Rabu, 31 Mei 2023

US House advances debt ceiling bill in crucial step to avert historic default - Financial Times

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Selasa, 30 Mei 2023

Tree of Life synagogue: Gunman driven by 'malice and hate' - BBC

Tree of Life synagogueGetty Images

A gunman who killed 11 worshippers at a Pittsburgh synagogue, in the deadliest antisemitic attack in US history acted with "malice and hatred", a court has heard.

Prosecutors described how the attacker barged into the synagogue in 2018 and shot every worshipper he could find.

His "malice and hate can only be proven in the broken bodies" of the victims, said the lead prosecutor.

If convicted, Robert Bowers, 50, could get the death penalty.

Eight men and three women - ranging in age from 54 to 97 - died in the attack inside the Tree of Life synagogue on 27 October 2018.

The gunman, who has pleaded not guilty, is on trial for more than 60 federal charges including obstruction of free exercise of religion resulting in death and hate crimes resulting in death.

The defendant's lawyers had offered to plead guilty on all counts, in exchange for a sentence of life in prison instead of the death penalty, but federal prosecutors rejected such a deal.

Most families of those killed have voiced support for the death penalty.

"The defendant had moved methodically through the synagogue to find the Jews he hated and kill them," Soo Song, the lead prosecutor, said in her opening statement on Tuesday.

The court heard audio of the 911 call one of the victims made to emergency dispatcher Shannon Basa-Sabol, who was the first witness in the trial.

She received Bernice Simon's desperate call from inside the Tree of Life synagogue.

"Tree of Life, we're being attacked… We're being attacked!" Ms Simon said on the phone.

"My husband's shot, oh dear God, my husband's bleeding, he's shot in the back."

Ms Simon and her husband, Sylvan, were both killed.

Some survivors cried in court.

Tree of Life rabbi and attack survivor Jeffrey Myers testified how he prayed while on the line with a police dispatcher as the attack unfolded.

"I thought about the history of my people, how we've been persecuted and hunted and slaughtered for centuries, and how all of them must have felt the moments before their death, and what did they do," Mr Myers told the court.

Three congregations - Dor Hadash, New Light and the Tree of Life - shared the synagogue.

Judy Clarke, the defence lawyer, acknowledged to jurors on Tuesday that there was no disputing her client carried out the attack, but she questioned whether he had acted out of hatred.

She argued that the death penalty sentencing option was unconstitutional because she said the former truck driver suffers from serious mental illnesses, including schizophrenia.

She also said he was "a socially awkward man who didn't have many friends" and that he had "misguided intent" and "irrational thoughts".

The 12 jurors were told that the defendant frequently posted antisemitic slurs online, on sites like Gab, and prosecutors said he shouted "all Jews must die" during the attack.

Investigators said he was carrying multiple weapons on him, including a semi-automatic rifle.

Police shot the gunman three times before subduing him. Five of the injured included police officers who responded to the scene.

The trial in the US District Court in Pittsburgh in western Pennsylvania is expected to last several weeks.

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1 dead, 5 injured in Charleston Co. shooting - Live 5 News WCSC

CHARLESTON COUNTY, S.C. (WCSC) - The Charleston County Sheriff’s Office said one person was killed and five others were injured in a shooting near a nightclub in the Hollywood area Monday night.

The shooting happened around 9:50 p.m. on Storage Road near Church Hill Road in the Hollywood area, sheriff’s office spokesman Andrew Knapp said.

Knapp said deputies found one person inside a vehicle who was pronounced dead at the scene. The five injured people were taken to area hospitals with injuries that were not believed to be life-threatening, Knapp said.

Around two hours before the shooting, deputies responded to a report of a large crowd in the area and found a neighborhood party, Knapp said.

No arrests have been made. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Charleston County Sheriff’s Office at 843-743-7200 or Crimestoppers of the Lowcountry at 843-554-1111.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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Chicago Weekend Shootings: At Least 8 Killed, 42 Wounded in Memorial Day Weekend Violence - NBC Chicago

At least eight people have been killed and at least 42 others were wounded in shootings across the Chicago Memorial Day weekend, police say.

The first fatal shooting of the weekend occurred just before 1 a.m. Saturday in the 7800 block of South Seeley, in the city's Beverly View neighborhood.

According to police, a 33-year-old man was found unresponsive on a sidewalk after he had been shot in the left armpit. He was pronounced dead at the scene, and no suspects are in custody.

Also on Saturday, just after 2 a.m. in the Lakeview neighborhood, 34-year-old William Hair was found lying on a sidewalk after he had been shot in the chest, police said.

The man was taken to an area hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

"Three blocks from his house, a car pulled up. Two people came out. There were two gunshots, one from each person," his brother, Matthew Hair, said. "They did not ask for money. They did not ask for anything. They shot at him for no reason."

No suspects are in custody, and police are continuing to investigate.

Two people were shot in the Heart of Chicago, in the 2300 block of West 18th Street at approximately 2:55 a.m. Saturday. Both victims were standing on a sidewalk when shots were fired, according to police.

A 36-year-old man was struck in the face by gunfire, and was pronounced dead at an area hospital. Another victim, a 37-year-old woman, was also hit in the face, and was listed in critical condition.

Two additional fatal shootings occurred within less than an hour of one another Saturday morning, including one in the 1100 block of North Ridgeway, police said.

When authorities arrived at the scene, they found a man that had suffered multiple gunshot wounds. He was taken by another individual to a hospital before Chicago paramedics transferred him to another facility.

He was later pronounced dead. No suspects are in custody.

Just before noon Saturday in the 7900 block of South Ashland, four people were shot by a person in a passing vehicle.

A 69-year-old woman was struck while sitting in a vehicle, and she later died from her injuries.

A 26-year-old man was hit in the shoulder, a 34-year-old man was hit in the left arm, and a 55-year-old man was shot in the back. All three were hospitalized in good condition, police said.

No suspects are in custody.

At approximately 9:50 p.m. in the 9800 block of South Avenue L, a 20-year-old man was walking on a sidewalk when he was shot in the back.

According to police, the man was taken to an area hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

A 26-year-old man exiting a gas station in the 500 block of East 67th Street was shot by a person in a while SUV at approximately 10:54 p.m. Saturday.

Police say the man was shot in the back, and was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.

Just after 12:30 a.m. Sunday in the 1000 block of West 105th Street, a 20-year-old man was walking on a sidewalk when two men walked up to him and opened fire, striking him multiple times in the head and legs.

Police say the man was pronounced dead at the scene.

Here are the rest of the weekend’s shootings so far.

Monday –

  • At approximately 1:43 a.m. in the 9100 block of South Harper, three victims were standing on a sidewalk when someone inside a black sedan fired shots. A 59-year-old male was transported to a nearby hospital with a gunshot wound to the arm in good condition. A 57-year-old female was transported to a nearby hospital with a gunshot wound to the head in critical condition, and a 77-year-old male was transported to a nearby hospital in critical condition with a gunshot wound to the back. No one was in custody.
  • At 2:53 a.m., a 38-year-old male was standing in the courtyard of a building in the 13100 block of South Ingleside when shots were fired. The victim struck in the leg and was transported to a nearby hospital in critical condition.
  • A 33-year-old woman was inside a vehicle in the 2500 block of South Saint Louis at approximately 7:35 a.m. when she was shot in the right thigh. Police say she drove herself to an area hospital, where she was listed in good condition.
  • At approximately 4 p.m. in the 700 block of North Hamlin, a 43-year-old man was on the street when an altercation broke out, with the assailant shooting the victim in the thigh. The man was taken to an area hospital in good condition, police said.
  • A man was inside a vehicle in the 5400 block of South Halsted at approximately 4:30 p.m. when he was hit in the back by gunfire, according to police. The man was taken to an area hospital in critical condition.
  • In the 7900 block of South Clyde at approximately 4:45 p.m., a 22-year-old man was inside a residence when he was shot in the face. Police say the man was taken to an area hospital in critical condition.
  • Police say a 36-year-old man was standing near a street in the 700 block of North Pine at approximately 7:05 p.m. when he was shot in both legs. He was taken to an area hospital in good condition.

Sunday –

  • At approximately 12:50 a.m. in the 600 block of West Barry, three men were shot while standing on a sidewalk. One of the victims was taken to an area hospital in serious condition after he was hit in the back. Two other men, a 22-year-old and a 32-year-old, were hospitalized in good condition.
  • In the 4700 block of South Honore at approximately 12:55 a.m., a 39-year-old man was shot in the foot, police said. The man was taken to an area hospital in good condition.
  •  A 22-year-old woman was sitting in a car in the 700 block of West 54th Street at approximately 1:44 a.m. when she was shot in the head. Police say friends of the woman brought her to an area hospital, where she was listed in serious condition.
  • Police say a 26-year-old man was walking in the 2700 block of West Ogden at approximately 2:50 a.m. when a person in a black sedan shot him in the left leg. He was taken to an area hospital in critical condition.
  • At approximately 3:54 a.m. in the 3300 block of West Douglas Boulevard, a 23-year-old woman was on a sidewalk when she was shot in the buttocks. Police say the woman was taken to an area hospital in good condition.
  • A 60-year-old sustained a gunshot wound to the left leg at around 1 p.m. in the 1000 block of South Normal. The victim was walking down an alley when an unknown vehicle drove by and someone inside fired shots, striking the victim, according to police.
  • A 30-year-old man was shot in the left hand at around 1:58 p.m. in the 11900 block of South Michigan. The victim was driving his car when a white-colored sedan pulled up alongside the victim, he heard shots and felt pain. The victim was taken to the hospital in good condition.
  • At around 4 p.m. in the 8600 block of South Loomis, a 34-year-old man sustained a gunshot wound to the stomach, police said. The victim heard and felt shots, police said, and he was later found laying between two houses in a gangway. He was taken to the hospital in critical condition.
  • In the 5900 block of West Superior at around 4:45 p.m., a 30-year-old man was shot in the lower leg during a domestic incident. A known offender produced a handgun and fired shots, striking the victim, according to police.
  • A 2-year-old girl accidentally shot herself at around 6:15 p.m. in the 1500 block of West Jonquil Terrace. Upon arrival, officers discovered a two-year-old who had been shot in the right hand. According to authorities, the young girl found a gun and accidentally discharged the weapon, striking herself in the forearm.
  • A 21-year-old man was shot at around 6:22 p.m. in the 7600 block of West Ford City, police said. A 24-year-old man who was approached by the 21-year-old man who produced a handgun and fired shots, police said. The victim returned fire, striking the offender in the thigh area. The victim, who possesses a valid Firearms Owner Identification Card and a Concealed Carry License, was not taken into custody.
  • A 50-year-old woman around 4:15 p.m. in the 1200 block of North Western Ave. sustained a self-inflicted gun shot wound to the leg. The woman self-transported to a nearby hospital and was last listed in good condition. According to a report from the Chicago Sun-Times, the shooting was "accidental."
  • At approximately 10:43 p.m., a 2-year-old male was "playing in a bedroom with a known adult male "in the 7900 block of South Hermitage when a handgun was discharged, police said. The victim was transported to a nearby hospital with gunshot wound to the hand. He was last listed in fair condition. No one is in custody and detectives are investigating.

Saturday –                                   

  • In the 3000 block of West Jackson at approximately 1:11 a.m., a 16-year-old female was standing on a sidewalk when she was shot in the right side, police said. She was hospitalized in fair condition.
  • At approximately 1:18 a.m. in the 900 block of North Randolph, a 33-year-old man was standing on a sidewalk when a person in a passing vehicle shot him in the chest. Police say the victim was hospitalized in critical condition.
  • A 25-year-old man was found inside of a vehicle in the 1400 block of West 49th Street at approximately 1:18 a.m. He had sustained a gunshot wound to the head, and was hospitalized in critical condition, according to police.
  • Police say a man was dropped off at a local hospital at approximately 1:26 a.m. for treatment for a gunshot wound to the head. He was listed in critical condition.
  • In the 2400 block of South Homan at approximately 3:20 a.m., a 22-year-old man was standing in a group when he was shot in the chest. According to police, he was taken to an area hospital in serious condition.
  • At approximately 3:04 a.m. in the 4700 block of West Monroe, a 34-year-old man was arguing with another individual when he was shot in the right leg, police said. The man was taken to an area hospital in fair condition.
  • A 21-year-old man was walking in the 4300 block of West Gladys at approximately 5:32 a.m. when he was struck in the lower back by gunfire. According to police, he was hospitalized in serious condition.
  • Police say a 24-year-old man transported himself to a local hospital after he was shot in the left foot in the 2800 block of West 19th Street at approximately 7:15 a.m. His condition has since stabilized.
  • At a hotel in the 300 block of North Dearborn, a 23-year-old man was handling a gun when it appeared to accidentally discharge, striking him and a 25-year-old man. The older individual was hit in the stomach, and the 23-year-old was hit in the hand. Both were hospitalized in fair condition.
  • At approximately 3:14 p.m. in the 3800 block of South Michigan Avenue, a 45-year-old woman was shot in the shoulder during an altercation, police said. Authorities say the woman was hospitalized in fair condition.
  • A 14-year-old was standing on a sidewalk in the 7000 block of South Ada when they suffered a graze wound to the arm from gunfire. Police say the teen declined medical treatment, and no suspects are in custody.

Friday –

  • At approximately 5:39 p.m. in the 6300 block of West Montrose, a 29-year-old man was approached by another individual who opened fire, striking the victim in the stomach. He was taken to an area hospital in critical condition.
  • A 32-year-old man was shot in the leg and was dropped off at an area hospital in critical condition, police said. No further details were immediately available.
  • In the 9700 block of South Merrill at approximately 10:24 p.m., a 17-year-old male was shot as he opened his front door. Police say the teen was hit in the upper-left thigh, and was hospitalized in good condition.

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Senin, 29 Mei 2023

What's in the debt ceiling deal struck by Biden and McCarthy? - CNBC

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on the bipartisan budget agreement in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on May 28, 2023.
Yuri Gripas | Bloomberg | Getty Images

President Joe Biden and Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy on Sunday signed off on an agreement to temporarily suspend the debt ceiling and cap some federal spending in order to prevent a U.S. debt default.

The deal, written into legislative text that they hope will be passed by the House of Representatives and Senate in the coming days, was formally posted on an official congressional website.

A cap on discretionary spending

The deal would suspend the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling until Jan. 1, 2025, allowing the U.S. government to pay its bills.

In exchange, non-defense discretionary spending would be "roughly flat" at current year levels in 2024, "when factoring in agreed upon appropriations adjustments," according to White House officials.

They estimated that total non-defense discretionary spending excluding benefits for veterans would total $637 billion for the 2024 fiscal year, down marginally from $638 billion the year before. That total would also increase by 1% in 2025.

A breather for the 2024 election

The debt limit extension lasts past 2024, meaning Congress would not need to address the deeply polarizing issue again until after the November 2024 presidential election.

Still, tough conversations about how to allocate money under the new spending caps will need to take place in Congress this year.

Increased defense spending

The deal would boost total defense spending to $886 billion, in line with Biden's 2024 budget spending proposal.

That is about a 3% increase from the $858 billion allocated in the current budget for the Pentagon and other defense-related programs in other agencies.

Moving special IRS funding

Biden and Democrats secured $80 billion for a decade in new funding to help the Internal Revenue Service enforce the tax code for wealthy Americans in last year's Inflation Reduction Act, a move the administration said would yield $200 billion in additional revenue over the next 10 years.

The IRS earmarked the money for hiring thousands of new agents, and the extra tax revenue they generated was expected to offset a slew of climate-friendly tax credits.

The new legislation and subsequent appropriations would shift $10 billion in each of calendar years 2024 and 2025 in funding away the Internal Revenue Service. But administration officials believe the IRS can make do in the near term since it was funded over a 10-year period.

Covid Clawback

Biden and McCarthy agreed to claw back much of the unused Covid relief funds as part of the budget deal. The estimated amount of unused funds is between $50 billion and $70 billion.

White House officials said some funds would be retained, including items related to vaccine funding, housing assistance and support for Native Americans.

Work requirements

Biden and McCarthy battled fiercely over imposing stricter work requirements on low-income Americans for being eligible for food and healthcare programs.

No changes were made to Medicaid in the deal, but the agreement would impose new work requirements on some low-income people who receive food assistance under the program known as SNAP up to age 54, instead of up to age 50.

Student loans

The new bill would require the Biden administration to follow through with a plan to end the current pause on student loan repayments by late August.

But it did not strike down Biden's plan to forgive $430 billion in student debt, which the Supreme Court is currently reviewing.

'Paygo'

Republicans secured a budgeting mechanism known as "Paygo," which is short for pay-as-you-go, that says new government agency actions affecting revenues and spending should be offset by savings.

But the law would give Biden's budget director the opportunity to issue waivers to that requirement and it would also limit judicial review of the decisions.

Energy permitting

Biden and McCarthy agreed to new rules to make it easier for energy projects — including fossil-fuel based ones — to gain permit approval. McCarthy and his Republicans had identified permitting reform as one of the pillars of any deal and the White House threw its support behind the plan earlier this month.

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Rescue operations underway after apartment building partially collapses in Davenport, Iowa - ABC News

DAVENPORT, Iowa -- Rescue operations were underway Sunday evening after part of an apartment building collapsed in the eastern Iowa city of Davenport. Authorities have not said whether anyone was killed.

Authorities said people were treated for injuries at the scene but did not detail how many.

Rescuers were called to the scene shortly before 5 p.m. Sunday. Fire crews rescued seven people and escorted more than a dozen others from the building in their initial response, Davenport Fire Chief Michael Carlsten said at a news conference.

Carlsten said the back of the six-story apartment complex collapsed and had separated from the building, which houses apartments on the upper floors and businesses on the ground level.

Authorities found a gas leak after the collapse, Carlsten said, while water also had leaked throughout the floors of the structure.

First responders were still searching for people who were unaccounted for Sunday. The stability of the building was a concern following secondary collapses while rescuers were at the scene, Carlsten said.

“Our focus is rescue right now,” Davenport Mayor Mike Matson said at a news conference.

“This is an active scene. We will continue to work, continue to evaluate, with the whole purpose of trying to find people and trying to get them out,” Matson said, adding that he spoke with Gov. Kim Reynolds, who offered assistance.

The Davenport Police Department asked people to avoid downtown after the collapse.

A reunification area established at St. Anthony’s Church on Main Street was being serviced by Red Cross personnel, Carlsten said.

The cause of the collapse was not immediately known.

Rich Oswald, City of Davenport director of development and neighborhood services, said at a news conference that work was being done on the building’s exterior at the time of the collapse.

Reports of bricks falling from the building earlier this week were part of that work and the building’s owner had a permit for the project, Oswald said.

The Quad-City Times reported Robert Robinson, a second-floor resident, had gone outside and returned as alarms went off in the building.

“When we started to go back in the lights went out,” he told the newspaper. “All of a sudden everybody started running out saying the building collapsed. I’m glad we came down when we did.”

Robinson and his girlfriend were able to take the elevator down just in time, he said.

“This is horrible,” he said. “We don’t have anywhere to go. Nothing to eat.”

Tadd Machovec, a Davenport contractor, told the newspaper he was inside putting up a support beam when the building came down.

Some people in the area said the building has had problems. City officials said Sunday that they had several complaints from residents about needed repairs.

Jennifer Smith, co-owner of Fourth Street Nutrition, said she learned of the explosion from her husband, who works for Mid-American Energy.

“He was on call and got called in for a building explosion downtown. We had no idea it was our building,” she said. “It sounds bad, but we have been calling the city and giving complaints since December. Our bathroom caved in December.”

Smith said water damage has been apparent since they moved into their space in the winter. The company's co-owner, Deonte Mack, said fire crews were in the building as recently as Thursday for an inspection.

“The tenants told us the building was going to collapse,” Smith said.

The Quad-City Times reported the building is owned by Andrew Wold. A working phone number for Wold was not immediately available Sunday night and attempts to reach him for comment were unsuccessful.

Nearly 20 permits were filed in 2022 for building repairs, mainly for plumbing or electrical issues, according to the county assessor’s office.

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Minggu, 28 Mei 2023

3 dead, 5 injured in shooting at biker rally in Red River, New Mexico - ABC News

"The scene is secure," New Mexico State Police said.

May 28, 2023, 12:36 AM

Three people were killed and five others were injured in a shooting at an annual motorcycle rally in Red Rock, New Mexico, police said.

"The scene is secure, no ongoing threat to public safety," New Mexico State Police said on Twitter.

One of the people injured in the shooting was airlifted to a hospital in Denver, authorities said. Police officers responded to "secure" two other hospitals, Holy Cross Medical Center and at The University of New Mexico Hospital, where injured people were being treated, State Police said.

PHOTO: Police respond to a shooting at the 41st Annual Red River Memorial Day Motorcycle Rally, in Red River, New Mexico, on May 27, 2023.

Police respond to a shooting at the 41st Annual Red River Memorial Day Motorcycle Rally, in Red River, New Mexico, on May 27, 2023.

KOAT

As many as 28,000 bikers were expected to arrive in Red River this weekend for the 41st Annual Red River Memorial Day Motorcycle Rally, an annual event with live music.

Bikers from "all different backgrounds line Main Street for one crazy party," according to the town's website.

PHOTO: A view of the 41st Annual Red River Memorial Day Motorcycle Rally, in Red River, New Mexico, on May 27, 2023.

A view of the 41st Annual Red River Memorial Day Motorcycle Rally, in Red River, New Mexico, on May 27, 2023.

KOAT

Officials in nearby Taos put in place an emergency curfew beginning at 10 p.m. Saturday. All alcohol sales were to be stopped during the emergency proclamation, which was posted on the town's Facebook page.

"NMSP request the public to avoid Red River as we conduct our investigation," State Police said.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives was responding to help State Police with the investigation, the Phoenix Field Division said on Twitter.

Police updated the number of deaths to three in a statement on Twitter early on Sunday morning, revising an earlier statement saying two people had died.

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State Farm no longer offering home insurance in California - The Hill

State Farm Insurance logo displayed on the screen of a smartphone. (Sheldon Cooper/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

State Farm will no longer offer home and property insurance to new customers in California starting Saturday, the company said in a press release.

The insurance company pointed to “historic increases in construction costs outpacing inflation, rapidly growing catastrophe exposure, and a challenging reinsurance market” for its decision, making particular note of the risk posed by the state’s frequent wildfires.

“We take seriously our responsibility to manage risk,” State Farm said. “We recognize the Governor’s administration, legislators, and the California Department of Insurance (CDI) for their wildfire loss mitigation efforts.

“However, it’s necessary to take these actions now to improve the company’s financial strength,” it added.

State Farm said that it will continue to serve existing customers in the state and that personal auto insurance would not be impacted.

There were 7,490 wildfires in California in 2022 that burned more than 360,000 acres, which Cal Fire described as a “quiet year.”

The year prior, wildfires burned more than 2.5 million acres in the state. 

Tags California Insurance State Farm wildfires

Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Sabtu, 27 Mei 2023

Louisiana high school grad still lost at sea after Coast Guard calls off search: report - Fox News

The Coast Guard called off its search for a recent Louisiana high school grad who fell overboard while on a cruise in the Bahamas. 

Cameron Robbins, 18, graduated from University Laboratory School (U-High) in Baton Rouge on May 21 and went on a celebratory boat ride with several hundred students. 

On Wednesday night, he reportedly jumped overboard on a dare. Reports from that night said it was inclement weather.

After a two-day, 325-mile search, the U.S. Coast Guard said on Friday it ended its search-and-rescue efforts that were coordinated with the Royal Bahamas Defence Force. 

TEXAS: COAST GUARD RESCUES 3 FROM OFFSHORE OIL RIG NEAR FREEPORT AFTER VESSEL SINKS

Photo of Cameron Robbins

Cameron Robbins, 18, went overboard during a cruise in the Bahamas while celebrating with graduation (Drew Sutton/Facebook )

"Our Coast Guard command center and aircrews based in Miami supported RBDF search and rescue efforts since the initial report Wednesday evening, and continued through Friday evening," Lt. Cmdr. Matthew Spado, Coast Guard liaison officer to the Bahamas, said in a statement on Friday.

"We were informed by the RBDF this evening that they were suspending the active search efforts pending further developments, and were not requesting further Coast Guard assistance after notifying the Robbins family. 

COAST GUARD SUSPENDS SEARCH FOR 3 PEOPLE IN DOWNED AIRCRAFT OFF CALIFORNIA'S SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND

"We offer our sincerest condolences to Cameron Robbins’ family and friends."

Robbins was a standout baseball player who attended the school for more than a decade and left a lasting impression on his classmates and teachers. 

Coast Guard search pattern

A graphic of search patterns conducted by U.S. Coast Guard Air Station Miami aircrews to assist the Royal Bahamas Defence Force’s search and rescue efforts of Cameron Robbins near Nassau, Bahamas, from May 25, 2023 to May 26, 2023. Royal Bahamas Defence Force crews suspended active search efforts pending further developments on May 26, 2023 (U.S. Coast Guard)

Kevin George, the director of Lab School, told local news outlet WBRZ, that Robbins is a "special kid."

He's "been here throughout his entire educational career. He's an athlete, great kid, great smile, great head of hair. Just one of the kids you're so proud of when they cross the stage," George said. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The Royal Bahamas Police Force said it's investigating claims that Robbins leaped into the water on a dare.

The school has held multiple prayer vigils over the last couple of days, and the school said it's making counselors available to students and teachers. 

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Jumat, 26 Mei 2023

‘So happy’: Man declared innocent after 33 years in US jail - Al Jazeera English

Daniel Saldana was convicted in 1990 of attempted murder, but evidence emerged that he was not even at the scene.

A California man who spent 33 years in prison for attempted murder has been declared innocent and freed after it emerged that he was not even at the scene of the attack.

Daniel Saldana, now 55, was convicted in 1990 of opening fire on a car leaving a high school football game in Baldwin Park, east of Los Angeles. There were six teenagers inside and two of them were wounded but survived.

The attackers mistook the teens for gang members, authorities said.

Saldana, who was 22 at the time of the shooting and working full-time as a construction worker, was one of three men charged with the attack. Convicted of six counts of attempted murder and one count of shooting at an occupied vehicle, Saldana was sentenced to 45 years to life in state prison.

Saldana appeared with District Attorney George Gascón at a press conference announcing his exoneration on Thursday. He said he was grateful to be freed.

“It’s a struggle, every day waking up knowing you’re innocent and here I am locked up in a cell, crying for help,” Saldana said, according to the Southern California News Group.

“I’m just so happy this day came,” he added.

Investigations into Saldana’s case began in February after the district attorney’s office learned that another convicted attacker had told authorities during a 2017 parole hearing that Saldana “was not involved in the shooting in any way and he was not present during the incident,” Gascón said.

A former deputy district attorney was present at the hearing “but apparently did nothing” and failed to share the exonerating information with Saldana or his lawyer as required, he added.

As a result, Saldana spent an additional six years in prison before the DA’s office reopened the case and declared him innocent, Gascón said.

The district attorney did not disclose other details of the case but he apologised to Saldana and his family.

“I know that this won’t bring you back the decades you endured in prison,” he said. “But I hope our apology brings some small comfort to you as you begin your new life.”

Gascón added: “Not only is this a tragedy to force people into prison for a crime they did not commit, but every time that an injustice of this magnitude takes place, the real people responsible are still out there to commit other crimes.”

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Kamis, 25 Mei 2023

Review does not support Ken Paxton claim of partisan House investigators - The Texas Tribune


Erin Epley

Brian Benken

Terese Buess 

Mark Donnelly

Donna Cameron


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Nashville Parents Can Have Say in Case Over Shooter's Writings, Judge Rules - The New York Times

A group of about 100 families will now have the chance to argue in court against releasing the writings of the assailant who killed six people at a Christian school.

Parents from about 100 families will be allowed to formally argue against the release of journals and writings left behind by the assailant who killed six people at a Christian school in Nashville in March, a judge said on Wednesday.

After journalists, a gun-rights organization and lawmakers sued to force the release of hundreds of pages of journals and writings left by the shooter, the parents of the three 9-year-olds killed and nearly all of their surviving classmates, as well as the school and adjoining church, had asked in a hearing on Monday to join the case and argue against their publication.

The judge, Chancellor I’Ashea L. Myles of the Chancery Court in Davidson County, acknowledged that the parents “stand in a unique position stepping into the shoes of their minor children.” And because those children are the victims of a crime currently under investigation by the police, the judge found that the parents had a right to intervene on their behalf.

After journalists, a gun-rights organization and lawmakers sued to force the release of the shooter’s writings, the parents of the victims and nearly all of their surviving classmates asked to join the case and argue against publication.George Walker IV/Associated Press

The decision does not resolve the far more complicated question of whether and how to publish the writings of a mass shooter, and officials must still grapple with balancing constitutional rights, the public’s desire for answers on motive, and fears of inspiring yet another act of devastating violence.

But the judge's order allows those most directly affected by the shooting an opportunity to make their case in court as victims and survivors. It came on the final day of school for Covenant School students, who gathered on Wednesday with parents, staff and Nashville police officers for chapel service.

“We are grateful for the opportunity to enter this case on behalf of our children and loved ones,” Brent Leatherwood, the lone Covenant School parent who attended the Monday hearing, said in a statement. “Our intention is to safeguard our families and do all we can to prevent this horror from spreading to any other community.”

Lawyers for the families said that though several parents wanted to remain anonymous amid fears of harassment, others were willing to either testify in court or submit written statements.

In her ruling, Chancellor Myles noted that there was little precedent in Tennessee for such an intervention, but she cited the legal protections offered to juvenile records, the attention on the case and the fact that children were targeted among her reasons for ruling in favor of the parents.

The judge also agreed to allow the Covenant School and the Covenant Presbyterian Church to intervene, finding that both institutions had “a sufficient personal stake” to warrant the opportunity to argue over the release of the writings.

In a separate six-page ruling, she wrote that she had been “stirred” by their argument that the writings could include information that would not necessarily have been accessible even under open records laws, as they are private institutions. She also acknowledged warnings from the police that an investigation into the shooting was still ongoing and that a premature release of the writings could jeopardize that work.

In her ruling, Chancellor I’Ashea L. Myles noted that there was little precedent in Tennessee for such an intervention.George Walker IV/Associated Press

Nashville city and police officials, who had stonewalled public records requests citing the ongoing investigation, have submitted a redacted version of the writings for the court’s review and signaled a willingness to release that version. While the police quickly shot and killed the assailant during the attack, they have yet to formally determine a motive or search a number of subpoenaed records.

The parents, however, have pleaded with the court to keep the entirety of the shooter’s paper trail locked away, warning that it could further inflict pain and trauma. The school and church raised their own concerns about the safety of their buildings, and said releasing the writings could lay the foundation for other school shootings.

In a hearing on Monday, lawyers pushing for the swift release of the writings questioned whether the parents, school and church had the legal standing to intervene, or could assert the protections granted to crime victims. They also questioned whether a private school could assert certain privacy rights under a public records law, and warned against limiting the protections of the First Amendment.

Only a handful of officials — including Nashville city lawyers and F.B.I. employees — have reviewed the writings. Chancellor Myles, who has also examined the trove of writings, set a hearing schedule for lawyers to continue wrestling over the release of the documents.

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Rabu, 24 Mei 2023

Alex Murdaugh indicted on 22 federal counts for alleged financial schemes - CNN

CNN  — 

A federal grand jury has indicted disbarred South Carolina attorney and convicted murderer Alex Murdaugh on 22 charges in connection with schemes aimed at stealing money from his clients, according to the US Attorney’s Office for the District of South Carolina.

The charges include conspiracy to commit wire fraud and bank fraud, wire fraud, bank fraud and money laundering, the office said Wednesday in a news release.

Murdaugh, 54, “has been cooperating with the United States Attorneys’ Office and federal agencies in their investigation of a broad range of activities,” his attorneys, Dick Harpootlian and Jim Griffin, said Wednesday in a statement.

“We anticipate that the charges brought today will be quickly resolved without a trial,” they said.

Murdaugh, a former personal injury attorney, is appealing his conviction this year in South Carolina for murdering his wife and grown son; he was sentenced to life in prison.

“Trust in our legal system begins with trust in its lawyers,” US Attorney Adair Boroughs said of the alleged financial crimes. “South Carolinians turn to lawyers when they are at their most vulnerable, and in our state, those who abuse the public’s trust and enrich themselves by fraud, theft, and self-dealing will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

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Selasa, 23 Mei 2023

U-Haul truck crashes into barriers near White House, suspect in custody: officials - Fox News

The driver of a U-Haul truck was taken into custody Monday night after crashing into security barriers near the White House, according to officials.

The truck crashed on the northern side of Lafayette Square at around 10 p.m. Monday night, according to Secret Service spokesperson Anthony Guglielmi.

"Shortly before 10:00 p.m. Monday, Secret Service Uniformed Division officers detained the driver of a box truck after the vehicle collided with security barriers on the north side of Lafayette Square at 16th Street," Guglielmi said in a statement. 

There were no injuries to any Secret Service or White House personnel, Guglielmi said.

WASHINGTON, DC TEEN SHOT, KILLED OUTSIDE SCHOOL

A Uhaul truck

A U-Haul truck crashed into barriers near the White House on Monday, May 22, 2023. (Fox News)

The cause and manner of the crash are under investigation. 

Secret Service and Metropolitan police swiftly responded to the scene. 

D.C. Fire and EMS were also dispatched to the scene and roads and pedestrian walkways near the crash site were closed as they conducted a suspicious package investigation, officials said. 

The White House

Metropolitan police remain near the White House, where a U-Haul crashed. (Roy Rochlin/Getty Images)

K9 units were seen searching around the truck, according to WUSA9.

A crashed truck

K9 units were seen searching around a Uhaul truck for a potential suspicious package at the White House on Monday, May 22, 2023.  (Fox News)

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Guglielmi said in a tweet at around 12:20 a.m. that the truck was "deemed safe" by police and that a preliminary investigation reveals the driver may have intentionally crashed into the security barriers at Lafayette Square. 

He said charges will be filed by the United States Park Police with investigative support from the Secret Service.

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Senin, 22 Mei 2023

A Year After a School Shooting, Divisions Run Through Uvalde - The New York Times

At a school board meeting this month in Uvalde, Texas, parents and administrators found themselves locked in what had become a familiar argument: Nearly a year had passed since a gunman breached Robb Elementary School and killed 19 children and two teachers. The community was still waiting for officials to fully disclose how it happened.

“Almost a year now, and honestly nothing has changed,” Jesse Rizo, the uncle of one of the massacre victims, told the board. “These people are pretty much begging you guys to answer questions. You came here and you pretty much oppress people. They ask you questions, you don’t have answers.”

Despite the passage of time, there is still strong disagreement over who should be fired for the slow police response to one of the worst school shootings in American history, and what position the town should take on the repeated calls from families of the victims to restrict guns. Neighbors who have known each other for years now find themselves unable to agree and more distant than ever before.

“We used to be a close community,” Mr. Rizo said after the school board meeting on May 15. “Now it’s like we don’t know each other anymore.”

United in grief in the weeks after the shooting that ignited a national firestorm over how the police respond to mass shootings, Uvalde in the painful months since then has drifted apart, dividing along fault lines that barely existed a year ago.

The fissures run deep and remain raw: between the victims’ relatives lobbying for stricter gun laws, and neighbors who have long been avid hunters and gun owners and bristle at any new restrictions; between supporters of the police, who are the subject of a district attorney’s investigation for their delay in taking down the gunman, and residents who now distrust law enforcement; between those still in mourning and those who would like to move on.

A school building boarded up with fencing and yellow police tape.
Robb Elementary School is boarded up and prepared for demolition. A new school will be constructed in town.
Vincent Salazar, grandfather of Layla Salazar who was killed in the school shooting at Robb Elementary, attended a school board meeting with other family members in Uvalde, in October.

Frictions have occasionally spilled into the open in a city where everyone still shops at the same grocery stores, eats at the same restaurants, attends the same Little League games.

At a recent library event, residents pulled the city manager aside to ask, quietly, about when Uvalde could begin to put the shooting behind them, starting with finally getting rid of a makeshift shrine to the massacre’s victims that still fills the central plaza. “I’ve had more than one person ask me: When are you going to clean up the plaza?” said the city manager, Vince DiPiazza.

There have been overt displays of anger. The relatives of one of the children killed screamed at the mother of the 18-year-old gunman after running into her by chance on the street last year. A local pastor drew ire for defending the police during a school board meeting last summer. One person urged him to sit down, shouting, “Your time is up!”

“The negativity divides. You have everybody getting mad,” said Berlinda Arreola, the step-grandmother of one of the victims.

Disagreements and lingering resentments have complicated the preparations for Wednesday’s commemoration of the massacre. Officials urged outsiders to stay away from Uvalde, while relatives of some residents planned a memorial march through town.

Rifts have grown even among the families. Joe Alejandro, whose niece was killed, found himself disagreeing with other relatives who have been demanding stricter gun laws, such as raising the age from 18 to 21 to buy an AR-15-style rifle, the type used in last year’s massacre

“I’ve had guns all of my life, and my gun is not going to kill anybody,” Mr. Alejandro said. “This is how we grew up. You go hunting in the morning and go to school and the guns stay there,” he said, referring to his car. “Why come after me?”

Mr. Alejandro’s view is a common one in Uvalde, where voters in the majority Hispanic city surrounded by ranches and hunting land voted for Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, a little over five months after the shooting, in a race where his opponent, Beto O’Rourke, frequently wore a Uvalde baseball hat and had promised stronger gun control.

Berlinda Arreola, the step-grandmother of Amerie Jo Garza, speaks alongside other Uvalde families during a news conference at the Texas State Capitol in Austin this month.
Kimberly Rubio, whose daughter Lexi, 10, was killed in the shooting, grabbed a sign before the start of a March for Our Lives rally in Austin, in August.

After more than 100 students walked out of classes last month as part of protests against gun violence, school administrators warned them that they would face consequences the next time.

Long after the gunfire, Uvalde remains on edge. Recently, the City Hall and a large supermarket went into lockdown after residents circulated images of a man walking around downtown with a gun on his shoulder. (It turned out to be a BB gun.) Some parents kept their children home from school during the final full week of classes this month amid social media threats of violence that turned out to be unfounded.

Tensions remain in part because several investigations into the shooting and police response remain unresolved.

An inquiry by the district attorney, Christina Mitchell, remains open into whether charges should be brought against any of the dozens of officers who waited for more than an hour to storm the classroom where the gunman was holed up with students and kill him. Ms. Mitchell has said that she intends to present any evidence of criminal wrongdoing to a grand jury. But such a presentation is likely still many months away.

“A case of this magnitude has to be deliberate, has to be thorough, and there cannot be haste,” she said in a statement. “Because I have seen cases that are quickly investigated and justice does not prevail in those cases.”

A medical study to determine whether a faster confrontation with the gunman could have saved any of the children has yet to be completed. The Justice Department, too, is still working on its inquiry into the police response. Vanita Gupta, the department’s third highest-ranking official, visited Uvalde last month to meet with officials and families and reassure them that the investigation was still happening, even if its results were not yet forthcoming.

The department has helped city officials connect with people in other cities torn apart by mass shootings, sharing a kind of grim new playbook for navigating the long, painful aftermath. “It reinforced in my mind that what was happening here is not unusual,” said Mr. DiPiazza.

Much of the frustration has been directed at school administrators, who oversee the school district’s small police force. The chief of that force, Pete Arredondo, was immediately singled out by the Texas Department of Public Safety’s director, Steve McCraw, for failing to swiftly confront the gunman.

Brett Cross, uncle and guardian of Uziyah Garcia, 10, who was killed in the shooting, slept on a cot outside of the Uvalde school district administration office as part of a protest calling for the district’s resource officers to be suspended, in October.
Sandra Cruz, mother of Eliahna Torres, 10, visits the cross dedicated to her daughter at the plaza in Uvalde.

But a report by a Texas House committee later found “systemic failures” in the police response, not just by Mr. Arredondo, but by other agencies, including the state D.P.S. and the city Police Department, which also participated in the response. Both Mr. Arredondo and a state police sergeant on scene, Juan Maldonado, were fired, and the officer who had been acting as the chief of the city Police Department at the time of the massacre resigned.

The school district revamped its Police Department, but the hiring of a new school police chief has not eased tensions. When a father of two students questioned the qualifications of a new police hire during a recent school board meeting, the district responded by barring him from school property for two years.

A letter signed by the new interim school superintendent, Gary Patterson, called the father’s actions disruptive and disturbing.

In addition to the school police chief, the district has hired three additional officers and hopes to bring in several more. “We’re being very careful and trying to hire the right type of person,” Mr. Patterson said in an interview. “Our Police Department is the most scrutinized in the world right now.”

The school building where the shooting took place now sits behind chain-link fencing, its windows boarded over, ready for a planned demolition. The sign at one corner of the campus has become a kind of shrine, visited by victims’ relatives and passing motorists, and students have been dispersed to other schools until a new facility can be built.

Before the shooting, the most prominent mural downtown had been the one bearing the town name, images from its history and its previous claim to Texas fame as “the honey capital of the world.” Now several streets and alleys are emblazoned with towering images of the fourth graders and their teachers who were killed, an unavoidable reminder of the city’s forever altered identity.

A mural in Uvalde honoring Maranda Mathis, who was killed in the shooting.
Gloria Cazares and other families from Uvalde were overcome with emotion moments after the Texas House Select Committee on Community Safety voted in favor of House Bill 2744, which would raise the minimum age to buy a semiautomatic rifle from 18 to 21, earlier this month in Austin.

From the first hours after the shooting, it was clear that the massacre would test the closeness of the community. On the night of May 24, victims’ relatives had gathered at a hospital awaiting news of their children when the gunman’s mother walked in.

Her mother — the gunman’s grandmother — had been the first victim, shot in the face before the gunman drove to the school. She has since recovered.

Ms. Arreola, the step-grandmother of Amerie Jo Garza, who was killed, recalled feeling stunned as the gunman’s mother introduced herself. “I just wanted to let you know that it was my son who killed your kids, and I’m so sorry for this,” Ms. Arreola remembered her saying.

When Ms. Arreola and other relatives saw the woman on the street two months later, in July, Ms. Arreola became enraged. “What reason did he have?” she yelled, in a scene captured by a camera crew for the Spanish-language broadcaster Telemundo.

The gunman’s mother could be seen calling 911 asking for help, and also addressing the relatives. “I know my son was a coward, you don’t think I don’t know that?” she said. “You don’t think I’m carrying all that with me? I know. And I’m sorry.”

On a recent evening, scores of parents gathered to watch Little League games as the sun went down over a city park. Clouds slid by overhead, delivering a light drizzle.

“Life goes on,” said Lupe Leija, who works in construction and also serves on the league’s board. “But there’s still anger.”

He said his son was at Robb Elementary during the shooting and refused to sleep alone for two months after. Now, he said, his son and others were coming to the games, just trying to regain a sense of normality. “A lot of people come here to relax,” he said. “People just want to feel comfort. They want to feel peace.”

Under the lights, umpires call balls and strikes. Parents sit in folding chairs or stand and cheer for their children. Among them on some nights, Mr. Leija said, is the former state police sergeant, Mr. Maldonado. No one pays him much attention.

“He got released from his job,” Mr. Leija said. “What more do they want?”

Kirsten Noyes contributed research.

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Lara Trump withdraws name from consideration for Florida Senate seat - BBC.com

[unable to retrieve full-text content] Lara Trump withdraws name from consideration for Florida Senate seat    BBC.com Lara Trump withdra...