Yahoo! News: Terrorism
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- 'The Squad' — Ocasio-Cortez, Omar, Pressley and Tlaib — hit back at Trump and call for his impeachment
- Michael Flynn’s Ex-Business Partner Points the Finger at Him in Court
- Iran Says Missing Tanker Had Problems and Was Towed for Repairs
- Serial killer linked to Arkansas woman's 1994 slaying
- Utah Police Find New Evidence in MacKenzie Lueck Case
- The B-2 Stealth Bomber Is Now 30 Years Old. Take a Look Inside.
- What first-hand government reports say about conditions at migrant detention centers
- View Photos of the 2019 Porsche Cayenne S
- Former U.S. congressman Sanford considers challenge to Trump
- Italy seizes 'combat-ready' missile and automatic weapon stash in raids on far-Right figures
- Boxy and Beautiful: 2004 Mercedes-Benz G55 AMG
- Founder of neo-Nazi website should pay Jewish woman $14m for unleashing antisemitic 'troll storm' on her, judge rules
- Afghanistan Isn't Worth Dying For
- Texas fossil uncovers new species of duckbilled dinosaur
- The Mid-Engined Chevrolet Corvette C8 Will Still Be Called Stingray
- Iran's top diplomat warns US is 'playing with fire'
- A NASA official says the explosion of SpaceX's ship during a test 'was a huge gift' for making the vehicle safe to fly
- Geraldo Rivera on Trump's controversial tweets: It pains me to watch Trump take the low road
- Australian model sentenced for airline flight disturbance
- No More Social Media for You, Irked Judge Tells Roger Stone
- ICE raids: Top immigration official admits he ‘does not know details’ of controversial arrests
- India Says Russia's Missiles Don't Work (And Wants to Buy Israeli Ones Instead)
- At least 1 dead, 15 injured — including 3 firefighters — in California house explosion
- U.S. Justice Department asks appeals court to pause antitrust ruling against Qualcomm
- Prosecco Grapes, Kiwi Pops, and More Easy Fruit Desserts
- 'This country belongs to you': Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and progressive freshman lawmakers give impassioned response to Trump's attacks
- June was the warmest June ever recorded, but there's a bigger problem
- Man charged with sex assault on fellow nursing home resident
- Landlords Sue NYC Over New Rent Caps on a Million Apartments
- Russia bars opposition candidates from Moscow city ballot
- Imagine If Russia and China Built Nuclear-Powered Aircraft Carriers Together
- Police: A 69-year-old Arizona woman is missing in California's Mojave Desert without supplies, cellphone
- The U.S. Army Is Building a Smarter Land Mine
- New York Times Reporter Leaves Following Implosion of Trump Taxes Team
- China just posted its lowest growth rate in almost 30 years as the trade war hammers the economy — and the 'worst is yet to come'
- The Latest: 2 accusers speak at Epstein bail hearing
- Man arrested in slaying of 75-year-old community activist
- Mom wants health industry to focus on protein-packed diet after daughter’s unexpected death
- Odd Man Out: How the Independent Justin Amash Could Shake Up the 2020 Presidential Election
- View Photos of the Lotus Evija
- Fed's Powell doubles down on rate cut signal
- Trevor Noah Compares Trump to Hitler After Racist Tweets Against Congresswomen
- Lyft broke the law when it failed to tell Chicago about a driver it kicked off its app. A month later he was accused of killing a taxi driver while working for Uber. (LYFT, UBER)
- An Air Force officer reported his wife missing. Now he's charged with her murder
- The Latest: UAE official says tanker sent no distress call
Posted: 15 Jul 2019 03:32 PM PDT |
Michael Flynn’s Ex-Business Partner Points the Finger at Him in Court Posted: 15 Jul 2019 05:07 PM PDT Photo Illustration by Lyne Lucien/The Daily Beast/GettyIf there is a question of who worked on behalf of the Turkish government to influence the 2016 Donald Trump campaign, then the court should look no further than former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, lawyers for Bijan Kian, the Iranian-American businessman and former Flynn partner, told jurors in the Eastern District of Virginia Monday. Kian is charged with two felonies—illegally lobbying on behalf of the Turkish government and conspiring covertly to influence U.S. politics about Fethullah Gulen, a Turkish cleric who is now living in Pennsylvania. He faces a maximum of 15 years in prison if convicted. But Kian's team of attorneys said in their opening statements Monday that their client "did not conspire with anyone" to work on behalf of the Turkish government in the U.S. When questioning the Turkish government's influence operations in the U.S., the jury should look at the newly announced cache of evidence the government has on Flynn, said attorney Bob Trout. Kian isn't referenced in any of it, Trout said. Michael Flynn Putting Mueller Deal at Risk in 'Dangerous' New TrialIn the opening statements Monday the Kian legal team spent the majority of their time arguing that their client did not work on behalf of the Turkish government when he attempted to influence public opinion in the U.S. about Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen. Gulen currently lives in Pennsylvania and is wanted by the Turkish government for allegedly planning a military coup in the country in 2016. Kian instead worked on behalf of a Turkish-Dutch businessman named Ekim Alptekin, Trout said. (Alptekin is named as a defendant in the Kian case but will likely avoid appearance because he is living in Istanbul.) Toward the end of his statements, Trout tried to create a degree of separation between Kian and Flynn who is currently awaiting sentencing in Washington for crimes carried out during his time working with the Trump team. He pointed to the government's evidence, which was mentioned in a hearing last week, and said that prosecutors had all but conceded that Kian was not involved. The jurors have not seen the evidence yet and the details of what the government currently has in its position is unclear.According to a government indictment filed last year, Flynn and Kian worked together throughout the fall of 2016, when Flynn was an advisor to then candidate Trump, on a project to try and extradite Gulen back to Turkey. Prosecutors said the two took hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Turkish government to execute the plan. Flynn was also at the time accused of lying about his communications with Russian Ambassador Sergei Kislyak. He entered into a cooperation deal with Special Counsel Robert Mueller and admitted to lying about the communications and about his consulting firm's business with the Turkish government. He said that the registration he filed for the Turkey-focused project in 2017 contained several inaccuracies, though his lawyers maintain that Flynn did not intentionally lie on the documents. As part of his deal with the government, Flynn was supposed to testify against Kian and his sentencing in Washington was postponed so he could appear as a witness in Virginia.That all changed last week when the government removed Flynn from the witness list and instead named him as a co-conspirator in the case. The government also said it had extensive information that the Turkish government attempted to influence the Trump campaign through Flynn. It was the first mention of an additional set of materials that show how Flynn was being extensively involved in the Turkish lobbying.It's that evidence that lies at the heart of who really committed the crime of illegally lobbying for Turkey, Kian's lawyers said Monday. Kian "didn't know" about the alleged separate communications between Alptekin and Flynn that are in the government's possession, Trout said.For its part, the government in its opening statement barely mentioned the former national security adviser, instead referring several times to Kian's business team members as "associates." The government focused on Kian's email correspondences, including with Flynn, about the Gulen project and attempted to lay out for the jury how the money that flowed into Kian's account for services rendered connected back to the Turkish government.After nearly an hour and a half of opening statements, both of which were at times tangled and difficult to follow, the jury seemed to fade by 5:30 p.m. Several individuals closed their eyes and appeared to be sleeping.They're due back in court Tuesday morning for testimony, including evidence to be entered into the record and for witness examinations.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Iran Says Missing Tanker Had Problems and Was Towed for Repairs Posted: 16 Jul 2019 01:09 PM PDT (Bloomberg) -- A small oil tanker that had gone missing in the Persian Gulf had technical difficulties and was towed into Iranian waters for repairs, an Iranian foreign ministry official said, according to the ISNA news agency.Further details on the ship, the Panamanian-flagged Riah, will be announced later, Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi said, according to the semi-offficial ISNA. Iran responded after a request for assistance from the tanker, the report said.The Iranian comments did little to clarify exactly what happened to the Riah. The vessel was passing through the Strait of Hormuz, the shipping chokepoint at the mouth of the Gulf, before it went silent more than two days ago in unexplained circumstances, according to the Associated Press. The news agency said the U.S. "has suspicions" that Iran took control of the tanker, citing an unidentified defense official.The disappearance was first reported by CNN, which said U.S. intelligence increasingly believed the tanker had been forced into Iranian waters by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps but that some Gulf sources suggested the ship simply broke down and was towed by Iran.Earlier, a United Arab Emirates official said the ship isn't owned or operated by the U.A.E. and hadn't sent out a distress call.While details are unclear, if the Riah was seized, it would seem an unusual target for Iran. The vessel is 30 years old and tiny. Its capacity is 2,000 dead weight tons, according to the MarineTraffic website. That's only a fraction of the almost 160,000-ton capacity of the British Heritage, the U.K. oil tanker harassed by Iranian ships last week while exiting the Persian Gulf.Why Tanker Attacks Raise Fears Over Strait of Hormuz: QuickTakeWhile Iran has been blamed for attacks on merchant shipping in recent months, it has denied responsibility. The main threats it has made in the past few weeks have been against the U.K. after British Royal Marines helped authorities in Gibraltar seize the supertanker as it carried Iranian crude in the Mediterranean Sea seemingly bound for Syria.In May and June, six tankers were attacked just outside the Gulf. A British Navy frigate intervened this month to stop Iranian boats from blocking the BP Plc-operated British Heritage as it was exiting the waters.U.K. Navy Intervenes After Iran Tries to Stop British Oil TankerThe U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet, which is based in Bahrain, declined to comment when contacted by Bloomberg.\--With assistance from Anthony DiPaola and Golnar Motevalli.To contact the reporters on this story: Zainab Fattah in Dubai at zfattah@bloomberg.net;Verity Ratcliffe in Dubai at vratcliffe1@bloomberg.net;Zoya Khan in New York at zkhan79@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Lin Noueihed at lnoueihed@bloomberg.net, Bill Faries, Larry LiebertFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Serial killer linked to Arkansas woman's 1994 slaying Posted: 15 Jul 2019 11:52 AM PDT Authorities are investigating whether possibly the most prolific serial killer in U.S. history is behind the death of an Arkansas woman in 1994. Police in Pine Bluff are reviewing the case of Jolanda Jones's death after Samuel Little confessed to her killing, which had been determined to be drug-related. According to a police memo, when Little was in custody in Dallas, Texas, in October 2018, he indicated that he killed Jones, the Pine Bluff Commercial reported . |
Utah Police Find New Evidence in MacKenzie Lueck Case Posted: 16 Jul 2019 02:55 PM PDT |
The B-2 Stealth Bomber Is Now 30 Years Old. Take a Look Inside. Posted: 15 Jul 2019 12:37 AM PDT (Washington, D.C.) Slicing through the sky with bat-like wings, eluding enemy radar with stealth technology, quietly destroying enemy air defenses from 50,000 ft and using computers to merge sensor data with targeting information -- the Air Force's B-2 bomber … has been in the air attacking targets for "30-Years.""You pull up the weapons suite screen, align the right weapon with the target and provide input into the DEP - Digital Entry Panel. Then, you enter text into the computer," Lt. Col. Nicola Polidar, Commander of Detachment 5 of the 29th Training Systems Squadron, told Warrior in an interview.As this happens….the air attack begins.The B-2 took its first flight July 17, 1989 -- so now is the "30-Year Anniversary." B-2 pilots have operated the sleek, curved air-defense-defying platform for sensitive, highly-dangerous missions many times in recent decades. After blasting onto the scene in the early 90s, the B-2s combat debut came in the late 90s when the aircraft destroyed Serbian targets over Kosovo. Three decades ago, the Air Force and Northrop Grumman thought to massively advance the paradigm for stealth attack, and create a first-of-its kind leap ahead bomber. It was conceived of as a Cold War weapon, engineered to knock out Soviet advanced air defenses. The intent was to build upon and surpass the F-117 Night Hawk's stealth technology used in the Gulf War.The B-2s stealth configuration, buried engine, low heat signature and "radar absorbent" coating, is meant to not only avoid being hit by enemy weapons, but complete missions without enemies ever knowing it is there. Its core mission: launch secret, quiet, undetected attacks over heavily defended enemy territory to create a safer "air corridor" for less stealthy planes to operate within extremely lethal,otherwise uninhabitable airspace. |
What first-hand government reports say about conditions at migrant detention centers Posted: 16 Jul 2019 11:38 AM PDT |
View Photos of the 2019 Porsche Cayenne S Posted: 15 Jul 2019 05:00 AM PDT |
Former U.S. congressman Sanford considers challenge to Trump Posted: 16 Jul 2019 08:39 AM PDT Mark Sanford, a Republican former U.S. congressman from South Carolina, said on Tuesday he is considering mounting a primary challenge to President Donald Trump over the rising federal debt. Sanford, 59, a longtime Trump critic who lost his seat in the House of Representatives last year after he was challenged by a Trump supporter in the Republican primary, will decide in the next month whether to make a long-shot bid against Trump for the party's 2020 presidential nomination, he told Reuters. Watching last month's Democratic debates pushed him to consider taking on Trump, Sanford said. |
Italy seizes 'combat-ready' missile and automatic weapon stash in raids on far-Right figures Posted: 15 Jul 2019 01:08 PM PDT Italian police have seized a large arsenal of weapons, including an air-to-air missile, in raids on neo-Nazi sympathisers, they said on Monday. Elite police forces searched properties across northern Italy following an investigation into Italians who had fought alongside Russian-backed separatist forces in eastern Ukraine, a police statement said. Three men were arrested, including a customs officer who has previously stood for parliament for an extreme right party. During their raids, police discovered a French-made Matra air-to-air missile that appeared to have once belonged to the Qatar armed forces. Subsequent checks showed the weapon was in working condition but lacked an explosive charge. A big cache of guns and ammunition was seized by the Turin special police force Credit: FRANCESCO AMMENDOLA,HO/AFP/Getty Images Police said the suspects had tried to sell the missile in conversations with contacts on the WhatsApp messaging network. Among other weapons uncovered were 26 guns, 20 bayonets, 306 gun parts, including silencers and rifle scopes, and more than 800 bullets of various calibres. The arms were primarily from Austria, Germany and the United States. Police also seized Nazi memorabilia from the properties. "The police investigation ... came into being because of the activities of some Italian fighters with extremist backgrounds who had taken part in the armed conflict in the Ukrainian region of Donbass," the police statement said. More than 10,000 people have been killed since 2014 in fighting between pro-Russian separatists and Ukrainian forces in eastern Ukraine. |
Boxy and Beautiful: 2004 Mercedes-Benz G55 AMG Posted: 16 Jul 2019 12:45 PM PDT Tear up the urban jungle in this high-powered SUV!The Mercedes-Benz G-Class was born from a rugged, off-road military truck, but today's versions of this legendary SUV are more likely to terrify unsuspecting sports cars than to traverse rugged terrain. That's especially the case when it comes to the AMG-tuned G-Class SUVs, which is what Dallas Motor Collection is offering up for sale with this lovely 2004 Mercedes-Benz G55 AMG.Although the G-Wagen dates back to 1979 and the second-gen model went into production in 1990, the U.S. market didn't get the G-Class until 2002. At the time, the G55 AMG represented the pinnacle for this SUV's performance with a 354-horsepower, 5.4-liter supercharged V-8 under the hood allowing for acceleration times of 0-60 mph in 5.2 seconds. The G-Class may have had a throwback design, but it was ahead of its time when it came to performance. And those side-mounted quadruple exhaust outlets leave no guesswork that this was the ultimate performance SUV of its time.The best part about AMGs is opening the hood and seeing the small plaque on the engine cover, which was signed by the craftsman who hand built the engine. Mercedes-AMG continues this impressive trend today. As the G-Class continues to age, it's getting more difficult to find these in such great shape with low mileage. This particular G55 AMG shows just under 100,000 miles on the odometer, and the interior looks as clean as it did back in 2004.This is a super-clean example of a 15-year-old G-Class, and it's hard to beat that classic look, luxurious interior and powerful engine. This G55 even comes with all of the original documentation and two key fobs. Don't miss your chance to own one of the fastest off-road SUVs ever created!Read more about Mercedes-Benz:\- Mercedes-Benz G-Class At 40: Off-Roading the German Way\- All-Terrain Benz: 1965 Mercedes-Benz Unimog |
Posted: 16 Jul 2019 03:57 AM PDT The founder and editor of the neo-Nazi website The Daily Stormer should be forced to pay more than $14m (£11.2m) to a Jewish woman targeted by a "troll storm" of abusive messages for months on end, a judge has said.The US magistrate called the campaign, launched by the website's publisher Andrew Anglin, as "egregious and reprehensible" with Tanya Gersh, her husband and her 12-year-old son being flooded with vile phone calls, text messages, emails and social media posts that included death threats and antisemitic slurs.Ms Gersh, from Whitefish, Montana, said that she was told she should have perished in the Holocaust and that voicemails she received contained the sounds of guns firing again and again. The mother was left suffering from panic attacks that left her short of breath and vomiting."I was frightened to the point that we couldn't think straight," Ms Gersh – a real estate agent – said after a recent court hearing. "We talked about waking our children in the middle of the night — to run from Nazis."The abuse began in December 2016 after The Daily Stormer published, under Mr Anglin's byline, a call to arms to readers. "Are y'all ready for an old fashioned Troll Storm?" the post said. "Because AYO — it's that time, fam." Ms Gersh's contact details were posted online and followers were urged to "tell them you are sicked by the Jewish agenda". There were also photographs of Ms Gersh and her son, photoshopped against an image of the Auschwitz concentration camp. The Daily Stormer claimed the posts were protected by free speech laws.Judge Jeremiah Lynch said that Mr Anglin had "acted with actual malice" in posting the contact details.The source of the abuse followed accusations from Mr Anglin and others that Ms Gersh had tried to extort the mother of prominent white nationalist Richard Spencer. Spencer has been widely denounced for telling supporters to "party like its 1933" – the year Adolf Hitler came to power – after the election of Donald Trump. Mr Spencer was also a featured speaker at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where a civil rights activist was killed and 19 other people were injured in August 2017.Sherry Spencer, who owned a commercial property in Ms Gersh's town of Whitefish, had faced scrutiny over her son's extreme views and residents had discussed protesting outside the building.According to her lawsuit, Ms Gersh said that Ms Spencer had phoned her for advice after Ms Gersh had contacted friends in the building to tell them protests may be coming.Ms Gersh suggested that Ms Spencer sell the building and disavow her son's views, with the lawsuit saying Ms Spencer had appeared receptive, but that changed.More than 30 articles naming Ms Gersh were then said to have appeared on The Daily Caller, according to the lawsuit filed on her behalf by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). The suit claims that Ms Gersh and her family received more than 700 hate-filled messages.With Mr Anglin having not appeared at a deposition in April, Judge Lynch recommended a default judgement against the publisher – but he went further. He recommended that Mr Anglin, who is in his mid-30s, be ordered to pay $4,042,438 in compensatory damages and $10 million, the maximum under Montana state law, in punitive damages for "the particularly egregious and reprehensible nature of Anglin's conduct." Judge Lynch's findings and recommendations must be approved by US District Judge Dana Christensen to take effect.Ms Gersh said that she may not receive the money, but Monday's judgement has sent a message to others."A clear message has been sent to Anglin and other extremists: No one should be terrorised for simply being who they are, and no one should ever be afraid for being who they are," she said in a statement."This lawsuit has always been about stopping others from enduring the terror I continue to live through at the hands of a neo-Nazi and his followers, and I wanted to make sure that this never happens to anyone else," she added.Last month, Mr Anglin was ordered to pay $4.1 million after he failed to respond to a defamation lawsuit filed by the Muslim radio host and comedian Dean Obeidallah after The Daily Stormer falsely labelled him a terrorist. |
Afghanistan Isn't Worth Dying For Posted: 16 Jul 2019 10:13 AM PDT Army Sgt. Maj. James Sartor was killed in action in Afghanistan's Faryab Province on Saturday. He was "only" the twelfth soldier to die there this year. That makes his death no less inexcusable, no less an unacceptable sacrifice for Washington's failed foreign policy.What do we tell Sartor's family? That he heroically "gave the last full measure" for the defense of our nation? In some conflicts in American history, that might have been true. But in Afghanistan, it is a trite and insulting bromide.This man, like the eleven that preceded him this year, sacrificed his life in an operation that provided no benefit to our country. America is not safer because of this supreme, excruciatingly painful sacrifice. The truth is that hardly any Americans pay any attention to our war in Afghanistan and fewer still genuinely care that another trooper has tragically been killed.Instead, the entire burden of the grief—the unquenchable, searing pain of loss—falls to a tiny number of family members and close friends of those who died. My blood boils in anger when I hear—as I have many times—some callously claim, "Hey man, nobody forced them to sign up. They volunteered and knew what they were getting themselves into." This implies that we service members forfeit the value of our life once we raise our right hand. |
Texas fossil uncovers new species of duckbilled dinosaur Posted: 16 Jul 2019 01:23 PM PDT |
The Mid-Engined Chevrolet Corvette C8 Will Still Be Called Stingray Posted: 15 Jul 2019 10:29 AM PDT |
Iran's top diplomat warns US is 'playing with fire' Posted: 15 Jul 2019 07:49 PM PDT Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif warned Monday that the United States is "playing with fire," echoing remarks by President Donald Trump as the two sides are locked in a standoff over Tehran's nuclear program. The United States quit an international deal aimed at curbing Iran's nuclear program last year, hitting Tehran with crippling sanctions. |
Posted: 15 Jul 2019 05:02 PM PDT |
Geraldo Rivera on Trump's controversial tweets: It pains me to watch Trump take the low road Posted: 15 Jul 2019 04:32 PM PDT |
Australian model sentenced for airline flight disturbance Posted: 15 Jul 2019 12:30 PM PDT An Australian model was sentenced Monday in Los Angeles to community service and probation for slapping a flight attendant and going on an obscene tirade during a flight, with a federal judge saying he believed she was deeply remorseful and did not deserve fines or prison time. U.S. District Judge Cormac J. Carney sentenced Adau Mornyang to three years of probation and 100 hours of community service. Prosecutors had sought a month in jail for Mornyang. |
No More Social Media for You, Irked Judge Tells Roger Stone Posted: 16 Jul 2019 03:00 PM PDT (Bloomberg) -- A federal judge who has warned Roger Stone to stop criticizing the criminal case against him on social media finally banned him from the platforms outright.Prosecutors had complained to U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson that the longtime Republican party operative and former adviser to President Donald Trump has been using social media to assail the government's case, in violation of her February directive that he limit his comments to professing his innocence.Jackson read her new ruling from the bench, following a 45-minute recess from a contentious two-hour hearing."I've twice given you the benefit of the doubt," she told Stone, alluding to prior infractions, then added that he'd now forced his lawyers into contortions to contend he was in compliance with her prior order.Reprising a theme she raised in the case of former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, Jackson said Stone's behavior "had more to do with middle school than with a court of law" and banned him from posting on Twitter, Facebook or Instagram, and even from reposting or liking other people's content on the platforms.Read More: Who Framed Roger Stone? His Instagram Account Demands an AnswerStone is accused of lying to Congress about his contacts with WikiLeaks over its publication of material damaging to Democrat Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign. He is also charged with obstruction and witness tampering.Stone's was the last indictment brought by Special Counsel Robert Mueller. The case is now being prosecuted by the office of Washington U.S. Attorney Jessie Liu and is set for trial in November.Before issuing her final order, Jackson engaged in a prolonged sparring session with Stone counsel Bruce Rogow, who denied that his client had run afoul of the judge's prior ruling, even as she peppered him with Instagram posts and other examples of Stone's behavior she found questionable."I don't think any of these things pose a threat to a fair trial," Rogow told her.Stopping short of asking the court to send the political provocateur to jail, prosecutor Jonathan Kravis raised the idea of Jackson barring him from using social media. "What we are most concerned about is protecting the integrity of the jury pool," he said.Ultimately the judge did just that, scolding the defense for its effort to "ignore the exponential power" of social media and particularly what it means for Stone to take an item published by someone else and spread it "with his imprimatur."'Asking You Now'During an earlier portion of the Tuesday court hearing, Stone's lawyers argued that the government can't prove Russian agents hacked Democratic Party computers during the election, rendering 18 FBI search warrants based on that premise invalid and the evidence collected under them subject to exclusion.Defense attorney Robert Buschel told the judge the warrants weren't obtained in good faith. He said they were based only on reports by a private cybersecurity firm and the U.S. intelligence community's "high confidence" that the Russians were behind the theft of materials later published by WikiLeaks, not on factual certainty.Buschel called it "government doublespeak," suggesting the theft was just as likely to have been carried out by agents of China or the U.K.That line of argument drew a pointed response from Jackson, who repeatedly asked Buschel to identify a single statement in any of the filings that he saw as knowingly false or reckless -- and what that had to do with the charges against Stone."I'm asking you now," Jackson said after a series of exchanges with the attorney. "I want you to read me a false sentence."Russia ConnectionStone's lawyers have sought to discredit the Russia connection by suggesting that metadata on the WikiLeaks documents came from a portable memory device connected to a computer from which they were downloaded and not through a trans-Atlantic computer connection.Even accepting that premise, Jackson asked, how would that invalidate the warrants?Buschel replied that lack of conclusive proof of Russian hacking rendered Stone's allegedly false statements to the congressional committee probing the incursion "irrelevant."Prosecutor Aaron Zelinsky defended the warrants, telling Jackson that Stone's lawyers were "trying to backdoor a debunked conspiracy theory" about other potential hackers, relieving the Russians of culpability."There is voluminous evidence that the Russians were responsible for hacking" the Democratic Party computers, Zelinsky told the judge. In any event, he said, Stone was charged with lying to Congress and other offenses, not with being involved in the hacking.The case is U.S. v. Stone, 19-cr-18, U.S. District Court, District of Columbia (Washington).(Updates with exchange about social media starting in eighth paragraph.)To contact the reporter on this story: Andrew Harris in Washington at aharris16@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: David Glovin at dglovin@bloomberg.net, Peter JeffreyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
ICE raids: Top immigration official admits he ‘does not know details’ of controversial arrests Posted: 15 Jul 2019 08:46 AM PDT The acting director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services has said he does not have details about the ICE raids targeting undocumented immigrants, even though he has spoken about the operation in recent days.Ken Cuccinelli said during a CNN appearance on Monday he did "not have operational details", including how many arrests were made during the operation that began on Sunday.Last week, Mr Cuccinelli discussed the operation and said there were approximately one million people in the US with removal orders."I told you, I don't have details about any arrests that have taken place so far with respect to that operation," Mr Cuccinelli said, explaining his lack of knowledge about specifics by saying "operational details are kept contained within the agency".The raids were expected in Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York and San Francisco.But, there were no reports of the raids in several cities, according to immigrant advocacy groups that are monitoring the situation.Mr Cucinelli's agency is in charge of legal immigration, and it is left to Immigration and Customs Enforcement to detain undocumented immigrants for deportation.The US has conducted raids previously, including raids on workplaces where undocumented immigrants have allegedly been hired.Donald Trump's administration has overseen a spike in the number of those kinds of raids, compared to during the Obama administration. |
India Says Russia's Missiles Don't Work (And Wants to Buy Israeli Ones Instead) Posted: 16 Jul 2019 01:00 AM PDT India is now looking to Israel, from whom it has purchased numerous weapons, such as the Heron drone and the Derby, a radar-guided, beyond-visual-range air-to-air missile with a range of 50 kilometers (31 miles).After losing one of its fighters to Pakistani jets armed with American-made missiles, India is not happy with its Russian-made missiles.In fact, it wants to replace its Russian air-to-air missiles with Israeli weapons, according to Indian news site NDTV."In two years from now, the Indian Air Force's frontline Sukhoi-30 fighters may be re-armed with Israeli Derby air-to-air missiles after the jet's Russian-made R-77 missiles were found wanting in air combat operations over the Line of Control on February 27 this year," NDTV said.During air battles along the Kashmir border on February 26 and 27, an Indian Air Force (IAF) MiG-21 was shot down, apparently by a U.S.-made AIM-120 AMRAAM (Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile) fired by one of Pakistan Air Force's (PAF) American-built F-16 fighters. India claims to have downed a Pakistani fighter – which Pakistan denies – but India was still embarrassed by the capture of its MiG-21 pilot, who was shown on Pakistani television and later returned. |
At least 1 dead, 15 injured — including 3 firefighters — in California house explosion Posted: 16 Jul 2019 09:05 AM PDT |
U.S. Justice Department asks appeals court to pause antitrust ruling against Qualcomm Posted: 16 Jul 2019 02:10 PM PDT "For DoD, Qualcomm is a key player both in terms of its trusted supply chain and as a leader in innovation, and it would be impossible to replace Qualcomm's critical role in 5G technology in the short term," Ellen M. Lord, Under Secretary for Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, wrote in a filing made in the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. Qualcomm, the largest supplier of modem chips that connect smartphones to wireless data networks, on May 21 lost in an antitrust lawsuit brought by the Federal Trade Commission earlier this year. |
Prosecco Grapes, Kiwi Pops, and More Easy Fruit Desserts Posted: 15 Jul 2019 02:31 PM PDT |
Posted: 15 Jul 2019 03:16 PM PDT |
June was the warmest June ever recorded, but there's a bigger problem Posted: 16 Jul 2019 03:00 AM PDT In 139 years of record-keeping, this June was the warmest June ever recorded. But June 2019 also revealed a deeper warming reality. The first half of 2019, January through June, finished up as the second warmest half-year on record, newly released NASA data shows. On top of that, each of the last five January through Junes are now the five warmest such spans on record. Only 2016 started off hotter than 2019. "At this point, the inexorable increase in global temperatures is entirely predictable," said Sarah Green, an environmental chemist at Michigan Technological University. She noted that NASA's updated data is added proof that climate models have accurately predicted Earth's continued warming as heat-trapping gasses amass in the atmosphere."As we have shown in recent work, the record warm streaks we've seen in recent years simply cannot be explained without accounting for the profound impact we are having on the planet through the burning of fossil fuels and the resulting increase in atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations," added climate scientist Michael Mann, the director of the Earth System Science Center at Penn State University.Indeed, atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, already at their highest levels in at least 800,000 years, are now accelerating at rates that are unprecedented in both the historic and geologic record."The latest numbers are just another reminder that the impacts of human-caused warming are no longer subtle," said Mann. "We're seeing them play out in terms of both unprecedented extreme weather events and the sorts of planetary-scale temperature extremes betrayed by these latest numbers."The warmest January through Junes on record.Image: nasa gissThe well-predicted consequences of this heating are now unfolding. Here are some, of many, examples: * Warming climes have doubled the amount of land burned by wildfires in the U.S. over the last 30 years, as plants and trees, notably in California, get baked dry. * Greenland -- home to the second largest ice sheet on Earth -- is melting at unprecedented rates. * The last 12 months have been the wettest 12 months in U.S. history, leading to widespread flooding around the nation (For every 1 degree Celsius, or 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit, of warming, the air can hold 7 percent more water.) * The Arctic is on fire. * Ocean temperatures are going up, and up, and up. * Since 1961, Earth's glaciers lost 9 trillion tons of ice. That's the weight of 27 billion 747s. * Heat waves are increasing in duration and frequency, while smashing records. * Daily high record temperatures are dominating daily low records. Overall, the atmosphere is experiencing an accelerated upward temperature climb, though there are some ups and downs within the greater warming trend. This is due to natural climatic influences, particularly from events like El Niño, which can give global temperatures an added kick. > NASA global mean June temperature is out! Guess what - it's been the hottest June on record. Definitely felt like that in Germany... climatecrisis FridaysForFuture pic.twitter.com/vkOFP22NNM> > -- Stefan Rahmstorf (@rahmstorf) July 15, 2019"The year-to-year variations of the global temperature may be affected by El Niño, etc., but in the long-term [global temperature] keeps increasing steadily," said NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies scientist Makiko Sato, who helped prepare the June climate observations. SEE ALSO: This scientist keeps winning money from people who bet against climate changeThis June was "easily" the warmest June on record, NASA noted, and overall, this year's January through June temperatures were 1.4 degrees Celsius (or 2.5 degrees Fahrenheit) above average temperatures in the late 1800s. Seasonal temperature trends.Image: nasa Giss2019 will almost certainly end up being one of the hottest years on record. This is in line with another stark trend. Eighteen of the 19 warmest years on record have occurred since 2001 -- and the five hottest years have occurred in each of the last five years. (It's not just the first half of each year setting records.)"This is further evidence that temperatures will keep rising until government policies that decrease greenhouse gas emissions are actually implemented," emphasized Green. WATCH: Ever wonder how the universe might end? |
Man charged with sex assault on fellow nursing home resident Posted: 16 Jul 2019 11:29 AM PDT Police say a New Hampshire man has been charged with sexually assaulting a female stroke victim at a nursing home where both were residents. Milford Police Capt. Shawn Pelletier says 74-year-old Robert Champigny was arrested Monday night at a Manchester hotel for assaulting the 83-year-old woman at Crestwood Nursing Home in June. Champigny was released on personal recognizance. |
Landlords Sue NYC Over New Rent Caps on a Million Apartments Posted: 16 Jul 2019 02:13 PM PDT (Bloomberg) -- New York City's rent-stabilization law is under attack after a group of real-estate trade groups and landlords sued to overturn regulations that cover more than 1 million apartments.The decades-old law that limits rent increases violates the U.S. Constitution by placing an unfair burden on property owners, particularly those who own pre-1974 buildings with six or more units, according to the suit, filed Monday in federal court in Brooklyn.The state legislature, now under full Democratic control, adopted sweeping tenant protections in June that further cap rent increases and restrict landlords' ability to evict residents. The massive rewrite of the rent rules, which cover about 2.4 million residents, aimed to preserve affordable housing by eliminating tools landlords used to remove units from regulation. The package also abolished a "vacancy bonus" that allowed property owners to raise rents 20% when a tenant left.The plaintiffs say the update further eroded their rights and that the law's "irrationality and arbitrariness" and "web of restrictions override core rights of property owners."Read More: NYC Tenants Get a Rent-Law Blessing That Landlords See as CurseThe landlords claim the rules have morphed over the years so that they benefit too many higher earners, while renters who make less than $35,000 a year account for just 38% of rent-stabilized renters. The breakdown is about the same for unregulated apartments, the groups claim, suggesting the law isn't much different from the unregulated market.The trade groups claim that 22% of rent-stabilized tenants make more than $100,000 a year and that married couples without children are over-represented in rent-stabilized apartments despite being less likely to suffer rental hardship than couples with children.The city said the suit threatens ordinary New Yorkers."Dismantling rent stabilization would be a devastating blow to everyday New Yorkers who are working hard to call this great city home," Jane Meyer, the mayor's deputy press secretary, said in a statement. She said the city would review the suit and continue to "fight to protect affordability, prevent harassment and keep this a city for everyone."Supreme Court SnubTenants-rights groups argued the changes were needed to counter decades of abuse by some landlords and a shrinking supply of affordable housing. Tens of thousands of apartments have been removed from rent-stabilized status, sending rents higher as neighborhoods are gentrified. The effort won support from Governor Andrew Cuomo, a third-term Democrat, as well as New York City mayor and 2020 presidential candidate Bill de Blasio.The U.S. Supreme Court rejected a challenge to the city's rent-stabilization system in 2012, turning away an appeal from landlords who said the city had violated their constitutional rights by limiting rents on three one-bedroom apartments in their Upper West Side brownstone. The state of New York defended the statute, citing previous Supreme Court decisions that judges "should not sit as super-legislatures reviewing matters of economic policy, but should ask only whether a legislature's policy judgments are rational."Among the plaintiffs is the Rent Stabilization Association, which represents 25,000 landlords. When the law was amended, the landlords said it would cause buildings to fall into disrepair because owners wouldn't be able to afford to maintain them.The case is Community Housing Improvement Program v. City of New York, 19-cv-4087, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York (Brooklyn).(Updates with second paragraph under Supreme Court Snub)\--With assistance from Gerald Porter Jr..To contact the reporters on this story: Erik Larson in New York at elarson4@bloomberg.net;Henry Goldman in New York at hgoldman@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: David Glovin at dglovin@bloomberg.net, Peter JeffreyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Russia bars opposition candidates from Moscow city ballot Posted: 16 Jul 2019 11:54 AM PDT Russian officials on Tuesday refused to register nearly 30 candidates for elections to Moscow's local parliament, including prominent critics of President Vladimir Putin despite protests over the move. Opposition politicians have been fighting to get on the ballot for September's elections to the Moscow city legislature as they seek to capitalise on growing public discontent over falling living standards and unchecked corruption. On Tuesday, Moscow election officials definitively rejected most of the prominent opposition figures from participating, citing lack of viable signatures. |
Imagine If Russia and China Built Nuclear-Powered Aircraft Carriers Together Posted: 15 Jul 2019 02:07 PM PDT China could partner with Russia in order to develop nuclear-powered icebreakers.While the vessels would be useful in their own right, the main benefit could be to help Beijing refine reactor technology for use in a future nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, according to the Hong Kong South China Morning Post.The Chinese navy already possesses two conventionally-powered flattops and is building a third.But naval expert Li Jie told the newspaper that to be truly competitive, the Chinese navy needs a ship capable of generating lots of power and high speeds in order to launch large aircraft. "China really needs a more powerful, nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to catapult its superheavy carrier-based fighter jet, the J-15," Li said."While China has good experience in the development of nuclear reactors for use on land, it has yet to master the miniaturisation process that is needed to make a nuclear power unit suitable for an aircraft carrier," South China Morning Post reported."China has strong naval building capabilities, but it is still very weak in nuclear miniaturisation. So it can learn from Russia," Beijing-based military expert Zhou Chenming told the newspaper.The Chinese fleet already possess nuclear-powered submarines. But the subs' reactors are poor candidates for transfer to a surface ship as large as an aircraft carrier. France learned that lesson a quarter-century ago, Zhou pointed out.> In a bid to cut costs in the development of the Charles de Gaulle – France's first and only nuclear-powered carrier – its designers used two K15 submarine pressurised water reactors as the main propulsion system. |
Posted: 15 Jul 2019 05:12 PM PDT |
The U.S. Army Is Building a Smarter Land Mine Posted: 16 Jul 2019 07:06 AM PDT |
New York Times Reporter Leaves Following Implosion of Trump Taxes Team Posted: 16 Jul 2019 09:13 AM PDT Jennifer Graylock/GettyOne of the reporters on the New York Times' Pulitzer-winning exposé of President Donald Trump's finances is leaving the publication following a falling out with the paper's investigative team. David Barstow, one of three authors of last year's blockbuster investigation, is leaving the paper at the end of the month to lead the University of California Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism's investigative reporting program. "We are sorry to see him go but we hope that we get to work together on future projects," Executive Editor Dean Baquet said in a memo to staff. "And we think he will be a great teacher for a new generation of investigative journalists."New York Times' Trump Tax Team Imploded When Star Reporter David Barstow Went RogueBarstow, 56, won a record four Pulitzer Prizes during his career as an investigative reporter at the Times, most recently with the Trump taxes story that exposed how the president and his siblings avoided paying taxes for years with efforts that the paper described as "outright fraud."The story wasn't all good news though.As The Daily Beast reported last month, the investigative team imploded in the months after publishing the major story after Barstow attempted to team up with one of the paper's top-secret sources to ghostwrite a book. Barstow previously told The Daily Beast he was even considering leaving the Times to pursue the project, as ghostwriting is strictly forbidden under the paper's ethical rules. But the plan went sideways.Editors caught wind of Barstow's interest and told him not to pursue it. Barstow said he decided not to ghostwrite a book, but did try to help the source write a book proposal. The reporter sent multiple messages to the source and went so far as to make an unannounced visit to the person's residence that left them "freaked out." Barstow did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.Baquet previously told The Daily Beast that Barstow did not violate the paper's ethical guidelines, emphasizing that Barstow ultimately did not ghostwrite the book. Barstow denied any wrongdoing, saying it was not against the rules to consider it. Nevertheless, Barstow's pursuit of the source alienated his co-authors on the original Times story, Susanne Craig and Russ Buettner, who refused to work with him, sources said. Barstow said they pursued different tips. His byline did not appear on several subsequent Times investigative stories about Trump's finances and taxes.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Posted: 15 Jul 2019 02:11 AM PDT |
The Latest: 2 accusers speak at Epstein bail hearing Posted: 15 Jul 2019 09:38 AM PDT |
Man arrested in slaying of 75-year-old community activist Posted: 16 Jul 2019 03:22 PM PDT The suspect in the slaying of a community leader who founded Baton Rouge's African American history museum was a tenant who owed her back rent, authorities said Tuesday. Ronn Jermaine Bell, 38, was arrested Tuesday on a charge of first-degree murder, city Police Chief Murphy J. Paul told news reporters. Bell is being held in the East Baton Rouge Parish jail. |
Mom wants health industry to focus on protein-packed diet after daughter’s unexpected death Posted: 15 Jul 2019 12:17 PM PDT |
Odd Man Out: How the Independent Justin Amash Could Shake Up the 2020 Presidential Election Posted: 16 Jul 2019 10:24 AM PDT Washington circles are abuzz with the suggestion that Justin Amash, the ex-Republican congressman from Michigan, may mount a third-party presidential campaign in 2020. In the few days since leaving the GOP, he's talked about "room for a third party" and refused to rule out running for president. But sources close to Amash and the Libertarian Party deny that a presidential run is in the works—although the door is still open. For the time being, the Libertarian-leaning representative is looking to build a fiscally conservative, pro-restraint coalition across party lines.Michigan representative Justin Amash has made waves in recent weeks with his challenges to the Republican establishment. He first suggested that President Donald Trump should be impeached, then he contested the president's authority to attack Iran without congressional approval, and finally left the party.Amash seemed to send mixed signals about his next move, telling CNN that he's planning to run for re-election to the House of Representatives, but confirming that he still "wouldn't rule anything like [a Libertarian presidential run] out." |
View Photos of the Lotus Evija Posted: 16 Jul 2019 11:06 AM PDT |
Fed's Powell doubles down on rate cut signal Posted: 16 Jul 2019 10:16 AM PDT Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell added more weight to expectations the central bank will cut interest rates later this month, stressing Tuesday that the US inflation outlook is near historic lows. Economists and investors see it as a certainty that the Fed will lower the key borrowing rate at the policy meeting July 30-31, and Powell in recent statements has moved to solidify those predictions by pointing to some concerns about economic growth and persistent weak inflation. Central bankers have "raised concerns about a more prolonged shortfall in inflation below our 2 percent target," Powell said in a prepared speech at a Bank of France event. |
Trevor Noah Compares Trump to Hitler After Racist Tweets Against Congresswomen Posted: 15 Jul 2019 05:23 PM PDT Trevor Noah returned to The Daily Show on Monday after a two-week break and jumped directly into the only political news story right now: President Donald Trump's racist tweets suggesting four congresswomen of color should "go back and help fix the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.""I don't know what's worse," Noah told viewers, "the fact that the president thought it's acceptable to say 'go back' to where you came from or the fact that he said it to people who are already where they came from." "You know, it's almost like in Trump's head, you can't be a person of color and an American," the host continued, before pivoting to a joke. "Which is strange, because he of all people should know that you can be two things at the same time. I mean, he's bald and has a full head of hair. It doesn't make sense, but we accept it."Noah went to say he was not surprised that "Mr. 'Mexicans Are Rapists'" is standing by his comments. When Fox News reporter John Roberts asked Trump if it concerned him that "many people saw that tweet as racist and that white nationalist groups are finding common cause with you on that point," the president replied, "It doesn't concern me because many people agree with me."As his audience booed, Noah said, "I don't know where to begin. First of all, just because many people agree with you doesn't mean you aren't being racist." Then came the analogy to Nazi Germany: "Imagine if Hitler was like, 'I know everybody says I'm bad, but have you seen how many people are waving at me in the streets? If I was racist, they would say something, yeah?'" Trevor Noah Schools Audience Member Who Wants Reparations for White PeopleRead more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Posted: 15 Jul 2019 11:36 AM PDT |
An Air Force officer reported his wife missing. Now he's charged with her murder Posted: 15 Jul 2019 10:18 AM PDT |
The Latest: UAE official says tanker sent no distress call Posted: 16 Jul 2019 12:13 PM PDT An Emirati official says a small oil tanker that's based in the United Arab Emirates offered no distress call before switching off its tracker over two days ago in the Strait of Hormuz. The comment Tuesday comes a U.S. defense official told The Associated Press that America "has suspicions" that Iran seized the vessel. A U.S. defense official tells The Associated Press that America "has suspicions" that Iran seized an oil tanker based in the United Arab Emirates that turned off its tracker over two days ago in the Strait of Hormuz. |
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