Categories
US

House panels: DHS officials interfered in effort to get lost Secret Service texts | Secret Service

Top officials at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) inspector general’s office interfered with efforts to recover erased Secret Service texts from the time of the US Capitol attack and attempted to cover up their actions, two House committees said in a letter on Monday.

Taken together, the new revelations appear to show that the chief watchdog for the Secret Service and the DHS took deliberate steps to stop the retrieval of texts it knew were missing, and then sought to hide the fact that it had decided not to pursue that evidence. .

The inspector general’s office had initially sought to retrieve the lost texts from across the DHS – spanning both the Secret Service as well as the former DHS secretary Chad Wolf and his deputy, Ken Cuccinelli – as part of its internal review into January 6.

But six weeks after the inspector general’s office first requested Secret Service communications from the time of the Capitol attack, that effort was shut down by Thomas Kait, the deputy inspector general for inspections and evaluations, the House committees said.

“Use this email as a reference to our conversation where I said we no longer request phone records and text messages from the USSS relating to the events on January 6th,” Kait wrote in a July 2021 email to a senior DHS liaison officer, Jim Crumpacker , that was obtained by Congress.

The House committees also disclosed they had learned that Kait and other senior officials manipulated a memo, authored on 4 February 2022, that originally criticized the DHS for refusing to cooperate with its investigation and emphasized the need to review certain texts.

By the time that Kait and other senior officials had finished with the memo, the House committee said, mentions about the erased texts from the Secret Service or the DHS secretary had been removed and instead praised the agency for its response to the internal review.

The memo went from being a stinging rebuke that said “most DHS components have not provided the requested information” to saying “we received a timely and consolidated response from each component”, the House committees said.

Appearing to acknowledge the removal of the damaging findings in the memo, Kait asked colleagues around that time: “Am I setting us up for anything by adding what I did? I spoke with Kristen late last week and she was ok with acknowledging the DAL’s efforts.”

The disclosures alarmed the House oversight committee chair, Carolyn Maloney, and House homeland security committee chair, Bennie Thompson – who also chairs the House January 6 committee – enough to demand that top DHS officials appear for transcribed interviews.

In the four-page letter, the two House committees again called for the recusal of the DHS inspector general, Joseph Cuffari, and demanded communications inside the inspector general’s office about not collecting or recovering texts from the agency relating to the Capitol attack.

The deepening investigation has also revealed that Cuffari’s office was notified in February 2022 that texts from Wolf and Cuccinelli could not be accessed and that Cuccinelli had been using a personal phone – yet never told Congress.

Kait has a history of removing damaging findings from reports. In a DHS report on domestic violence and sexual misconduct, Kait directed staff to remove a section that found officers accused of sexual offenses were charged with generic offenses, the New York Times reported.

The controversy over the missing texts erupted several weeks ago after Cuffari first informed Congress in mid-July that his department could not turn over Secret Service texts from the time of the Capitol attack because they had been erased as part of a device replacement program.

That prompted Thompson, through the House January 6 select committee, to issue a subpoena to the Secret Service for texts from the day before and the day of the Capitol attack as it examined how the agency intended to move Donald Trump and Mike Pence on January 6 .

But the Secret Service provided only one text exchange to the select committee, the Guardian has previously reported, telling investigators that every other message had been wiped after personnel failed to back up data from the devices when they were swapped out.

Categories
US

Airbnb apologizes for Mississippi ‘slave cabin’ listed as luxury getaway after viral TikTok video

Comment

The Airbnb listing in Mississippi seemingly had everything a traveler could ask for in a bed-and-breakfast accommodation: a suite with exquisite antique furnishings, soft linens, a brand-new bathroom and access to Netflix on the smart TV.

But there was something else about the Panther Burn Cottage that the luxury listing proudly advertised: The property was an “1830s slave cabin” that housed enslaved people at a plantation in Greenville, Miss.

Airbnb has faced backlash in the days since a TikTok video about the listing from Wynton Yates, an entertainment and civil rights attorney in New Orleans, went viral.

“The history of slavery in this country is constantly denied,” Yates said in the Friday video, “and now it’s being mocked by being turned into a luxurious vacation spot.” Yates, who is Black, added, “This is not okay in the least bit.”

Now, Airbnb has apologized and noted Monday that it is “removing listings that are known to include former slave quarters in the United States.”

“Properties that formerly housed the enslaved have no place on Airbnb,” Airbnb spokesman Ben Breit said in a statement. “We apologize for any trauma or grief created by the presence of this listing, and others like it, and that we did not act sooner to address this issue.”

Brad Hauser, who took over ownership of the Greenville property last month, said in a statement to The Washington Post that even though the building had been a doctor’s office and not a quarters for enslaved people, it was “the previous owner’s decision to market the building as the place where slaves once slept.” Hauser, who is White, said he “strongly opposed” the previous owner’s decision and vowed to provide guests with a “historically accurate portrayal” of life at the Belmont Plantation.

“I am not interested in making money off slavery,” said Hauser, 52, who apologized for the listing “insulting African Americans whose ancestors were slaves.”

It’s unclear how many Airbnb listings feature properties in the United States that once housed some of the millions of enslaved Black people. Several properties in Georgia and Louisiana that were billed as quarters for enslaved people have since been removed from Airbnb’s site, according to Mic.

‘These are our ancestors’: Descendants of enslaved people are shifting plantation tourism

Yates, 34, told The Post on Tuesday that he was first made aware of the Greenville listing in a group text message. Yates said his brother’s friend deél was looking for rental properties in Greenville, about 100 miles northwest of Columbia, SC, and found that the Panther Burn Cottage was the only listing available.

So when Yates’s brother shared the listing in the family group text Friday, the New Orleans attorney was floored by it and had the same thought: “This is crazy.”

“To see weddings on plantations and events on plantations and suburbs and subdivisions named after plantations and plantation owners is something I’ve been grossed out by every day of my life. But this was a new level of disrespect for what slavery was,” Yates said. “To see the space where enslaved peoples lived being renovated into a luxurious space and rented out just took my breath away.”

Screenshots of the listing show the cabin is next to a 9,000-square-foot mansion that has nine bedrooms and eight bathrooms. Built in 1857, the luxury structure is “the last remaining antebellum mansion standing” in the Mississippi Delta, according to the listing.

Then, the listing references the history surrounding the much smaller cottage.

“This particular structure, the Panther Burn Cabin, is an 1830s slave cabin from the extant Panther Burn Plantation to the south of Belmont,” the listing reads. “It has also been used as a tenant sharecroppers cabin and a medical office for local farmers and their families to visit the plantation doctor.”

The previous owner noted in the listing that the cabin was moved to the Belmont Plantation in 2017 and “meticulously restored,” while keeping some of the cypress boards used in the original built in the 1830s. The Panther Burn Cottage was advertised on the Airbnb listing as “the last surviving structure from the fabled Panther Burn Plantation.”

Despite the history of enslaved people living in the cabin, Yates pointed out in his TikTok video how it didn’t detect guests who stayed there from leaving glowing reviews of the “memorable” listing.

“Enjoyed everything about our stay,” one woman commented in July 2021.

“We stayed in the cabin and it was historic but elegant,” another wrote last October.

“What a delightful place to step into history, Southern hospitality, and stay a night or two!” one guest said in March.

The contrast between the Panther Burn Cottage housing about 80 enslaved Black people in the 1800s and White people today using it as a cute, luxury vacation spot is “mind-blowing,” Yates said.

“It was built by enslaved people and lived in by enslaved people where they died from being overworked, infectious diseases, hunger and heartbreak. They died in those spaces,” Yates told The Post. “It wasn’t a comfortable situation.”

After Yates’s TikTok video on the “slave cabin” was viewed more than 2.6 million times, Airbnb said it was not only removing all listings promoted as former quarters for enslaved people but also “working with experts to develop new policies that address other properties associated with slavery.”

Hauser told The Post that when he initially inquired about the building behind Belmont, the previous owner told him it was not a cabin for enslaved people and was not being advertised as such. He said he was “misled” about the cabin, and noted how Airbnb and Booking.com had suspended advertising contracts with the Belmont “pending further investigation.”

“I intend to do all I can to right a terrible wrong and, hopefully, regain advertising on Airbnb so The Belmont can contribute to the most urgent demand for truth telling about the history of the not only the South but the entire nation,” Hauser said in a statement.

Yates said he doesn’t know whether Airbnb’s apology will amount to situations like the Panther Burn Cottage being avoided in the future. When asked what he would tell property owners with buildings that once housed enslaved Black people, Yates had a clear message: “Stop romanticizing the experience of slavery.”

“Because that’s exactly what this is,” he said. “This is profiting off of slavery.”

Categories
US

Russia Wants Griner Prisoner-Swap Talks With the US to Be ‘Discreet’

  • The Kremlin wants prisoner-swap negotiations for Brittney Griner and Paul Whelan to be “discreet.”
  • Russian spokesman Dmitry Peskov warned that “megaphone diplomacy” from the US “will not lead to results.”
  • The Biden Administration has offered to trade arms dealer Viktor Bout for the detained Americans.

Russia wants prisoner-swap negotiations with the US for detained prisoners Brittney Griner and Paul Whelan to be “discreet.”

During a Tuesday conference call with reporters, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said his country’s still believes “that any exchanges of information on this topic should be discreet,” according to Reuters.

The Biden Administration reportedly offered to free notorious convicted arms dealer Viktor Bout in exchange for the release of both the WNBA superstar and former US Marine. US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken confirmed that a deal had been offered last week but hesitated to offer further details on the negotiations.

DEA agents escort Viktor Bout (center) off the plane after he was extradited to the United States.

DEA agents escort Viktor Bout (center) off a plane after he was extradited to the United States.

US Department of Justice via Getty Images


Reuters reported on Tuesday that Peskov was surprised at Blinken’s public comments.

“Any exchange of information on the subject should be discreet without any ‘loudspeaker diplomacy,'” he told reporters, according to the Associated Press. “Public exchange of positions will not yield any result.”

Since the initial trade offer, Russia has extended a counter-proposal; In addition to Bout, the Kremlin wants the US to help free an additional convict — a Russian national who was tried, sentenced, and imprisoned for murder in Germany.

Brittney Griner in Russia

Griner is led to a July hearing in Russian court.

KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV/AFP via Getty Images


John Kirby, the Biden administration’s National Security Council Coordinator for Strategic Communications, called the Kremlin’s counteroffer “a bad faith attempt to avoid a very serious offer and proposal that the United States has put forward.”

“Holding two American citizens hostage in exchange for an assassin in a third-party country is not a serious counteroffer,” Kirby said, adding: “We urge Russia to take [our] offer seriously.”

Griner was first stopped at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo International Airport on February 17 after Russian customs agents allege they found vape cartridges containing hashish oil in her luggage. She has been detained ever since, with the US government classifying her as “wrongfully detained” in May and her trial for drug smuggling charges beginning two months after that.

Brittney Griner.

Griner.

AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, Pool


Griner’s proceedings in Russia continued on Tuesday with her defense team attempting to undermine the validity of the tests Russia performed on the vape cartridges that were found in her luggage, according to CNN. Though her attorneys have approached the entire trial as an opportunity to bolster appeals for leniency, Insider’s sources have expressed skepticism Russia will show the 6-foot-9 Phoenix Mercury center any mercy in sentencing.

The trial could come to close as soon as Friday with a sentence following shortly after, Reuters reported. Griner’s lawyer said the star basketball player is nervous, as she’s up against a Russian conviction rate that exceeds 99% and she faces up to 10 years in prison if she’s found guilty.

She “still knows that the end is near, and of course, she heard the news so she’s hoping that sometime she could be coming home, and we hope, too,” Griner’s lawyer said on Tuesday, CNN reported.

Categories
US

Georgians can claim an embryo as a dependent on tax returns

The Georgia Department of Revenue said Monday that in-state residents can claim embryos with a “detectable human heartbeat” as dependents on their taxes.

It added that an embryo “with a detectable heartbeat” has been added to the definition of dependent, effective July 20, the date of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling which allows all abortions in the state to be banned once a fetal heartbeat is detected by an ultrasound.

The Supreme Court in late June overturned the Roe v. Wade decision that had established a constitutional right to abortion. Since that ruling, a number of states have moved to ban abortions.

Georgia’s own abortion law includes exceptions for rape and incest, as long as a police report is filed. It also allows for later abortions in cases that the mother’s life is at risk or a serious medical condition renders a fetus unviable.

The July Circuit Court decision also redefined its “personhood” provision throughout Georgia law to include an embryo or fetus at any stage of development.

The statement by the Georgia Department of Revenue added that as of July 20, taxpayers can claim an exemption in the amount of $3,000 per embryo.

An exemption can be claimed if a taxpayer has “an unborn child (or children)” with a detectable heartbeat which the statement said may occur as early as six weeks’ gestation.

“Similar to any other deduction claimed on an income tax return, relevant medical records or other supporting documentation shall be provided to support the dependent deduction claimed if requested by the Department,” the statement added.

Lauren Groh-Wargo, the campaign manager for Georgia’s Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams, tweeted on Tuesday“So what happens when you claim your fetus as a dependent and then miscarry later in the pregnancy, you get investigated both for tax fraud and an illegal abortion?”

While Abrams did not reference the statement by the Georgia Department of Revenue, she added in a tweet on tuesday that an abortion is “a medical decision between a woman and her doctor” and that Georgia should not be a state where “the governor makes it his decision to deny women medical care.”

.

Categories
US

Drone strike on al-Qaida leader Zawahiri points to a new US approach : NPR

Osama bin Laden (left) sits with his No. 2, Ayman al-Zawahiri, for an interview that was published in November 2001, shortly after the 9/11 attacks. The US says it killed al-Zawahiri in a drone strike in Kabul on Sunday.

Visual News/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Visual News/Getty Images


Osama bin Laden (left) sits with his No. 2, Ayman al-Zawahiri, for an interview that was published in November 2001, shortly after the 9/11 attacks. The US says it killed al-Zawahiri in a drone strike in Kabul on Sunday.

Visual News/Getty Images

A deadly US drone strike in Afghanistan over the weekend offered several clues about what US counterterrorism strategy is likely to look like in the future.

First, the target was al-Qaida’s top leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, a man the US had pursued for more than two decades. The strike showed the US could still track hard-to-find extremist leaders even if it takes a long time to find them.

Second, this was the first high-profile US attack in Afghanistan since US troops withdrew in August of last year. Such strikes are far less frequent than during the height of the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but they remain part of the arsenal.

Third, US national security priorities have moved on after two years of wars against Islamist extremists. Russia’s war in Ukraine is the most pressing concern at the moment, and China is the biggest challenge in the long term. But extremism remains a threat that will emerge periodically.

“We make it clear again tonight that no matter how long it takes, no matter where you hide, if you are a threat to our people, the United States will find you and take you out,” President Biden said Monday evening from the White House.

The strike shows the US can still monitor threats from abroad

US officials said they learned earlier this year that al-Zawahiri’s family moved into a safe house earlier this year in the upscale Kabul neighborhood of Sherpur, a diplomatic area that many Taliban leaders now call home.

At some point, Zawahiri joined them. The US officials said al-Zawahiri never left the house, but they were able to establish a pattern of his movements.

This allowed the US to carry out the drone strike with two Hellfire missiles on Sunday morning when al-Zawahiri was on the balcony of the home, according to US officials.

The officials did not say where they launched the drone, but the US no longer has any military bases in the immediate region, suggesting the aircraft may have flown a long distance before reaching its target.

John Kirby, coordinator for strategic communications at the White House’s National Security Council, told Morning Edition that the strike deals a significant blow to al-Qaida’s operations, and proves that the US will not let Afghanistan become a safe haven for terrorists.

“We said a year ago that we knew al-Qaida was starting to move back, in small numbers, into Afghanistan,” Kirby added. “We were honest about that. We also said that the plan isn’t to hit every single al-Qaida terrorist with a missile, it’s to make sure that we are defeating those threats to our homeland, to the American people. Mr. Zawahiri presented that kind of a threat and that’s why we took him out.”

People walk through a road in the Sherpur area of ​​Kabul, where Ayman al-Zawahiri lived, on Tuesday.

Wakil Kohsar/AFP via Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Wakil Kohsar/AFP via Getty Images


People walk through a road in the Sherpur area of ​​Kabul, where Ayman al-Zawahiri lived, on Tuesday.

Wakil Kohsar/AFP via Getty Images

Zawahiri’s hideout suggests ties between al-Qaida and Taliban

Morning Edition host Steve Inskeep, who was in Kabul at the time of the Sunday strike, says residents were awoken by the sound of at least one early-morning explosion and later shared images of a multi-story house with the windows blown out.

“We drove to the area of ​​the targeted house this morning and found Taliban fighters blocking and guarding the approaches to it, but otherwise life seemed to be going on as usual in the streets all around,” he told Morning Edition on Tuesday. “It’s near embassies, it’s near government buildings and, in fact, the government intelligence headquarters is just a few minutes’ drive away from where, according to the US, Zawahiri was hiding.”

It’s an extraordinary development, Inskeep says, considering that it was the Taliban’s sheltering of Osama bin Laden after 9/11 that prompted the US to attack Afghanistan in the first place, back in 2001.

The fact that al-Zawahiri was sheltering in the heart of the capital suggests there is still a close relationship between al-Qaida and the Taliban, which had pledged in the 2020 Doha agreement not to harbor extremists.

In a statement on Monday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken accused the Taliban of breaking its word and betraying the Afghan people.

“By hosting and sheltering the leader of al-Qaida in Kabul, the Taliban grossly violated the Doha Agreement and repeated assurances to the world that they would not allow Afghan territory to be used by terrorists to threaten the security of other countries,” Blinken said .

In turn, the Taliban, which has not confirmed al-Zawahiri’s death, blamed the US for violating the agreement by striking Afghanistan.

Al-Qaida is diminished, but the US says it will stay vigilant

The US and the Taliban were already at odds, and the US has refused to recognize the group as the government of Afghanistan, as they have most other countries.

While the US is providing humanitarian assistance, Afghanistan is painfully low on food, medicine and other basics.

As the US was pulling out a year ago, American military leaders said they would continue to keep tabs on Afghanistan from “over the horizon.”

Many doubted the US ability to do with the military gone, the embassy closed and intelligence being much more difficult to gather. But the drone strike showed the US was able to gather detailed intelligence and carry out a long-range strike, at least in this instance.

Kirby says al-Zawahiri was “actively engaged in urging his followers to plot and plan attacks” including potentially in the US With history as a guide, he says al-Qaida leaders are expected to name a successor to al-Zawahiri.

Al-Qaida still poses a threat to the US, he adds, even if it is a “vastly diminished terrorist network” than it was two decades ago, or even in 2011 when the US killed Bin Laden.

However, the US considers the Islamic State a much greater danger these days, including in Afghanistan, where the group is at odds with the Taliban and al-Qaida and has been blamed for many deadly attacks.

Categories
US

Schumer-Manchin social spending and tax bill faces major hurdles as Dems seek quick passage

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A social spending deal between Sen. Joe Manchin and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer could give Democrats a major win as campaign season heats up, but there is still a list of hurdles and unknowns Democrats need to overcome to get the legislation across the finish line.

After more than a year of on-and-off negotiations, Schumer, DN.Y., and Manchin, DW.Va., last week announced an agreement legislation that is massively scaled back from the initial $3 trillion-plus “Build Back Better bill. The new bill, officially called the “Inflation Reduction Act,” spends $433 billion and would raise $739 billion in tax revenue, according to Democrats.

Though it is just a shell of what progressives want, Democrats appear poised to pounce on the agreement as something they can tout to voters before the midterms. They plan to use a process called reconciliation to advance the bill along party lines, avoiding the 60-vote filibuster.

However, they first have to avoid a series of pitfalls that could slow, or even stall, their efforts.

MANCHIN DISPUTES DATA SHOWING SOCIAL SPENDING BILL WOULD RAISE TAXES ON MIDDLE CLASS DURING RECESSION

Sen.  Joe Manchin said Monday he plans to press Sen.  Kyrsten Sinema to vote for Democrats' reconciliation bill.

Sen. Joe Manchin said Monday he plans to press Sen. Kyrsten Sinema to vote for Democrats’ reconciliation bill.
(The Associated Press)

Wrangling all 50 Democrats

Though Manchin is on board with the bill, there is still one outstanding vote for Senate Democrats: Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz.

Sinema was not closely involved in the negotiations over the latest iteration of Democrats’ reconciliation plan, Manchin said, because he kept his cards close to his vest, unsure of if he would ever be able to agree to anything. If Sinema decides to oppose it, that would be a better setback for Democrats. Manchin said Monday that he planned on discussing the bill with Sinema on Monday night.

A spokesperson for Sinema told Fox News Digital on Monday that she does not currently have comment on the reconciliation bill, “as she is reviewing the bill text and will need to see what comes out of the parliamentarian process.”

The parliamentarian, Elizabeth MacDonough, still needs to hear arguments from Republicans and Democrats on the Byrd Rule and issue rulings on which parts of the bill should be removed as not germane, under the rule. That means it is unlikely Sinema will take a stance on the bill until later this week.

Sen.  Kyrsten Sinema is the key outstanding vote for Senate Democrats on their reconciliation package.

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema is the key outstanding vote for Senate Democrats on their reconciliation package.
(Reuters/Caitlin O’Hara)

Democrats also need to stay healthy so all their members can be present for votes. Manchin recently had COVID-19, but is now back. Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., was recently sidelined with a surgery and is now back as well. If any other members have health problems that prevent them from voting, the reconciliation effort will be stalled, at least temporarily.

SINEMA STILL UNDECIDED ON MANCHIN SOCIAL SPENDING BILL, WILL MAKE DETERMINATION AFTER PARLIAMENTARIAN REVIEW

On the flip side, if Republicans catch the coronavirus, that could help Democrats. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, announced Monday that he tested positive. If he has an extended absence, or if more Republicans announce positive tests, Democrats may not even need Vice President Kamala Harris to break a tie vote on the bill.

Parliamentarian rules process

MacDonough’s Byrd Rule process also presents another hurdle for Democrats, as it will take time. Furthermore, MacDonough could advise that some key elements of the bill should be removed to comply with the Byrd Rule, which generally says only provisions that impact federal revenue and spending can be in reconciliation bills.

It appears unlikely that any changes would doom the bill, given how Democrats, facing a tough midterm, are desperate for a political win.

However, MacDonough’s rulings on past versions of reconciliation bills, particularly on immigration provisions, have frustrated Democrats. James Wallner, R Street Institute senior fellow for governance, said that especially with Democrats’ thin margins, nothing is a done deal.

“We shouldn’t count our votes until they are cast,” he said.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer faces several hurdles to pass Democrats' reconciliation bill before the Senate leaves for the month — not the least of which is the health of his members.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer faces several hurdles to pass Democrats’ reconciliation bill before the Senate leaves for the month — not the least of which is the health of his members.
(AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)

WHAT’S IN THE MANCHIN-SCHUMER TAX HIKE AND CLIMATE CHANGE BILL?

Wallner also noted that the Senate does not actually need to listen to the parliamentarian and could simply overrule her. As a general rule, however, the Senate has followed that precedent for reconciliation bills, and top lawmakers have given no indication they plan to ignore MacDonough this time.

Poison pill amendments

Perhaps the riskiest process of all for Democrats’ will be the “vote-a-rama,” which is likely to happen sometime between late this week and early next, depending on several factors.

After debate time is expired on the reconciliation bill, senators may continue offering unlimited amendments, which are voted on in rapid-fire succession. They will usually come to the floor in tranches agreed on by party leadership, and the Senate will likely take dozens of votes in a marathon session that could last all night. The most recent Senate vote-a-rama on initial reconciliation instructions lasted more than 15 hours.

However, this vote-a-rama is on the actual legislative text of the bill, meaning any changes that make it through that process will be reflected in law should the bill pass. This gives Republicans chances to potentially inject poison pill amendments on a range of issues that could cause some Democrats to vote against the bill in either the Senate, or in the House, where their majority is similarly small.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell will likely lead his caucus in introducing dozens of amendments to Democrats' reconciliation bill, a process that could last for 12 hours or more, and include dozens of votes.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell will likely lead his caucus in introducing dozens of amendments to Democrats’ reconciliation bill, a process that could last for 12 hours or more, and include dozens of votes.
(Eric Lee/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

A common practice in a vote-a-rama is for leadership to offer what is called a wrap-around amendment at the end of it, which essentially voids any changes passed in the marathon voting session. That would require all 50 Democrats to vote for it. Sinema’s office did not commit to voting for a wrap-around amendment in an email to Fox News Digital on Monday.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Wallner said a wrap-around amendment vote may not be easy for many Democrats, especially if they voted for an amendment during the vote-a-rama.

“That’s not necessarily an easy thing for them to do. It depends on the outside pressure. It depends on their constituents’ concerns. It depends on the media’s attention to what’s happening,” Wallner said. “There’s a reason why they couldn’t stop that amendment from passing.”

One thing going in Democrats’ favor on the vote-a-rama, Wallner said, is that Republicans are just as concerned with winning elections this fall as they are. That means Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., could hold his fire on some provisions that could divide Democrats, because they could also reveal discord within the GOP.

“If you want to really use an amendment strategy to take a bill on the floor, it’s really hard to do that in a way that keeps your party unified,” Wallner said. “Because by definition if your party’s unified, chances are the other party is going to be unified in opposition.”

Fox News’ Chad Pergram contributed to this report.

Categories
US

Everything you need to know

Precinct worker Christine Ingles, of Northville, waits for more voters to show up on Election Day, Tuesday, Nov 3, 2020 at Precinct 1 located inside the garage of Novi Township clerk, Derwood Haines, 58.

Tuesday, Aug. 2, is Election Day in Michigan, as voters head to the polls to decide a series of races at the statewide and local levels.

Here is a primer on everything you need to know — from what races are being decided, how to register to vote, what times polls open and close and more:

Who’s on Michigan primary election ballot?

On the August primary ballot today are Democratic and Republican primaries for governor, congressional and state legislative races.

The biggest race to watch is to see who earns the Republican nomination for governor, to challenge Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in November. Here are the 5 candidates.

There are also elections being decided at the local level. To see what is on your ballot, enter your address using our voter guide, or at the Michigan Voter Information Center at michigan.gov/vote.

Categories
US

Thinking of Visiting the Hyperion, the World’s Tallest Tree? ThinkAgain.

For hundreds of years, a tree known as Hyperion has stood quietly among its fellow giants deep within Redwoods National and State Park in Northern California. Inaccessible by trails, Hyperion, a coast redwood, can be reached only by bushwhacking through heavy vegetation and crossing a river.

Still, a flood of travel bloggers, tree enthusiasts and recreational climbers has managed to do so — and has damaged the surrounding undergrowth in the process. As a result, the National Park Service has closed off access to Hyperion, which, at 379.1 feet tall, is the world’s tallest living tree.

Now, under a rule adopted this year, anyone who gets too close could face up to six months in jail and a $5,000 fine.

“I hope people understand that we’re doing this because our eye is focused on protection of resources and safety of the visitors,” said Leonel Arguello, the park’s resource manager.

Mr. Arguello said the Park Service’s decision to establish the rule limiting access to the tree had come after an increase in people forging their own trails and climbing the tree. Large amounts of garbage and human waste had also been found in the area.

Under the rule, which took effect in March but received widespread attention after SFGATE wrote about it over the weekend, people will be prohibited from getting within a square mile of the tree, Mr. Arguello said. The Park Service will regularly send out rangers to patrol the area, I have noted.

The tree’s remote location makes it difficult for emergency medical services to access, Mr. Arguello said. “I hope people understand that we’re doing this because our eye is focused on protection of resources and safety of the visitors,” he said.

Mr. Arguello said no one had been arrested or fined yet. I have added that while $5,000 was the maximum fine under the rule, park rangers would likely initially ask trespassers to leave the area or issue a $150 ticket.

Redwood trees are among the tallest and oldest trees on Earth, and their existence dates back to the Jurassic period some 200 million years ago. Hyperion was discovered in 2006 by two naturalists and confirmed by Stephen Sillett, a redwood expert.

There is a certain irony to Hyperion’s popularity, observers say.

Despite its “champion height,” it is not worth the trek, according to Mr. Arguello: From close up, you can see only the first 150 feet from the ground. Above that, only the bottom of branches are visible.

“It’s the most unimpressive tree you’ll ever see,” he said. “I’ve worked at this park for 33 years now, I’ve seen most of the old growth in this park, and this particular tree is not that impressive at the base. It’s just really tall.”

He added: “When you can’t see the top 150 feet of tree, it doesn’t really matter how tall it is.”

But the mystery of what stands above that bottom 150 feet is in part what draws some visitors.

Young redwoods have a conical shape, said William Russell, a professor of environmental studies at San Jose State University. But as they get older, the trunks mature into a cylindrical shape with thick branches toward the canopy making them “really appealing to climbers,” Mr. Russell said.

Climbing any of the park’s trees for anything other than research is prohibited. But Mr. Russell said he had been hearing about recreational climbing in Redwood National Park for a number of years. Illicit climbing is “really problematic” for the tree and its surroundings, Mr. Russell said, but “climbers are the least of it.” Climate change and commercial logging remain perpetual pressures on the fragile system, Mr. Russell said.

Redwoods require moisture from coastal fog to keep their canopies damp. “The more coastal fog you have, the better off you are as a coastal redwood,” Mr. Russell said. The tops of trees like Hyperion are fragile ecosystems, Mr. Russell said: The crowns are more drought-stressed and also rich with entire mini-forests of vascular plants and nests of marbled murrelets, an endangered seabird.

Lucy Kerhoulas, an associate professor of forest physiology at California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt, described monument trees like redwoods, spruces and Douglas firs as competing in “an arms race for light.” But the microsite of a particular tree — its soil composition, species and site location — can make all the difference in its height. Hyperion is near a creek and on a protected north-facing slope.

Ms. Kerhoulas has noticed an increase in “loving the trees to death” when it comes redwoods, but for hikers hoping to see a “glamourous, tall, jaw-dropping” tree, she said the Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park was “a lot better use of time and energy.”

Categories
US

Images show Kabul house where al Qaeda chief is believed to have been killed by US strike

The identification was made by geolocating and verifying the authenticity of three photos circulating social media since Sunday, in additional to utilizing archival, high-resolution satellite imagery.

The strike, which took place at 9:48 pm ET on Saturday and in the early hours of Sunday morning in Kabul, was authorized by US President Joe Biden following weeks of meetings with his Cabinet and key advisers.
It took out the 71-year-old al Qaeda leader who at one time acted as Osama bin Laden’s personal physician, and who rose to the top of the terrorist organization after US forces killed bin Laden in 2011.

CNN has reached out to the National Security Council for comment on the identification of the house but did not immediately receive a response.

The house, located in the Sherpur neighborhood of the Afghan capital, is surrounded by several houses and buildings to its north, south and west. Directly east of the house sits Omaid High School.

Just under 1,000 feet to the southeast of the house sits the United Kingdom’s embassy in Kabul. According to the British Foreign Office, all diplomatic and consular staff are “temporarily withdrawn” from the country.

This photograph appears to show the aftermath of the strike.

The house is in an area called the Green Zone, where most of the previous Afghan government officials used to live.

Zawahiri was sheltering in downtown Kabul to reunite with his family, Biden said in his Monday evening address announcing the strike, and was killed in what a senior administration official described as “a precise tailored airstrike” using two Hellfire missiles.

Opinion: The rise and fall of Osama bin Laden's uncharismatic successor
Before he gave the order to kill the terrorist leader, Biden wanted to intimately understand the vicinity in which he was hiding.

Among the preparations was a small-scale model of Zawahiri’s safe house, constructed by intelligence officials and placed inside the White House Situation Room for Biden to examine as he debated his options.

The Sherpur area of ​​Kabul was an old military base, but during the years of civil conflict and the Taliban era in the 1990s it was left almost unused. In 2003, the Afghan Defense Ministry abandoned it and the government divided it into more than 50 plots, giving them to powerful people including government ministers and other high-ranking officials, plus warlords and drug lords. Their houses soon gained the nickname “Poppy palaces.”

After the fall of the Ashraf Ghani government in August 2021, the majority of the owners of Sherpur houses fled the country and their houses were confiscated by the Taliban.

It’s unclear who owns the house where Zawahiri was killed or whether it is one of those confiscated houses.

.

Categories
US

Elderly California store owner fires at armed robbery suspect who shouts, ‘He shot my arm off!’

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

An 80-year-old California liquor store owner was caught on video opening fire at a would-be robber with a shotgun, prompting the suspect to run out of his business screaming “he shot my arm off!”

The self-defense act happened early Sunday at Norco Market & Liquor in Norco, just east of Los Angeles, after the store owner was confronted by a gunman wielding a rifle.

“In this case, a lawfully armed member of our community prevented a violent crime and ensured their own safety, while being confronted with multiple armed suspects,” the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office said.

Surveillance footage obtained by Fox11 LA shows the masked suspect pointing a rifle at the store owner moments before the owner reached behind the counter, grabbed a shotgun and fired in the suspect’s direction.

LOS ANGELES AREA CARJACKING SUSPECT SHOT, KILLED BY POLICE

Two of the armed suspects police say they have taken into custody following the attempted robbery at a liquor store in Norco, Calif., on Sunday, July 31.

Two of the armed suspects police say they have taken into custody following the attempted robbery at a liquor store in Norco, Calif., on Sunday, July 31.
(Riverside County Sheriff’s Office)

The suspect is then heard screaming “he shot my arm off!” as he ran out of the store and into a getaway vehicle outside.

The 23-year-old gunman – who has not been publicly identified – was later tracked down at a local hospital “suffering from a gunshot wound consistent with a shotgun blast,” according to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office.

He remains in critical but stable condition and will be booked into jail upon his release.

The liquor store in Southern California where the attempted robbery unfolded.

The liquor store in Southern California where the attempted robbery unfolded.
(Google Maps)

The other men police say were inside the getaway vehicle, who also were found at the hospital, were identified as Justin Johnson, 22, of Inglewood, Jamar Williams, 27, of Los Angeles, and Davon Broadus, 24, of Las Vegas.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The BMW SUV they were traveling in was previously reported stolen and found to contain numerous stolen firearms – and now each of those men are facing charges of robbery and conspiracy and are being held in lieu of $500,000 bail, the sheriff’s office added.

The 80-year-old store owner, meanwhile, is recovering at a hospital after suffering a heart attack shortly after the attempted robbery, according to Fox11 LA.