the insurrection, drawing intense criticism from Fanone and several other police officers who were there. US Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn, who also defended the Capitol during the insurrection, and the mother of late Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick also participated in the meeting with McCarthy and all three repeatedly pressed McCarthy to acknowledge Trump’s role in spurring on the attack, according to the recording. Sicknick suffered multiple strokes and died a day after the riot. It was his mother, Gladys Sicknick, who first challenged McCarthy’s claim about what Trump knew and when he knew it. “He already knew what was going on,” she said of Trump, according to the audio obtained by CNN. “People were fighting for hours and hours and hours. This doesn’t make any sense to me.” Later in the meeting, Fanone also confronted McCarthy about his defense of Trump, telling the Republican leader: “While you were on the phone with him, I was getting the shit kicked out of me!” “I asked McCarthy why he would take credit for Trump’s pathetic, half-hearted late-afternoon video address to his followers. I said, ‘Trump says to his people, ‘This is what happens when you steal an election. Go home. I love you.’ What the f–k is that? That came from the president of the United States,” Fanone writes in his book. All three urged McCarthy to condemn 21 members of his own party who voted earlier that month against awarding the Congressional Gold Medal to officers who defended the Capitol and pushed him to commit to a serious “insurrection investigation,” Fanone writes in his memoir. “I told McCarthy I felt betrayed by the way some Republicans were twisting a riotous assault on law enforcement officers into a fundraising grift,” Fanone writes in his book. “‘It’s crap,’ I said. ‘It’s disgraceful,’” he adds, recalling his comments during the meeting and noting that “McCarthy offered no response.” McCarthy said ahead of his meeting with Fanone that he has “no problem talking to anybody about” his conversation with Trump on January 6 when asked by CNN if he would speak to the committee about the call. Fanone suffered a heart attack and a concussion during the insurrection and is dealing with a traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder. The-CNN-Wire & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved. Join our Newsletter for the latest news right to your inbox Read More Here
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McCarthy Told 2 Officers In Private Meeting That Trump Had No Idea His Supporters Were Attacking Capitol On January 6 Newly Obtained Audio Shows
Van Buren Man Among Four Killed In Weekend Wrecks
Van Buren Man Among Four Killed In Weekend Wrecks
Van Buren Man Among Four Killed In Weekend Wrecks https://digitalarkansasnews.com/van-buren-man-among-four-killed-in-weekend-wrecks/ Police lights are shown in this file photo. Four people were killed and five more injured in wrecks on Arkansas roads this weekend, according to preliminary fatality reports from the Arkansas State Police. Mark Gibson, 67, of Van Buren died in a head-on collision on Arkansas 59 near Van Buren a few minutes after 3:45 p.m. Friday when his 2013 Chevrolet Silverado was struck by a 2002 Dodge 3500 that veered into the opposing lane of traffic, according to a report. The driver of the Dodge, 42-year-old Michael Hale of Canehill, was also injured in the wreck. He was taken to a Fort Smith hospital for treatment. Garon Dupree, 20, of Texas was traveling east on Arkansas 160 on Sunday in Miller County when his 2000 Chevrolet Silverado left the roadway and struck a building about 2:15 a.m., according to a report. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The report said the weather was clear and the roads were dry at the time of the crash. George Peden, 69, of Texarkana was traveling in a 2011 Dodge Caravan north on Arkansas 237 around 2:20 p.m. Saturday in Miller County, according to a report from state police. Nathaniel Strooper, 46, also of Texarkana, was driving a 2008 Dodge Dakota on Arkansas 82 when his vehicle collided with Peden at the intersection of the highways. The report said Peden’s passenger was injured in the crash as well as Strooper’s. Peden was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital. Troopers said in the report that the weather was clear and the roads were dry. Kathy O’Briant, 63, of Monticello died shortly before 4:15 p.m. Friday when the 2006 Ford she was a passenger in failed to stop before crossing Arkansas 530 on Arkansas 114 in Lincoln County and was struck by a 2004 Chevrolet, according to a report. Both vehicles were forced off the road by the impact of the crash, and the Ford O’Briant was in rolled over once as it slid. The driver of the Ford, 66-year-old Charlotte Roberson of Dumas and another passenger, 28-year-old William Roberson, also of Dumas, were injured in the wreck. They were taken to UAMS Medical Center in Little Rock for treatment. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Van Buren Man Among Four Killed In Weekend Wrecks
Ukraine War: Russian Hawks Celebrate Deadly Response To Crimea Setback
Ukraine War: Russian Hawks Celebrate Deadly Response To Crimea Setback
Ukraine War: Russian Hawks Celebrate Deadly Response To Crimea Setback https://digitalarkansasnews.com/ukraine-war-russian-hawks-celebrate-deadly-response-to-crimea-setback/ Image source, AFP Image caption, The flurry of missiles launched against Ukraine were the first day at work for the hard-line Gen Sergei Surovikin (right), pictured here in 2017 By Sarah Rainsford BBC Eastern Europe correspondent The hail of indiscriminate missile fire across Ukraine this morning was Russia’s brutal payback for the attack on the Crimean bridge. Russian President Vladimir Putin called it the response to an “act of terrorism” which he blamed on Ukraine. But it was also Mr Putin’s response to hawks in his own camp who have been growing increasingly restless with Russian losses in the war and increasingly loud with their calls for tougher action. Those pro-Kremlin officials and TV hosts who were depressed and dejected just days ago are now cheering this assault on their neighbour, gloating and even dancing in social media posts as Ukraine grieves for its dead and picks through the wreckage of multiple attacks. The barrage of missiles was Gen Sergei Surovikin’s first day of work. Now in charge of Russia’s war effort, his appointment this weekend was a sop by Mr Putin to the hardliners. The general’s CV includes the indiscriminate Russian bombardment of Syria and the death of pro-democracy protesters in Moscow in 1991 during the attempted coup, so he was already being described as ruthless. This morning matched his reputation. Image source, EPA Image caption, Monday’s missile strikes across Ukraine, including the capital Kyiv, marked a significant escalation The Crimean bridge strike on Saturday pushed Russian dismay at the war’s progress to a peak. A symbol of Russia’s claim to Ukraine – the illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014 – had gone up in flames and the loudest voices in this war, the hardliners, were baying for retaliation. They had been calling for attacks on civilian infrastructure for some time: to freeze the Ukrainian people into submission this winter, if their soldiers can’t be beaten on the battlefield. “When will we actually start fighting?” propagandist Vladimir Solovyov demanded to know, arguing it was better for Russia to be feared than laughed at. So today, Kremlin loyalists are celebrating. The Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov, who had been furiously criticising Russia’s defence ministry for weeks, has pronounced himself “100% happy”. RT television channel boss Margarita Simonyan defined the bridge attack as a “red line” before cooing that Russia’s “little response has landed”. Image source, Anton Krasovsky Image caption, Anton Krasovsky of Russian state TV posted a video of himself apparently celebrating the latest strikes across Ukraine One of her senior employees, Anton Krasovsky, posted a video of himself in a cap with a pro-war Z symbol and what looked like Russian army pyjamas, dancing and grinning broadly at the camera. At the start, he punches the air, apparently for victory. But this “shock and awe” attack – which killed civilians and destroyed homes, smashing into parks and playgrounds – comes from a position of Russian weakness: its troops have been losing on the ground. Vladimir Putin seemed to drag his heels when that began, perhaps hoping to hold out on the battlefield until winter when Ukraine’s Western allies might weaken in their support, under more political pressure at home. Russia could then pressure for talks: a frozen conflict. But Ukraine’s military kept advancing, its morale still strong, even after Russia illegally annexed four chunks of Ukrainian land. The frustration of Russian hardliners burst into the open. Their criticism has been carefully focused on the military, not President Putin. But this is his war: he launched it and he is Russia’s supreme commander-in-chief. That’s why Grigory Yudin, from the Moscow School of Social and Economic Sciences, described Monday’s mass shelling as “an act of desperation”, aimed mostly at solving Mr Putin’s internal problems. Russia’s president had embraced the hawks’ idea that you have to “scare the opponent to death” so it will surrender, Mr Yudin wrote on Twitter. Russia’s former President, Dmitry Medvedev – once seen as a liberal – warned that these strikes were just “the first episode”, with more to come. Vladimir Putin himself said Russia would respond “in a very harsh manner” if what he called “acts of terrorism” like the bridge attack continue. Such talk could suggest a dark, new turn in the war, with increasingly random and devastating attacks. “I think the Russian leadership is ready for a war of attrition,” Russian foreign policy analyst Andrei Kortunov told the BBC. “They would like to break the will of the Ukrainian people and army which implies heavy strikes against critical infrastructure.” And yet Ukraine has shown no sign of buckling in well over seven months of an invasion that has already brought horrors such as the siege of Mariupol and torture and executions in places like Bucha and Izyum. “This theory is wrong in the Ukrainian case,” Grigory Yudin wrote. “But that is something the hawks are still to learn.” Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Ukraine War: Russian Hawks Celebrate Deadly Response To Crimea Setback
St. Charles Catholic's Jason Brown Among High School Broyles Award Honorees
St. Charles Catholic's Jason Brown Among High School Broyles Award Honorees
St. Charles Catholic's Jason Brown Among High School Broyles Award Honorees https://digitalarkansasnews.com/st-charles-catholics-jason-brown-among-high-school-broyles-award-honorees/ St. Charles Catholic defensive coordinator Jason Brown is one of 19 high school assistant coaches from across the country recognized Monday by the Broyles Award. The Comets won the Division III state championship in 2021 in a year of both transition and hardship at SCC. Not only did Wayne Stein move up from his assistant’s post to replace longtime head coach Frank Monica, but the LaPlace community was hit hard by Hurricane Ida just before the start of the season. One assistant from each of 19 states were recognized in Monday’s announcement. The Broyles Award will announce more winners as state selection processes are completed over the next few weeks with the goal to include winners from all states. Winners of this award will be honored at the 2022 High School Broyles Award Honoree Dinner on Monday, Dec. 5 in Little Rock, Arkansas. This event coincides with the annual collegiate Broyles Award ceremony. The High School Broyles Award is partnering with FieldTurf, a division of the Tarkett Sports family. FieldTurf is a leader in sports surfacing systems, with over 25,000 installations worldwide. FieldTurf continues its strong commitment to the High School Broyles Award mission, and we could not ask for a better partner to work with and support high school coaches nationwide. About the High School Broyles Award In 2018, the Broyles Award added to their 27-year tradition of honoring the nation’s best collegiate assistant football coaches through the creation of the High School Broyles Award. This award honors the top high school assistant football coach in every participating state, projecting their excellence onto the national stage. About the Broyles Award The Broyles Award was created in 1996 recognizing Coach Frank Broyles’ legacy of selecting and developing great assistants during his almost two decades as head coach at Arkansas. You can follow the Broyles Award on Facebook and Twitter. Read More…
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
St. Charles Catholic's Jason Brown Among High School Broyles Award Honorees
Trump Lawyer Cooperating With Justice Department On Missing Documents Case
Trump Lawyer Cooperating With Justice Department On Missing Documents Case
Trump Lawyer Cooperating With Justice Department On Missing Documents Case https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-lawyer-cooperating-with-justice-department-on-missing-documents-case/ The right-wing TV anchor-turned-attorney for former president Donald Trump, who signed a false certification telling the Department of Justice that the ex-president had turned over all classified documents in his possession, is now cooperating with federal prosecutors in the investigation into Mr Trump. According to NBC News, attorney Christina Bobb met with federal investigators and provided information on two other attorneys who had a hand in submitting the statement to the government. The Friday meeting reportedly ended with Ms Bobb naming Mr Trump’s previous lead counsel, Evan Corcoran, as the person who drafted the false instrument, which was turned over to investigators during a June meeting at Mr Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club. Ms Bobb, who was one of Mr Trump’s official custodians of records at the time, also named Trump lawyer Boris Epshteyn as having been involved in the discussions leading up to submission of the false statement but did not have a role in drafting it. The former One America News broadcaster reportedly insisted on edits to Mr Corcoran’s initial draft to include a disclaimer which stated that she was making the certification to prosecutors “based upon the information that has been provided to me” and told investigators it was Mr Corcoran who told her a “diligent search was conducted” for documents in response to an 11 May grand jury subpoena, after which all of the classified documents were turned over. That statement turned out to be false, and after investigators discovered there were more documents at Mr Trump’s property they obtained a warrant authorising them to search for them there. During the 8 August search of Mr Trump’s home, FBI agents found more than 100 documents bearing markings identifying them as classified at levels as high as “top secret”. Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Lawyer Cooperating With Justice Department On Missing Documents Case
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Message
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Message https://digitalarkansasnews.com/michigan-gop-statewide-candidates-stick-to-message/ By JOEY CAPPELLETTI Associated Press/Report for America WARREN, Mich. (AP) — With voting underway in Michigan’s general election, the Republican nominee for secretary of state stepped on stage as a warm-up act for former President Donald Trump and hit hard on the main theme of her campaign. Kristina Karamo repeated unfounded assertions about the 2020 presidential election that have been repeatedly debunked. She told the crowd at the recent rally at Macomb Community College that “authoritarians” are giving millions to her Democratic opponent — Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson — in an attempt to “corrupt battleground state election systems so they can control America.” “If you look at history, it shows you what tyrants do,” said Karamo, a former community college professor. “History is telling us, history is screaming to us, that if we don’t step up and fight now, we will lose the greatest country in human history.” It was an address designed to rev up the crowd of devoted Trump followers, some of whom have latched onto the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory. While Karamo’s speech drew cheers, relying on a general election strategy that appeals to the most far-right voters is a gamble for Michigan Republicans. Candidates who have to play to their party’s base during primaries or nominating conventions often shift toward the center, aiming to attract more voters for the general election. But that hasn’t happened this year for the Republicans seeking Michigan’s top three statewide offices — governor, attorney general and secretary of state. The Nov. 8 election will test whether campaigns designed to resonate with the far-right and highlight strong ties to Trump will be enough to win in a traditional swing state, where the Republican incumbent lost the White House race to Democrat challenger Joe Biden by more than 154,000 votes in 2020. All three GOP candidates stood behind Trump during the Oct. 1 rally at the college about 20 miles north of Detroit, joined by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who has amplified Trump’s election falsehoods to audiences across the country. Trump falsely claimed the 2020 election was “rigged and stolen” in Michigan, citing “evidence” he said first originated with Karamo and Matthew DePerno, a tax lawyer who is the nominee for state attorney general. In his own address to the crowd, DePerno called Democrats “radical, cultural Marxists” who want to “silence you.” “If that doesn’t work, they want to put you in jail,” DePerno told the crowd, which fell into chants of “Lock her up.” All three Democratic incumbents are women. DePerno’s campaign also is clouded by an investigation into whether he should be criminally charged for attempting to gain access to voting machines after the 2020 election. John DeBlaay, a Grand Rapids real estate agent and precinct delegate who attended the rally, said he was thrilled with the candidates. “We’ve got the best America First ticket all the way from top to bottom that we’ve had in a long time now,” he said. Some moderate Republicans are skeptical that campaigns appealing mostly to base elements of the party will be enough to beat Democratic incumbents with wide name recognition and sizable fundraising advantages. The Democrats also are expected to benefit from having an amendment on the ballot that seeks to enshrine the right to abortion in the state constitution. These Republicans say inflation, gas prices and economic anxiety should be the GOP’s main talking points, not a continued alignment with Trump and his false claims about widespread fraud costing him reelection. They point to the unusual way Michigan selects its attorney general and secretary of state candidates, a process done through a party nominating convention rather than through a primary election in which voters make the choice. The most conservative Republicans who are loyal to Trump dominated that convention in April. The party’s co-chair, Meshawn Maddock, was one of 16 Republicans who submitted false certificates stating they were the state’s presidential electors despite Biden’s certified victory in the state. Three weeks before the convention, during another Trump rally, DePerno encouraged attendees — many of them precinct delegates — to “storm” the party gathering and said it was “time for the grassroots to unite.” Delegates overwhelmingly voted to nominate Karamo. DePerno won a runoff over former legislative leader Tom Leonard, who lost in the 2018 attorney general’s race by 3 percentage points to Democrat Dana Nessel. “Karamo and DePerno are among the most loyal to Donald Trump that you will find anywhere in the country,” said Jason Roe, a longtime Republican strategist. “That loyalty has been unshakable in this election process, regardless of how it might affect general election prospects.” Roe, whose father served as the Michigan GOP’s executive director for 10 years, became executive director of the state party in spring 2021. Six months later, he stepped down due to a “difference in opinion on how many conspiracy theories we should tolerate.” Soon after Roe left, Trump began calling party leaders to “force the party to embrace things formally that weren’t going to be helpful to the upcoming election,” Roe said. The party’s candidate for governor, Tudor Dixon, won the nomination during the primary in August after receiving Trump’s endorsement. Dixon, a conservative news show host who once acted in low-budget horror films, also benefited from support of the wealthy DeVos family. While seen as less extreme than Karamo and DePerno, Dixon indicated during debates that she thought the 2020 presidential election was stolen and she recently made light of a plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat. Dixon has since tried to pivot away from denying the results of the last election by focusing on topics such as inflation and education, but she also is repeating hard-right rhetoric on cultural issues. She has called for banning “pornographic” books in schools and has pitched an education agenda modeled after the Florida policy that critics have labeled “Don’t Say Gay.” While Democrats have attacked DePerno and Karamo for their continued denial of Biden’s victory in 2020, they have focused on what they describe as Dixon’s “extreme” abortion stance. Lackluster fundraising has made it difficult for her to push back. As of Aug. 22, Dixon had $524,000 in the bank compared with Whitmer’s $14 million, according to the latest available campaign finance reports. Some of that gap has been closed by the super PAC Michigan Families United, which has received $2.5 million in donations, including from the DeVos family. “I just don’t like that there’s no commercials on TV about Dixon. Everything you see is about the other people, and it’s all negative,” said Laura Bunting, an Ionia County resident who attended the Trump rally. Karamo and DePerno had a combined $422,554 cash on hand as of Sept. 16 compared with the $5.7 million combined for their Democratic opponents, according to campaign finance reports. Michigan-based pollster Bernie Porn said the Republican candidates have been defined by their extreme stances but that none has attracted enough money to get on TV and introduce themselves to a broader swath of voters. That, he said, “makes it difficult for folks to form a favorable opinion of you.” ___ Joey Cappelletti is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. ___ Follow AP for full coverage of the midterms at https://apnews.com/hub/2022-midterm-elections Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Michigan GOP Statewide Candidates Stick To Message
Trump Takes Credit For Destroying Late Night Comedy And Boosting Gutfeld On Fox News
Trump Takes Credit For Destroying Late Night Comedy And Boosting Gutfeld On Fox News
Trump Takes Credit For ‘Destroying’ Late Night Comedy And Boosting Gutfeld On Fox News https://digitalarkansasnews.com/trump-takes-credit-for-destroying-late-night-comedy-and-boosting-gutfeld-on-fox-news/ By Zachary LeemanOct 10th, 2022, 1:37 pm Screenshot via YouTube Former President Donald Trump took credit for tanking the ratings of late night comedy shows in a Truth Social message congratulating Fox News’ Greg Gutfeld —whose name Trump misspelled — for recent ratings victories. “It was my great honor to have destroyed the ratings of Late Night ‘Comedy’ shows. There is nothing funny about the shows, the three hosts have very little talent,” Trump wrote. Though he didn’t name the specific three comedians, his message was in response to a Fox News report with Stephen Colbert, Trevor Noah, and Jimmy Kimmel highlighted in a feature image. Noah recently announced he is leaving his gig as the host of The Daily Show to focus on standup comedy. The report noted the shrinking audience for hosts like Colbert and Kimmel since Trump left office, as well as the fact that Gutfeld’s comedy talk show Gutfeld! is often edging out these other shows in viewership. Trump did name one late night host he clearly has a problem with: Jimmy Fallon. The host of The Tonight Show invited Trump onto his show in the midst of the 2016 presidential campaigns, a move that earned plenty of fallout. Fallon would go on to offer an apology to those he offended with the lighthearted exchange. “It’s all in the fun of the show. I made a mistake. I’m sorry if I made anyone mad. And, looking back, I would do it differently,” the comedian said in response to the pushback against the interview, which included Fallon at one point tugging on Trump’s hair. The former president claimed Fallon apologized for helping to “humanize” him. “When Jimmy Fallon apologized for having humanized ‘Trump,’ and his ratings soared, the Radical Left forced him to apologize—that was effectively the end of The Tonight Show. In any event, congratulations to Greg Gutfield!” Trump wrote. Screenshot via Truth Social Have a tip we should know? tips@mediaite.com Read More Here
·digitalarkansasnews.com·
Trump Takes Credit For Destroying Late Night Comedy And Boosting Gutfeld On Fox News