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Schumer defends dropping carried interest tax change to win over Sinema

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (DN.Y.) says he had no choice but to remove a provision closing the so-called carried interest tax loophole for money managers from his climate and tax reform bill because Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) threatened to block the legislation otherwise.

Dropping the carried interest tax provision from the Inflation Reduction Act cost $14 billion in projected revenue, but Schumer made up for it by adding an excise tax on stock buybacks that will generate $74 billion in revenue.

Schumer told reporters that he pushed hard to close the carried interest tax loophole, which allows asset managers to pay a lower effective income tax rate than many middle-income Americans, but Sinema told him she wouldn’t vote to begin debate unless he dropped the provision.

“I strongly believe in the carried interest loophole, I have voted for it, I have pushed for it, I have pushed for it to be in this bill,” he said. “Sen. Sinema said she would not vote for the bill, not even move to proceed unless we took it out so we had no choice.”

The Wall Street Journal reported that Sinema told donors at a campaign fundraiser Wednesday night that it would be bad policy to hit the private equity industry with an increase in interest carried in taxes at a time when the industry will be needed to finance infrastructure projects and semiconductor manufacturing .

Other Democrats, including Sen. Joe Manchin (W.Va.), however, points out that ending the carried interest loophole would affect asset managers who advise on investments, not the investors who put their own money up finance a project or business. Under the loophole, money managers pay a 20 percent capital gains rate and a 3.8 percent net investment income tax on the income they earn from advising on a profitable investment.

Schumer also noted that he reshaped the 15 percent corporate minimum tax to address Sinema’s concern that it would hit manufacturing companies.

The Democratic leader said he agreed to take out “two pieces” of the corporate minimum tax provision, lowering the amount of revenue it will raise from $313 billion to $258 billion over the next decade.

But he said that revenue loss will be made up for as well by applying the 1 percent excise tax on stock buybacks.

“What we added is something that excites me and I think excites all Democrats and particularly progressives. We’re adding in an excise tax on stock buybacks that will bring in $74 billion,” Schumer said.

“I hate stock buybacks. I think they’re one of the most self-serving things that corporate America does,” he said. “They don’t do a thing to make their company better and they artificially raise the stock price just by just reducing the number of shares. They’re despicable,” he added.

Asked when the effective date for the excise tax would be, Schumer said he would provide more information at a later time.

Sinema touted the removal of the carried interest provision in a statement Thursday evening.

Schumer said Democrats will try to pass the bill “as quickly as we can” but pointed out there are various tactics Republicans can use to slow the bill.

But he predicted the bill would have the support of all 50 Democrats to pass sometime in the next few days.

“I’m pleased we have reached an agreement on the Inflation Reduction Act that I believe will receive the support of the entire Senate Democratic conference,” he said.

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Sinema among top private equity cash recipients as she removed billionaire tax loophole from Manchin bill

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Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., has raked in significant amounts of campaign cash from the private equity sector, which she notched a victory after she lobbied to remove a billionaire tax loophole from the Inflation Reduction Act as part of her agreement to back the legislation .

The Arizona Democrat announced Thursday that she would “move forward” in supporting the Inflation Reduction Act, the reconciliation package Senate Democrats unveiled last week. As part of the agreement, she successfully removed the carried interest tax provision, which targeted a loophole used by wealthy Americans.

“We have agreed to remove the carried interest tax provision, protect advanced manufacturing, and boost our clean energy economy in the Senate’s budget reconciliation legislation,” Sinema said late Thursday. “Subject to the Parliamentarian’s review, I’ll move forward.”

Sinema’s move is a win for the private equity sector, which pours large amounts of cash into her campaign’s coffers.

SINEMA AGREES TO ‘MOVE FORWARD’ WITH SOCIAL SPENDING AND TAX BILL AFTER DEMS MAKE CHANGES

Individuals and political action committees from the private equity and investment sector have provided her campaign with $282,650 in donations this election cycle, making her the Senate’s sixth-largest recipient from the industry, according to data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics.

Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who spearheaded the bill, is by far the top darling of the sector. The New York Democrat’s campaign has raked in nearly $1.2 million from individuals and PACs in the industry this cycle. His campaign also tops contributions from those who work for hedge funds by more than $400,000, Center for Responsive Politics data shows.

“I strongly believe in the carried interest loophole. I have voted for it. I pushed for it at first for it to be in this bill,” Schumer told reporters Friday. “Senator Sinema said she would not vote for the bill, not even move to proceed unless we took it out. So we had no choice.”

Sinema’s campaign did not immediately respond to a Fox News Digital inquiry on her private equity donations.

MANCHIN CLAIMS DEMOCRATIC SOCIAL SPENDING AND TAX BILL IS FILLED WITH GOP PRIORITIES

Sen.  Kyrsten Sinema,D-Ariz., announced she would support the Inflation Reduction Act after the so-called carried interest loophole provision was removed.

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema,D-Ariz., announced she would support the Inflation Reduction Act after the so-called carried interest loophole provision was removed.
(Reuters/Elizabeth Franz)

The carried interest provision included in the original reconciliation package would have removed a loophole that allows private equity and hedge fund managers to pay fewer taxes. Wealthy fund managers are able to report income as capital gains, not regular income, dropping their tax rate from 37.9% to 23.8% and potentially saving them hundreds of thousands of dollars, under the little-known tax break.

The loophole would have raised $14 billion in federal tax revenue, according to initial estimates. As part of the negotiations with Sinema, Democrats will tack on a 1% tax on stock buybacks to help pay for the $433 billion legislation.

On Friday, the Chamber of Commerce, the nation’s largest business lobby group, applauded Sinema’s effort to remove the carried interest loophole provision.

MANCHIN-SCHUMER SPENDING BILL TARGETS TAX LOOPHOLE FAVORED BY INVESTORS

“Taxing capital expenditures — investments in new buildings, factories, equipment, etc. — is one of the most economically destructive ways you can raise taxes,” Chamber Executive Vice President and Chief Policy Officer Neil Bradley said. “It punishes innovation, leaves a country poorer and less capable of growing.”

“While we look forward to reviewing the new proposed bill, Senator Sinema deserves credit for recognizing this and fighting for changes,” he added.

Sen.  Joe Manchin, DW.Va., left, and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., unveiled the Inflation Reduction Act last week after months of contentious negotiations.

Sen. Joe Manchin, DW.Va., left, and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., unveiled the Inflation Reduction Act last week after months of contentious negotiations.
(F. Carter Smith/Bloomberg via Getty Images | Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Private equity and business groups had argued the provision would have hurt US small businesses most.

“Over 74% of private equity investment went to small businesses last year,” Drew Maloney, the president of private equity interest group the American Investment Council, said in a statement after the bill was unveiled. “As small business owners face rising costs and our economy faces serious headwinds, Washington should not move forward with a new tax on the private capital that is helping local employers survive and grow.”

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Karen Kerrigan, the president of the Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council, said the provision would ultimately be absorbed by “ordinary Americans and our nation’s small businesses.”

“Increasing taxes on carried interest means many entrepreneurial firms and small businesses across sectors will not have access to the capital they need to compete, scale, innovate and navigate challenging economic conditions,” Kerrigan told FOX Business last week. “This will only hurt local economies and workers and more broadly undermine US competitiveness.”

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Pentagon denies DC request for National Guard migrant help

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon rejected a request from the District of Columbia seeking National Guard assistance in what the largest has called a “growing humanitarian crisis” prompted by thousands of migrants being bused to the city from two southern states.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin declined to provide Guard personnel and the use of the DC Armory to assist with the reception of migrants into the city, according to US defense officials. Mayor Muriel Bowser said Friday that the district may send an amended, “more specific” request, adding that she believes this is the first time a DC request for the National Guard has been denied.

One official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a decision not yet made public, said that the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s food and shelter program has provided funding for the problem, and has indicated those funds are sufficient at this point.

Bowser, the largest Democratic district’s, formally asked the White House last month for an open-ended deployment of 150 National Guard members per day as well as a “suitable federal location” for a mass housing and processing center, mentioning the DC Armory as a logical candidate.

During the spring, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, both Republicans, announced plans to send busloads of migrants to Washington, DC, in response to President Joe Biden’s decision to lift a pandemic-era emergency health order that restricted migrant entry numbers. On Friday, Abbott said the first group of migrants from his state had now been bused to New York as well.

As of mid-July, about 5,200 migrants had been bused from Texas to DC since April. As of Aug. 3, more than 1,300 had been sent from Arizona since May. The governors call the practice a voluntary free ride – paid for by state taxpayers — that gets migrants closer to family or support networks.

But Bowser last month dismissed that characterization, saying that the asylum-seekers are being “tricked,” as many don’t get close enough to their final destinations and some are ditched at Union Station near the US Capitol and the White House. Often they arrive with no resources and no clue what to do next.

On Friday, Bowser told reporters that the Pentagon appears to be concerned “about the open-ended nature of our request.” and that a more specific one would help.

“We want to continue to work with the Department of Defense so that they understand our operational needs and to assure that political considerations are not a part of their decision,” Bowser said, adding that she believes the “crisis” will only worsen. “We need the National Guard. If we were a state, I would have already done it.”

A coalition of local charitable groups has been working to feed and shelter the migrants, aided by a $1 million grant from FEMA. But organizers have been warned that both their resources and personnel were nearing exhaustion.

“This reliance on NGOs is not working and is unsustainable — they are overwhelmed and underfunded,” Bowser said in her letter. She has repeatedly stated that the influence is stressing her government’s ability to care for its own homeless residents and now requires a federal response.

Bowser sharply criticized Abbott and Ducey, accusing them of “cruel political gamesmanship” and saying the pair had “decided to use desperate people to score political points.”

Explaining his decision to add New York City as a destination, Abbott said that Biden’s “refusal to acknowledge the crisis caused by his open border policies” forced Texas to “take unprecedented action to keep our communities safe.”

He said the migrants are being dropped off at the Port Authority Bus Terminal.

“In addition to Washington, DC, New York City is the ideal destination for these migrants, who can receive the abundance of city services and housing that Mayor Eric Adams has boasted about within the sanctuary city,” Abbott said.

In response, Fabien Levy, spokesman for Adams, tweeted that Abbott’s “continued use of human beings as political pawns is disgusting. NYC will continue to welcome asylum seekers w/ open arms, as we have always done, but we still need support from DC.”

As mayor of DC, Bowsesr does not have the authority to personally order a National Guard deployment, an issue that has become emotionally charged in recent years as a symbol of the district’s entrenched status as less than a state.

Her limited authority played a role in the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the US Capitol by supporters of former President Donald Trump. When it became clear that Capitol Police were overmatched by the crowds, Bowser couldn’t immediately deploy the district guard. Instead, crucial time was lost while the request was considered inside the Pentagon, and protesters rampaged through the building.

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Associated Press writer Ashraf Khalil in Washington, DC, Karen Matthews in New York City and Bob Christie in Phoenix contributed to this report.

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Gov. Greg Abbott vows more migrant buses coming to NYC

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office vowed Friday to send even more busloads of border-crossers to the Big Apple — as the Lone Star State continues to grapple with the ongoing migrant crisis.

The Republican governor said the Port Authority Bus Terminal in midtown Manhattan would be a drop-off spot going forward after the first busload from the border arrived in the city Friday morning.

“Over 50 migrants were bused to New York City this morning from the southern border in Texas,” Abbott’s office said in a statement.

“This is now a drop-off location for our ongoing seeking strategy.”

Abbott has already dispatched dozens of buses — filled with more than 6,100 migrants — to Washington DC since April.

He vowed to continue to charter buses to both New York and the nation’s capital as his state struggles to deal with the unprecedented number of migrants illegally crossing the US-Mexico border.

Texas Gov.  Greg Abbott talks with Fox News' Jesse Waters on border issues.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott talks with Fox News’ Jesse Waters on border issues.
foxnews
Migrants plead for hospitality after arriving at the Port Authority Bus Terminal.
Migrants plead for hospitality after arriving at the Port Authority Bus Terminal.
foxnews

“Because of President Biden’s continued refusal to acknowledge the crisis caused by his open border policies, the State of Texas has had to take unprecedented action to keep our communities safe,” Abbott said in announcing the arrival of the bus at Port Authority Gate 14.

“In addition to Washington, DC, New York City is the ideal destination for these migrants, who can receive the abundance of city services and housing that Mayor Eric Adams has boasted about within the sanctuary city.

“I hope he follows through on his promise of welcoming all migrants with open arms so that our overrun and overwhelmed border towns can find relief.”

Texas Gov.  Greg Abbott vowed to send more migrant buses to the Big Apple.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott vowed to send more migrant buses to the Big Apple.
foxnews

Adams, who has already warned that NYC’s homeless shelters are being overrun by migrants, turned down Abbott’s invitation to visit the border earlier this week to see the “dire situation” firsthand.

Abbott told Fox News’ Jesse Watters Thursday night that he wished Adams and DC Mayor Muriel Bowser would reconsider his offer.

“They do need to realize the magnitude of the chaos created by Biden’s open-border policies,” Abbott said.

Texas Gov.  Greg Abbott hopes Mayor Eric Adams will accommodate the migrants.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott hopes Mayor Eric Adams will accommodate the migrants.
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Governor GREG ABBOTT speaks at the CPAC Texas 2022 conference.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott previously invited Mayor Eric Adams to visit the US-Mexico border.
Chris Rusanowsky/ZUMA Press Wire

“They’re up in arms about a few thousand people coming into their communities over the past few months? Listen, in any one sector in the state of Texas, we have more than 5,000 people coming across [the border] in that sector every single day.”

“We’re full in the state of Texas,” Abbott added. “Our communities are overrun, and I started busing people to Washington DC, when local officials could not handle the number of people that had come across our border.”

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Calif. county south of Tahoe gets 2.2 inches of rain in hour

Thunderstorms pounded a section of the Sierra Nevada east of Lake Tahoe, stretching from Reno to California’s Alpine County, this week, delivering heavy rain, flooding roadways and triggering mudslides, the National Weather Service said.

“We typically see a push of monsoon moisture each summer, and it varies from year to year, how long the surge is and how strong it is,” said Wendell Hohmann, a forecaster with the weather service’s Reno office. “This year kind of came late. We were pretty dry up to mid-July and then finally a door opened to allow it in.

The thunderstorms hit as monsoonal moisture from the desert Southwest climbed northward into California and Nevada.


A gauge in Alpine County’s Markleeville, 30 miles southeast of South Lake Tahoe, recorded 2.49 inches of rain in 90 minutes on Wednesday. “It was 2.2 inches in 60 minutes — that’s how intense it was,” Hohmann said. On Thursday, Monitor Pass measured 0.8 inches of rain on Thursday, he said.

Debris flows crossed over Hot Springs Road, piling large boulders onto the road, Grover Hot Springs State Park employees and the California Highway Patrol said on Wednesday.

Highway 89 in the Markleeville area of ​​Alpine County is closed due to severe flooding, Caltrans said.

Highway 89 in the Markleeville area of ​​Alpine County is closed due to severe flooding, Caltrans said.

caltrans

The Tamarack Fire burned through the Markleeville area in 2021, and on Wednesday the weather service issued a flash flood emergency for the burn scar, followed by a flash flood warning Thursday.

“This is a particularly dangerous situation! Seek higher ground now,” the weather service said Wednesday.

Highway 89 from Turtle Rock to Markleeville is closed with no estimated time of reopening mud and debris flows that washed out part of the road, officials said. State Route 4 to Turtle Rock Park is also closed due to a mudslide.

The Tahoe area wasn’t hit with heavy rain, but Hohmann said thunderstorms are possible Friday.

The Reno Airport reported 1.22 inches of rainfall from a strong thunderstorm between 7:45 pm and 8:45 pm Wednesday, the weather service said. This is more rain than the airport has seen in the past seven months.

“Before Wednesday, the airport had seen only 0.74 inches from Jan. 1 all the way to Tuesday,” Hohmann said.

The official airport gauge recorded another 0.24 inch on Thursday, though Hohmann said another gauge at the south end of the runway had an inch of rain.

The weather service issued several flash flood watches for the Reno area Wednesday and Thursday, and the Reno Fire Department on Wednesday said some it rescued some drivers from flooded roadways Wednesday.

More thunderstorms are in the forecast for the Reno area Friday, and the flash flood watch remains in effect.

A monsoon refers to a seasonal reversal of wind patterns over a region. The summer monsoon is associated with an increase in thunderstorm activity; in North America, winds pull moisture from the Pacific Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico and transport it into the Southwest US

The summer monsoon is a typical weather pattern that is most pronounced in the interior Southwest states of Arizona and New Mexico. Sometimes the moisture pushes northward into California, the weather service said.

When monsoon moisture flows into Northern California, lightning is usually more common in the Sierra Nevada than along the coast due to the mountains’ lack of a marine layer and its topography. The air mass is forced to lift, intensifying the thunderstorms, the weather service said.

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Multiple injured, including two police officers, after vehicle plows through New Mexico parade

Multiple people were injured, including two police officers, after a car plowed through a parade celebrating Native American culture in New Mexico Thursday evening, police say.

The incident unfolded at the Gallup Intertribal Ceremonial Centennial Celebration, honoring Native American culture and heritage, New Mexico State Police said. The parade started at 7 pm according to the event website.

Jarring videos shared on social media showed the parade underway with dancers and performers in the street when the tan SUV appeared and people scrambled to run out of its path. Spectators were heard screaming and shouting “oh my God!” as they ran.

The vehicle appeared to speed through the parade route, not slowing down as attendees panicked and tried to flee the scene.

The City of Gallup, located about two hours west of Albuquerque, said in an incident alert at 8 pm local time, “Fortunately, no spectators or parade participants have been reported as struck by the vehicle.”

However, New Mexico State Police said multiple were injured in the ensuing chaos. A number of the injured was not released and they were treated at the scene, police said.

The City of Gallup said “the vehicle and its three occupants” were detained. Their names have not been released.

“There have been reports of shots fired but nothing has been confirmed at this time. Gallup Police are on the scene and an investigation is underway,” the alert said.

NBC News has reached out to New Mexico State Police for more details on the arrests.

The parade was part of an 11-day celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Gallup Intertribal Ceremonial.

“Gallup Intertribal Ceremonial is one of the oldest continuous recognitions of Native American culture and heritage and known for attracting an international audience,” a news release for the event said.

Kaelyn Bahe was at the parade and filmed the moment the SUV ran through the route, swerving along the road until it was out of sight.

“Everyone just took off their cars, I ran straight to mine,” she wrote on Facebook. “Please know I was super shocked and hella scared that I was asking everyone if they were okay.”

Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez shared a live video saying, “We were in the path of the vehicle.”

“Thank God that folks that were around me, our team members, our council delegates, were not stuck by the vehicle. It turned the corner and from that point on I don’t know what happened, but before that, it came straight towards us, the vehicle,” he said.

Navajo Nation Council Speaker Seth Damon condemned the incident saying, “This was a traumatic and triggering event for many, especially our youth, elders, and our veterans who acted quickly.”

“The Navajo Nation stands with resilience against any acts of violence and sends prayers of protection to those affected,” Damon said, adding, “the perpetrators will be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law.”

The Thursday panic was the latest example of violence at community parades.

Last November, an SUV plowed through the Christmas Parade in Waukesha, Wisconsin fatally striking six and injuring dozens more. In Highland Park, Illinois, a Fourth of July parade turned deadly when a gunman opened fired, killing 7 people and wounding dozens of others.

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Parkland Trial Reveals Depths of Families’ Sorrow

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Peter Wang’s mother has four tattoos memorializing her 15-year-old son, one inked on Feb. 14 each year since he was killed. Carmen Schentrup’s parents find sleep elusive. Nicholas Dworet’s mother hesitates every time someone asks her, “How many kids do you have?”

Joaquin Oliver’s mother cannot bear to join relatives for family celebrations because her son is gone. Jaime Guttenberg’s mother finds it impossible to watch her beloved Florida Gators play football, because they were also her daughter’s favorite team. Gina Montalto’s father struggles with his marriage to him, strained from grieving the loss of his daughter to him.

One by one, the relatives and friends of the 17 people killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., took the stand in court this week and divulged to a jury the depths of their despair since losing loved ones to gunfire four years ago on Valentine’s Day. Over four days of profoundly emotional testimony, they shared painful and intimate details that laid bare how their internal lives remain shattered and how massacres like Parkland leave families with years of unresolved sorrow.

“I have a box over my heart with a lid so tightly closed, trying to keep all my emotions under control,” said Linda Beigel Schulman, who lost her son, Scott J. Beigel, a geography teacher. “But today, I’m taking the lid off that box.”

The heart-rending testimony concluded on Thursday after the jury deciding the fate of the gunman, Nikolas Cruz, toured the school building where the mass shooting took place. Prosecutors left the viewing of the crime scene, an exceedingly rare and visceral occurrence in a criminal trial, for the last day of their nearly three-week presentation and rested their case.

What the 12 jurors and 10 alternates saw inside Building 12 of Stoneman Douglas High, which has been fenced off and unused since the day of the shooting, was a moment frozen in time, a joyful holiday interrupted by a deadly rampage. Bullet holes pocked the doors and walls. Bits of shattered glass crunched under their feet. Laptops remained opened, class work incomplete. Dried rose petals were strewn on floors caked in blood.

In one unfinished English class assignment, a student had written, “We go to school every day of the week and we take it all for granted. We cry and complain without knowing how lucky we are to be able to learn.” A second-floor hallway featured a James Dean quote: “Dream as if you’ll live forever, live as if you’ll die today.”

The crime scene visited capped 12 days of often thick video and autopsy evidence in an agonizing trial in which the jury will decide if Mr. Cruz, 23, who has pleaded guilty, should be sentenced to death or life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. The defense is scheduled to begin its case on Aug. 22. The judge will first hold a hearing without the jury to decide if defense lawyers can use a map of Mr. Cruz’s brain as evidence of the effects of fetal alcohol syndrome.

Before hearing from victims’ families and relatives, the jury listened to 17 survivors who were wounded in the shooting recount how they suffered their injuries and what lingering effects remained from being hit with high-velocity gunshots. Several still have pieces of shrapnel in their bodies.

Benjamin Wikander’s radial nerve was damaged so badly that he still must wear an arm brace. Maddy Wilford has trouble breathing with her right lung. Sam Fuentes suffers from chronic pain and spasms in her legs and no longer has the same range of motion she once did.

But the courtroom felt perhaps most somber as parents, siblings, grandparents and friends found it difficult to stay composed remembering their loved ones and describing life without them. They frequently reached for tissues. A bailiff offered them water.

“I can do this,” Tori Gonzalez, Joaquin Oliver’s girlfriend, said as she took deep breaths on the witness stand. One juror cried when she called Joaquin her soul mate from her.

“I lost innocence,” she said of the shooting. “I lost purity. I lost the love letters he was writing for me in that fourth-period creative writing class.”

Many relatives spoke about being unable to celebrate birthdays and holidays since the shooting. Peter Wang’s family no longer gathers for Chinese New Year. Luke Hoyer’s mother called Christmas nearly unbearable. Helena Ramsay was killed on her father’s birthday.

Families regretted that they would never see their children graduate from high school or college. Never get to walk them down the aisle. Never rejoice in their having children of their own.

“She never got her braces off,” said Meghan Petty, Alaina Petty’s sister. “She never got her first kiss from her.”

Parents and spouses described their homes as intolerably quiet. “The night no longer brings intimacy and comfort,” said Debra Hixon, the wife of Chris Hixon, the school’s athletic director, “just the loudness of the silence.”

Her son Corey Hixon, who has Kabuki syndrome, a rare genetic disorder, said simply of his father: “I miss him!”

Some people were angry. Alyssa Alhadeff’s father, Dr. Ilan Alhadeff, repeatedly yelled through tears: “This is not normal!” He said his wife de ella “occasionally sprays Alyssa’s perfume de ella just to try and smell her.”

“She even sleeps with Alyssa’s blanket, four years later,” he added.

Some parents have struggled to work. Fred Guttenberg, Jaime Guttenberg’s father, who has become a gun control activist, said he has been unable to hold a normal job and that his public crusade “has made life harder for my wife and harder for my son, and for that, I am sorry.”

“This broke me,” he said.

The shooting changed his relationship with his son, who was supposed to wait for Jaime and drive her home after school that day. Instead, once Mr. Guttenberg learned of the gunfire, he told his son to flee.

“He struggles with the reality that he could not save his sister, and he wishes it was him,” he said. “He’s angry at me convincing him to run.”

As victim after victim spoke, many people in the courtroom gallery wept. So did several defense lawyers.

Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs contributed reporting.

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Kamala Harris labeled hypocrite over Brittney Griner comments

Vice President Kamala Harris was accused of hypocrisy after she decried Brittney Griner’s conviction by Russia on cannabis smuggling charges — despite Harris prosecuting thousands of similar marijuana possession cases in her earlier career as a prosecutor.

Griner, 31, was sentenced on Thursday to nine years in prison after she admitted to bringing vape cartridges containing cannabis oil into the country. The WNBA star said she had been prescribed the oil to help relieve pain related to her chronic injuries and had accidentally packed them in her luggage.

The verdict was met with universal condemnation from US diplomats and government officials, led by President Biden, who called the sentence “unacceptable” and demanded that Russia release both Griner and a second jailed American, Paul Whelan, “immediately.”

Harris released a separate statement on Twitter condemning Griner’s conviction.

VP Kamala Harris has been labeled a hypocrite for condemning Brittney Griner's cannabis conviction in Russia, despite overseeing thousands of marijuana possession cases as a prosecutor.
VP Kamala Harris has been labeled a hypocrite for condemning Brittney Griner’s cannabis conviction in Russia, despite overseeing thousands of marijuana possession cases as a prosecutor.
AP
Griner was found guilty of smuggling cannabis into Russia and was sentenced to nine years in prison.
Griner was found guilty of smuggling cannabis into Russia and was sentenced to nine years in prison.
ZUMAPRESS.com

“With today’s sentencing, Russia continues its wrongful detention of Brittney Griner. She should be released immediately,” Harris wrote. “@POTUS and I, and our entire Administration, are working every day to reunite Brittney, as well as Paul Whelan, with loved ones who miss each of them dearly.”

But Harris’ many critics were quick to point out that while serving as both San Francisco’s district attorney and California’s attorney general, she oversaw thousands of marijuana-related prosecutions and was an outspoken critic of pot legalization, as the Daily Mail first reported.

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Brittney Griner sentenced to 9 years for cannabis possession in Russia

“Brittney Griner got 9 years for drug possession in Russia… which sounds like most of the criminal sentences Kamala Harris got people for the same thing when she was attorney general of California,” author Tim Young tweeted.

Another commenter wrote: “LMAO, didn’t U lock up as—load of people for weed? Then bragged about it, and went on to say you smoked weed in college listening to Tupac and snoop before they cut their first albums?”

A third smoked in the same vein: “You locked up people for possession of marijuana. And you’re only condemning this because the US cannot profit from her incarceration of her in Russia.

The San Jose Mercury News reported in 2019 that during Harris’ tenure as San Francisco’s top prosecutor between 2004-2010, her office handled more than 1,900 marijuana convictions — although it has been pointed out that most of those arrested for low-level possession were spared prison time, and only a few dozen were incarcerated.

Harris was elected the Golden State’s attorney general in 2011 and had a further 1,970 people locked up for marijuana offenses on her watch, according to an investigation by the Washington Free Beacon, a conservative publication.

Harris also vocally opposed California’s marijuana legalization ballot initiative, which ultimately passed in 2016.

She only threw her support behind legalization around 2018, even endorsing a bill which would have removed cannabis from the Controlled Substances Act, reported Forbes. She also wrote a book in which she argued for the decriminalization of cannabis.

By the time Harris radically changed her stance on marijuana, there was already talk of her running for president.

Harris famously sparred with Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard during a Democratic presidential debate in 2019 after Gabbard brought up her record of throwing people in prison for marijuana possession.

“She put over 1,500 people in jail for marijuana violations and then laughed about it when she was asked if she ever smoked marijuana,” Gabbard said, referring to Harris’ interview with the radio show “The Breakfast Club.”

In that sitdown, the White House contender — and former prosecutor — admitted with a laugh that she had smoked marijuana in college, saying: “I have. And I inhaled—I did inhale. It was a long time ago. But, yes.”

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Surprising facts and safety tips for lightning and thunder

Comment

Thunderstorms are a staple of the summertime across the Lower 48, and they all produce lightning — a wild phenomenon that also can be dangerous. In DC on Thursday, two people died after being hospitalized with injuries sustained in an apparent lightning strike near the White House.

These bolts of raw electricity ricochet through thin air, arcing from stormy skies and blasting whatever they hit with a deafening roar. Lightning can be mesmerizing, dangerous, beautiful and terrifying, but how much do you know about what happens when there’s a strike?

Two dead after Thursday night lightning strike near White House

Lightning is an electrical discharge and nature’s balancing mechanism for distributing charge throughout the atmosphere.

Thunderstorms become electrified when electrons, which are negatively charged particles, are shaved off one water particle — like a raindrop, snowflake or hailstone — and end up on another, leaving the former with a net positive charge and the latter a bit extra negative. Generally speaking, ice crystals acquire a positive charge, while raindrops take on a negative charge.

That makes the top of a cloud, where temperature are well below freezing, positively charged. Below that is a more expansive “central negative” within the storm. A shallow, broad positive charge sits at the storm’s base like the bottom of a hamburger bun.

Most lightning we see is either intracloud (within the cloud) or takes the form of cloud-to-ground bolts, most commonly originating from the middle negative charge. The greater the electrical field within a cloud, the more “sparky” the storm will be.

Getting an electric spark to jump through thin air is tricky. The ambient electric field has to be great enough to overwhelm the “dielectric breakdown strength” of air.

Think of a dam. It prevents water from flowing beyond it, unless the volume of water behind it reaches a threshold sufficient to burst the dam. Then the stored-up water can break through unimpeded.

For air, that magic number is 3 megavolts (or 3 million volts) per meter for dry air (it will change some in a storm). Charge accumulating on the surface will begin to bleed into thin air in a fine stream of electrons known as a “corona” discharge. That heats the adjacent air, lowering the resistance and making it possible for that spark to begin spreading in jagged increments.

It’s unclear what processes unfold within a cloud, but eventually what’s called a “stepped leader” of electricity races toward the ground, leaping in a branched, fractal pattern.

What I learned from 20 years photographing lightning in DC

“Upward streamers,” or narrow tendrils of electricity, reach skyward from the surface, akin to a group of students raising their hands. Eventually, the downward stepped leader connects with one of the upward streamers to create an unbroken channel of electricity between the cloud and the ground. Current pulses surge through the channel, each causing a burst of light. That’s why lightning appears to flicker.

Surprising facts about lightning

  • Lightning isn’t that thick. In fact, it’s only an inch or two across. It just looks wider because of luminosity.
  • Lightning is five times hotter than the surface of the sun. Within that narrow lightning channel, the electricity heats the air to nearly 55,000 degrees. That causes a rapid expansion of the air, which produces the atmospheric shock wave we hear as thunder.
  • Lightning can be triggered. Researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico use rockets to trigger lightning, and then employ high-speed cameras and instruments to collect data. It’s also well-established that airplanes, helicopters, tall man-made structures and even wind turbines can spark their own strikes.
  • “Upward lightning” is a thing. It’s exactly what it sounds like — lightning that leaps from the ground to the cloud, fanning outward along the cloud’s expansive lower positive charge. In fact, self-initiated upward leaders are common from man-made transmission/broadcast towers, and are an area of ​​emerging research.
  • Some lightning is more likely to spark wildfires. Although lightning is extremely hot, it is also brief. That limits its window of opportunity to ignite a wildfire. But instead of current flowing between the sky and ground in a brief series of staccato bursts, some lightning takes the form of a “continuing current” discharge. That means the current flows over longer-duration pulses. Because the current is heating the ground for longer, the odds of a wildfire climb markedly.
  • Men are struck roughly four times as often as women. In the United States, men account for 84 percent of lightning fatalities, and women make up the remaining 16 percent.
  • Lightning fatalities are trending downward. Because of improved forecasts, education and awareness, lightning fatalities have decreased significantly in recent decades. An average of 43 people died of lightning strikes annually in the United States between 1989 and 2018, but the average dropped to 23 between 2012 and 2022. A record low 11 deaths occurred in 2021.

Tips and facts to know for staying safe when there’s lightning

  • Never shelter under a tree. If lightning strikes a tree, the charge can flow through the trunk and laterally strike individuals beneath it, or also spread through the ground. Many lightning tragedies have stemmed from individuals seeking shelter beneath trees. The previous lightning fatality in DC, which took place on May 17, 1991, occurred when a group sheltered beneath a tree during a lacrosse game.
  • Leisure activities — especially fishing and boating — are the greatest sources of lightning fatalities. “[F]ishermen and boaters are likely to be out in the open and more vulnerable to a direct lightning strike,” a report from the National Lightning Safety Council from 2020 stated.
  • Lightning can strike even in blizzards. Thundersnow is real and it can be dangerous. On Jan. 25, 1990, lightning hit a light pole during a thundersnow storm in Crystal Lake, Ill. The charge traveled through the frozen ground and injured 11 people nearby shoveling snow or pushing stranded motorists.
  • Lightning can travel 10 or more miles away from a parent thunderstorm and even strike in clear air far from any rain. These “bolts from the blue” are often more powerful and potent, since they originate from the positively charged top of a thunderstorm. These are among the most dangerous, since they can strike in otherwise tranquil conditions. That’s why experts recommend sheltering at the first sign of thunder, as that’s a sign that you’re close enough to be struck by lightning.
  • Ninety percent of lightning-strike victims survive. There are an average of 30 lightning fatalities in the United States every year. The lightning strike near the White House on Thursday brought this year’s fatality count to 11.

Read more about lightning …

‘Gigantic jet’ lightning is a mystery. These researchers are solving it.

Jonathan’s story: After tragic ‘bolt from the blue,’ two simple rules that could save your life

Bolts from the blue: Here’s how lightning can strike when a storm is tens of miles away

Where lightning hit the most in the US in 2021

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US

Republicans vow ‘hell’ for Democrats over economic bill

Republicans are sharpening their knives while the Senate prepares to hunker in for a long weekend as Democrats deploy a special process to pass the party’s sprawling health care, tax and climate plan without buy-in from across the aisle.

Republican leaders smoked over the Democratic effort at a press conference on Friday, one day before the Senate is prepared to begin consideration of the plan, while taking aim at Sens. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz. ), two key centrist holdouts, for backing the effort.

“So, what will vote-a-rama be like?” Sen. Lindsey Graham (RS.C) told reporters on Friday, referring to the voting marathon senators are set to be subjected to in the next few days as part of the process Democrats are using to pass the bill. “It’d be like hell.”

“They deserve this. As much as I admire Joe Manchin and Sinema for standing up to the radical left at times, they’re empowering legislation that will make the average person’s life more difficult,” Graham said.

Graham, along with Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kan.), also threatened not to vote for a critical funding measure ahead of a September deadline, when government funding is set to lapse, over the effort.

Democrats are using a complicated procedure known as budget reconciliation to try to pass the party’s Inflation Reduction Act, a massive package that would advance key pieces of President Biden’s legislative agenda.

The procedure, which Republicans used to pass former President Trump’s signature tax law in 2017, will allow Democrats to pass a bill in the 50-50 Senate with a simple majority, bypassing the usual 60-vote threshold.

But to pass the bill using the maneuver, Democrats have to jump through a series of hoops before they bring the bill to the floor for a vote. That includes what’s known as vote-a-rama — an often lengthy and messy voting marathon in which senators can offer a series of amendments for a chance to influence legislation before a final vote on the overall bill.

Republicans have been strategizing in recent days on how to make Democrats feel as much pain as possible during the coming voting session, promising to line up tough votes for the party that could be used as ammunition for the coming campaign season.

During the recent press conference, Sen. John Barrasso (Wyo.), a member of Republican leadership, said the GOP will be focusing specifically on areas like “energy, inflation, border and crime.”

Many Republicans have been keeping their cards close to the vest on what amendments they plan to bring up during the voting marathon.

Pressed by The Hill on Thursday about which ones he’ll offer, Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) declined to divulge, saying he wants “it to be a surprise.”

“My colleagues will all have plenty of time to read my amendments,” Kennedy said. “But I don’t believe in leading with my chin.”

Republicans have expressed hopes at attaching some of their amendments to the overall bill, despite their overwhelming opposition to the package, in the event it could make the legislation tougher to pass in the House.

Still, there is concern among GOP members around the chances Democrats will introduce a “wraparound” amendment, which could allow for erasure of all amendments adopted during the session.

Sen. John Thune (SD), the No. 2 Senate Republican, acknowledged the issue during the press conference on Friday, questioning whether Manchin and Sinema would vote for such an amendment.

“Because they both said that they won’t vote after they felt like, in the American Rescue Plan, they voted for a wraparound amendment and felt like they were misled by their leadership at the time that they would never vote for one of those again ,” Thune said.

The Hill has reached out to the offices of Manchin and Sinema for comment.