Anonymous ID: 3bc0d7 Oct. 2, 2024, 8:19 p.m. No.21699605   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9745 >>9820 >>9958 >>9968

Melania Trump reveals pro-abortion rights stance in new memoir

 

Melania Trump, the wife of former President Donald Trump, is criticizing restrictions on reproductive rights, including limits on abortion, in her new memoir, "Melania," according to a new report.

 

"Why should anyone other than the woman herself have the power to determine what she does with her own body? A woman's fundamental right of individual liberty, to her own life, grants her the authority to terminate her pregnancy if she wishes," Melania Trump writes in her upcoming book, according to a report Wednesday from the Guardian.

 

In a position at odds with much of the Republican party, Melania Trump reportedly argues that the decision to terminate a pregnancy should be a decision left between a woman and her doctor, calling it "the common-sense approach."

 

"It is imperative to guarantee that women have autonomy in deciding their preference of having children, based on their own convictions, free from any intervention or pressure from the government," she reportedly writes in the memoir set for release next week.

 

"Restricting a woman's right to choose whether to terminate an unwanted pregnancy is the same as denying her control over her own body. I have carried this belief with me throughout my entire adult life," she reportedly says in the pages of "Melania."

 

Purported excerpts of Melania Trump's forthcoming book were published by the Guardian Wednesday but not independently verified by ABC News. A spokesperson for Melania Trump and the Trump campaign have not responded to requests from ABC News.

 

Melania Trump also addresses late-term abortions, according to the excerpts.

 

"It is important to note that historically, most abortions conducted during the later stages of pregnancy were the result of severe fetal abnormalities that probably would have led to the death or stillbirth of the child. Perhaps even the death of the mother. These cases were extremely rare and typically occurred after several consultations between the woman and her doctor. As a community, we should embrace these common-sense standards. Again, timing matters," she reportedly writes.

 

Those comments offer a stark contrast to narratives Donald Trump has pushed around the issue, falsely claiming that Democrats support abortion "after birth." Infanticide is illegal in all 50 states.

 

According to the report, Melania Trump then goes on to further ask for compassion for women who decide to terminate a pregnancy, detailing the hardships that surround making the decision and stressing the importance of "knowledge, security, and solace" for the next generation.

 

"When confronted with an unexpected pregnancy, young women frequently experience feelings of isolation and significant stress. I, like most Americans, am in favor of the requirement that juveniles obtain parental consent before undergoing an abortion. I realize this may not always be possible. Our next generation must be provided with knowledge, security, safety, and solace, and the cultural stigma associated with abortion must be lifted," the former first lady reportedly writes.

 

Melania Trump's reported comments come as husband Donald Trump has, at times, stumbled when answering complex questions on the campaign trail about his position on abortion rights and what reproductive care he would or wouldn't protect. After being instrumental in the overturning of Roe vs. Wade, the former president has advocated for certain abortion exceptions and has said he wouldn't sign a federal abortion ban.

 

During campaign rallies, Trump has touted his abortion policy, calling himself "the most pro-life President in American history." He has also celebrated his appointment of three U.S. Supreme Court justices who helped overturn Roe vs. Wade.

 

As Sen. JD Vance and Gov. Tim Walz sparred over Trump’s policies on reproductive rights at Tuesday night's vice presidential debate, the former president reiterated his position that the decision on abortion is where people wanted it – with the states, writing on his social media platform that he would not support a federal abortion ban "under any circumstances, and would, in fact, veto it.”

 

Abortion remains a top issue for voters especially women in the upcoming election. Both Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are working to connect with voters on the topic in what's expected to be a close contest in November.

 

According to the Guardian, Melania Trump, an immigrant herself, also addresses immigration in her book. But she writes that she likes to keep "occasional political disagreements" private.

 

Donald Trump recently promoted his wife's book at his rally in Uniondale, New York, though he suggested he hadn't actually read it.

 

"First Lady, people love our first lady out there. Go out and get her book," Trump said to cheers. "She just wrote a book. I hope she said good things about … She just wrote a book called 'Melania.' Go out and buy it. It's great. And if she says bad things about me, I'll call you all up, and I'll say, don't buy it."

 

https://abcnews.go.com/amp/Politics/melania-trump-reveals-pro-abortion-rights-stance-new/story?id=114450767

Anonymous ID: 3bc0d7 Oct. 2, 2024, 8:27 p.m. No.21699653   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9745 >>9820 >>9958 >>9968

Jesse Watters

Last night proved exactly why @kamalaharris

’s instincts aren’t ready for primetime. Her pick, @tim_walz, went on the debate stage and did the one thing you’re not supposed to do, say you're friends with school shooters. Walz looked concerned and frantic the whole night, stumbling during major moments. The country can’t afford a “knucklehead” when there are strikes, wars, and natural disasters in the world. Kamala proved she can’t pick a running mate— if she can’t pick that, imagine what her cabinet will look like. @realdonaldtrump, however, had a great night. @jdvance did exactly what he needed to do. He defined kamala and explained why Harris-Walz was just another four years of Biden-Harris.

 

https://x.com/JesseBWatters/status/1841644405117047159

Anonymous ID: 3bc0d7 Oct. 2, 2024, 8:31 p.m. No.21699674   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9680 >>9745 >>9820 >>9958 >>9968

A junk dealer found a painting in a basement. Experts say it’s an original Picasso

 

A painting discovered by a junk dealer in the basement of an Italian villa six decades ago is actually the work of Pablo Picasso and could sell for millions, according to experts.

 

Luigi Lo Rosso used to spend his days combing abandoned houses and landfills in search of treasure to sell in the family’s pawn shop in Pompeii, Italy.

 

In 1962, he found a rolled-up canvas with an asymmetrical painting of a woman in the basement of the villa on the nearby island of Capri.

 

The painting is now believed to be a distorted image of French photographer and poet Dora Maar, who was Picasso’s lover, according to Luca Gentile Canal Marcante, an art expert and honorary president of the Swiss-based art restoration non-profit Arcadia Foundation.

 

The oil painting on canvas features Picasso’s asymmetrical style of a woman in a blue dress with red lipstick.

 

At just 24, Lo Rosso didn’t appreciate that the signature in the upper left corner of the artwork that read simply “Picasso” meant anything, his son Andrea Lo Rosso told CNN on Tuesday.

 

The older Lo Rosso, who died in 2021, stuck it in a cheap frame and gave it to his wife — much to her chagrin, his son said.

 

She didn’t think it was pretty enough to sell, so it hung in the family home for about 50 years and later in a restaurant they owned.

 

“When mom hung it on the wall to decorate the house, renaming it ‘the scribble’ due to the strangeness of the woman’s face depicted, I wasn’t even born yet,” Andrea Lo Rosso said.

 

“From dad’s stories I know that there were two canvases recovered from the Capri dump site. However, only one was signed by Picasso. Both were covered with earth and lime and my mother spread them out and washed them with detergent, as if they were carpets.”

 

In the 1980s, when Andrea Lo Rosso was in grade school, he saw Picasso’s “Buste de femme Dora Maar” in an art history textbook and learned that the Spanish painter spent time in Capri in the 1950s.

 

He then told his parents the painting might just be of value.

 

Thus began a decades-long journey to authenticate the signature on the artwork.

 

The family said they contacted art historians, many of whom told them it wasn’t an original, but offered to take it off their hands.

 

Suspicious, they registered it with Italy’s patrimony police, who first thought it might be stolen, but, since it was not authenticated at the time, allowed the family to keep it.

 

The artwork has been locked in a vault in Milan since 2019. Finally, last month Cinzia Altieri, a graphologist for a patrimony court in Milan, was able to certify the Picasso signature as authentic.

 

Altieri worked on the painting for months, comparing it with other Picasso works and running forensic tests to make sure it was signed around the same time it was painted.

 

“There is no doubt that the signature is his,” she said in a statement to local Italian media Monday. “There was no evidence to demonstrate its apocryphal nature.”

 

Art expert Marcante, who has worked with the Lo Russo family, told CNN he’s confident the painting is authentic.

 

The Lo Rossos’ painting is likely to be worth around €6 million ($6.6 million), according to Altieri and Marcante’s assessments, based on the current art market.

 

If certified by the Picasso Foundation in Paris, it become even more valuable.

 

“I’m happy but let’s wait to toast, there is still one step to take before we consider this incredible story over,” Andrea Lo Rosso said.

 

“I continue to work as I do every day in the hope that even in Paris they will be convinced of the authenticity of the painting.”

 

CNN’s has contacted the Picasso Foundation for comment.

 

Lo Rosso and his siblings say that when it is finally recognized by the Picasso Foundation, which could more than double its value, they will auction it off in honor of their father, who wanted the painting to be certified and sold.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2024/10/02/style/picasso-painting-junk-dealer-italy-scli-intl/index.html

Anonymous ID: 3bc0d7 Oct. 2, 2024, 8:32 p.m. No.21699679   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9698 >>9700 >>9711 >>9723 >>9730 >>9732 >>9745 >>9820 >>9958 >>9968

Controversial Mayor Tiffany Henyard now facing eviction after allegedly living large on taxpayer dime

 

The embattled mayor of a suburban Chicago town — already under investigation for the alleged misuse of municipal funds, including $40,000 worth of Amazon purchases in a single day — is now being thrown out of her home, according to an eviction notice filed in Cook County Circuit Court.

 

Dolton, Illinois, Mayor Tiffany Henyard and live-in boyfriend Kamal Woods were notified September 18 that they were $3,350 in arrears on their rent and must either pay up or vacate the premises, the notice said.

 

Reached on Monday by The Independent, landlord Genetta Hull declined to comment further on the situation.

 

The couple pays $2,400 a month for the apartment, NBC Chicago reported. Their payments are not egregiously late, and it is not known why Hull moved so quickly to evict, according to WGN. Henyard, who earns $300,000 a year as mayor, also serves as supervisor of Thornton Township, where Woods makes $100,000-plus as youth director, according to the nonprofit Illinois Answers Project.

 

“This is a claim brought under false pretenses,” Henyard’s attorney Beau Brindley told WGN of the eviction proceedings. “I don’t believe proof of missed payment can be produced. This is being driven by other motives and is not a complaint brought in good faith.”

 

Former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot is heading up a probe into Henyard’s spending; Dolton is more than $3.5 million in the red, according to CBS News Chicago, a burst of seemingly outsized spending Amazon was just one of a plethora of improprieties Lightfoot last month announced she had found. Henyard has also allegedly spent thousands in taxpayer cash on hair and makeup and other personal perks.

 

Heynard is also accused of billing the city for $67,000 on out-of-town travel during a five-month span in 2023.

 

In April, FBI agents visited Dolton City Hall to execute a search warrant. However, it remains unclear what they were looking for or who exactly they are investigating.

 

“The Village of Dolton, once an area of natural prairie and home to Potawatomie, Sac, Illini, and Miami Indians has now grown into a bustling suburban community of over 23,000 residents,” Dolton’s official website tells visitors. “The village was founded by George Dolton who settled in the area with his family in 1835 and began running a ferry company with another resident of the area, J.C. Matthews. In 1866, the village built its first post office and Andrew Dolton, son of George Dolton, served as its postmaster. After a contentious debate, the Village of Dolton became incorporated on December 28, 1892.”

 

Henyard, according to the village site, was elected in February 2021 with 82 percent of the vote after serving eight years as village trustee. She made history as the first woman mayor of Dolton, as well as the youngest ever.

 

“As a life-long resident of Dolton, Mayor Henyard is passionate about Dolton and continues to live in the community where she grew up,” her bio reads.

 

A court date for Henyard and Woods’s eviction proceeding has been set for October 22.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/controversial-mayor-tiffany-henyard-now-192037190.html?guccounter=1

Anonymous ID: 3bc0d7 Oct. 2, 2024, 9:04 p.m. No.21699805   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9820 >>9826

1,000 active-duty soldiers to deploy to western North Carolina to help with Helene response

 

Up to 1,000 soldiers have been activated to help with relief efforts in western North Carolina, the White House said Wednesday. Many communities are still cut off after Helene brought catastrophic floods to the region last week.

 

The active-duty soldiers will join hundreds of members of the North Carolina National Guard already working in the area.

 

"These soldiers will speed up the delivery of life-saving supplies of food, water, and medicine to isolated communities in North Carolina – they have the manpower and logistical capabilities to get this vital job done, and fast," President Joe Biden said in a statement.

 

"Hurricane Helene has been a storm of historic proportion. My heart goes out to everyone who has experienced unthinkable loss. We are here for you – and we will stay here for as long as it takes.," the president said.

 

The soldiers are part of the XVIII Airborne Corps based at Fort Liberty, North Carolina, and include members of the 82nd Airborne, according to the Department of Defense. The soldiers are expected to arrive in western North Carolina within 24 hours, the DOD said shortly before noon Wednesday.

 

"The task force includes a Forward Support Company with the necessary support structures (fuel, water, mechanics, etc.) to support FEMA in stabilizing critical lifelines and essential services for communities in North Carolina," the DOD said in a statement.

 

"Their mission will include delivering support and commodities to impacted and isolated communities, assisting with supply point logistics at commodity staging locations, and removing debris from affected routes," the DOD said.

 

Many residents in western North Carolina are still without power, water or cell phone service five days after the storm.

 

Flooding, mudslides and downed trees made many roads impassable in western North Carolina.

 

The North Carolina Department of Transportation reopened Interstate 40 East Tuesday, but is still working to clear and repair the smaller roads that people rely on to travel in the mountains.

 

Biden is traveling to North Carolina and South Carolina on Wednesday to survey the damage from Helene.

 

https://spectrumlocalnews.com/nc/triangle-sandhills/news/2024/10/02/military-deploy-nc-helene

Anonymous ID: 3bc0d7 Oct. 2, 2024, 9:05 p.m. No.21699810   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9819 >>9820 >>9825

Skydiving instructor at California center that's seen 28 deaths gets prison time

 

A California skydiving instructor who fraudulently trained new instructors at the Lodi Parachute Center in San Joaquin County, including one who died while tandem jumping with an 18-year-old high school graduate in 2016, has been sentenced to two years in prison.

 

Robert Pooley, 49, of Acampo, was sentenced on Monday after being found guilty in May of running unauthorized tandem skydiving courses at the beleaguered site in San Joaquin County that has seen 28 deaths since 1985.

 

After Pooley’s certification as an instructor was suspended in 2015, he continued to train more than 100 new instructors using the digital image of the signature of another certified instructor to sign off on training courses. Pooley charged around $1,100 for each training course.

 

“Pooley falsely told students that he was a tandem examiner,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office said in a statement Monday. “After those deaths, numerous victims of Pooley’s scheme asked for their money back, but he did not repay them.”

 

One of Pooley’s trainees was Yong Kwon, a 25-year-old who had recently moved to California from South Korea. On Aug. 16, 2016, Kwon was paired with first-time skydiver Tyler Turner for a tandem jump. Both men died on impact in a nearby vineyard after Kwon was unable to successfully open either the main or reserve chutes. Turner’s mother, Francine Turner, described the tragic day to SFGATE last year, and characterized the scene at the Lodi Parachute Center as “hurried and rushed.”

 

Pooley has not been charged in relation to Kwon or Turner’s deaths.

 

Following the Turner and Kwon crash, a wrongful death civil suit was brought against longtime owner of the drop zone William Dause. Turner’s family was awarded a $40 million judgment in that case, but told SFGATE in 2023 that they had not seen a penny.

 

While investigating the 28 deaths at the Lodi Parachute Center, SFGATE revealed the murky level of regulation surrounding the sport that has a contentious history of oversight and accountability. The most recent skydiving deaths in California occurred in August when instructor Devrey LaRiccia Chase, 28, and student Kayla Black, 28, both died in a tandem jump at Skydive Perris in Riverside County.

 

https://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/california-skydiving-instructor-lodi-imprisoned-19807333.php

Anonymous ID: 3bc0d7 Oct. 2, 2024, 9:14 p.m. No.21699843   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9871 >>9938 >>9956 >>9958 >>9968

Special counsel Jack Smith provides fullest picture yet of his 2020 election case against Trump in new filing

 

Federal prosecutors laid out their most extensive case to date against former President Donald Trump for his effort to overturn the 2020 election in a sweeping legal brief that was unsealed Wednesday by a federal judge who is weighing the explosive criminal charges against him.

 

The 165-page document, which lands weeks before an election in which Trump is taking another shot at the White House, offers new detail about special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into the former president’s efforts to lean on state officials and paint a narrative of widespread fraud that prosecutors say Trump knew was untrue.

 

It includes new details of Trump’s frayed relationship with former Vice President Mike Pence; FBI evidence of Trump’s phone usage on January 6, 2021, when rioters overtook the US Capitol; and conversations with family members and others where the then-president was fighting his loss to Joe Biden.

 

Broadly, and in response to the Supreme Court’s ruling this summer that granted Trump sweeping immunity for official actions, Smith’s motion claims the former president took the steps he did as a political candidate – not as a president – and that, therefore, he is not entitled to protection from prosecution the justices identified in July.

 

“When the defendant lost the 2020 presidential election, he resorted to crimes to try to stay in office,” Smith wrote in the brief, which US District Judge Tanya Chutkan released in partially redacted form.

 

”At its core, the defendant’s scheme was a private one,” prosecutors wrote. “He extensively used private actors and his campaign infrastructure to attempt to overturn the election results and operated in a private capacity as a candidate for office.”

 

The filing weaves together what prominent witnesses told a federal grand jury and the FBI about Trump, along with other never-before-disclosed evidence investigators gathered about the former president’s actions leading up to and on January 6.

 

Releasing the motion, which was previously filed under seal, is the latest major development in Smith’s longstanding effort to prosecute Trump for actions he took to overturn the 2020 election, even as the former president is seeking a second term in a tight race with Vice President Kamala Harris. The case, which has already reached the Supreme Court once, has repeatedly been delayed as Trump has attempted to push off the prosecution until after next month’s election.

 

The document is broken into four sections. The first section lays out the case prosecutors said they would attempt to prove at trial, including a summary of evidence; the second section gives Chutkan a roadmap for how to assess which actions are official – and therefore potentially covered by immunity – and which are not; the third section walks through how the principles should apply in Trump’s case; the fourth is a brief conclusion that asks Chutkan to rule that the actions described are not protected by immunity and that Trump “is subject to trial on the superseding indictment.”

 

More evidence could come out in coming days. A hefty appendix accompanying Wednesday’s filing remains under seal, and the judge has asked both sides to weigh in on how much of it should be made public. Among the documents in the appendix are grand jury transcripts and notes from FBI interviews conducted during the yearslong investigation.

 

Trump’s team had fought the release of the document and the former president on Wednesday called it a “hit job” and claimed without evidence it was released in response to the vice presidential debate Tuesday night.

 

“Democrats are Weaponizing the Justice Department against me because they know I am WINNING, and they are desperate to prop up their failing Candidate, Kamala Harris. The DOJ pushed out this latest ‘hit job’ today because JD Vance humiliated Tim Walz last night in the Debate,” Trump posted on Truth Social.

 

The former president on Wednesday asked Chutkan for extra time and additional pages to file his response to Smith’s sweeping brief, where he will argue that the whole case should be thrown out under the Supreme Court’s ruling that he at least some immunity in the prosecution.

 

Trump argued that the deadline for his response should be extended five weeks, until November 21, given earlier extensions given to Smith, and he said that he should get the same four-fold increase on the usual page limit that Smith secured for his brief. Trump also said that he should be allowed to file an extra brief in the back-and-forth over the immunity issues in the case, which would give him the final word in the written arguments submitted to Chutkan on the matter.

 

“President Trump must have an equal opportunity to submit and address facts bearing on immunity, and to rebut the Special Counsel’s misleading submissions,” the new request said. “Accordingly, the Court should grant President Trump leave to file a 180-page Response.”

 

Here’s what to know from Smith’s court filing:

 

FBI knows how Trump used his phone on January 6

FBI experts have mapped out what Trump was doing on his phone while the US Capitol riot unfolded.

 

An FBI Computer Analysis Response Team forensic examiner can testify about “the news and social media applications” on Trump’s phone, Smith wrote in the filing, “and can describe the activity occurring on the phone throughout the afternoon of January 6.”

 

Those logs show that Trump “was using his phone, and in particular, was using the Twitter application, consistently throughout the day after he returned from the Ellipse speech.”

 

Smith said that three unidentified witnesses are also prepared to testify that on the afternoon of January 6, the television in the White House dining room where Trump spent much of the day was “on and tuned into news programs that were covering in real time the ongoing events in the Capitol.”

 

That testimony would allow prosecutors to show a future jury what Trump saw unfolding on TV while he made comments and posted online that afternoon.

 

Prosecutors frame Trump conversations with Pence as between ‘running mates’

Even as they face a high bar for introducing evidence from Pence, Smith’s team sought to do so by framing a series of interactions between the two as conversations between “running mates,” where Pence tried to convince Trump he needed to accept his electoral defeat.

 

They include a November 7, 2020, conversation where Pence allegedly told Trump that he should focus on how he revived the Republican Party, as well as Pence’s recollection of a Trump meeting with campaign staff, during which Trump was told the prospects of his election challenges looked bleak.

 

At a November 12 lunch, Pence told Trump that he didn’t have to concede but he could “recognize process is over,” prosecutors said, and during a November 23 phone call, Trump allegedly told Pence that one of his private attorneys were skeptical about the election challenges.

 

As part of those private conversations, prosecutors say, Pence “tried to encourage” Trump “as a friend” after news networks called the election for Biden. In other interactions, Pence encouraged Trump to consider running for reelection in 2024. Those interactions, prosecutors argued, were not at all related to Trump’s official duties as president.

 

“The content of the conversations at issue – the defendant and Pence’s joint electoral fate and how to accept the election results – have no bearing on any function of the Executive Branch,” they wrote in the filing.

 

Trump personally tweeted Pence ‘didn’t have the courage’ to overturn election

Trump personally posted the tweet that Pence “didn’t have the courage” to overturn the election results, prosecutors say.

 

The revelation comes as part of Smith’s argument as to why the tweet, posted after the riot began, should be considered a private act and therefore not protected under presidential immunity.

 

The post targeting Pence was “a matter of intense personal concern to the defendant as a candidate for office,” Smith wrote. At the time he posted the tweet, prosecutors say Trump knew his request for Pence to block the Electoral College votes was illegal; knew that his supporters gathered in Washington, DC, believed his lies during his speech at the Ellipse that the election had been stolen; and knew that those supporters had now breached the Capitol building.

 

“It was at that point — alone, watching news in real time, and with knowledge that rioters had breached the Capitol building — that the defendant issued the 2:24 p.m. Tweet attacking Pence for refusing the defendant’s entreaties to join the conspiracy and help overturn the results of the election,” Smith wrote.

 

The tweet communicated “to his angry supporters that Pence had let him — and them — down,” Smith wrote, adding that it was “not a message sent to address a matter of public concern and ease unrest; it was the message of an angry candidate upon the realization that he would lose power.”

 

One minute after the tweet was posted, Smith wrote, the Secret Service was forced to evacuate Pence to a secure location in the Capitol.

 

Trump told family: ‘It doesn’t matter if you won or lost the election’

Prosecutors allege they have a witness who will testify that Trump told family members, “It doesn’t matter if you won or lost the election. You still have to fight like hell.”

 

The witness, Smith’s team said in the filing, will testify that he was aboard Marine One when then-President Trump made the statement to his wife, Melania Trump, his daughter Ivanka Trump, and his son-in-law Jared Kushner.

 

Prosecutors did not name the official in the filing, but they said he was the director of Oval Office operations. “He witnessed an unprompted comment that the defendant made to his family members in which the defendant suggested that he would fight to remain in power regardless of whether he had won the election,” prosecutors wrote.

 

At the time, Ivanka Trump and Kushner were White House employees, serving as advisers to the president, and Melania Trump was first lady.

 

However, prosecutors claim that the conversation aboard Marine One was “plainly private” and had nothing to do with the Trump family’s official government responsibilities.

 

“The defendant made the comment to his family members, who campaigned on his behalf and served as private advisors (in addition to any official role they may have played),” prosecutors wrote.

 

Trump told advisers he would declare victory

Prosecutors say that Trump was told by advisers that the 2020 vote likely would not be finalized on Election Day and that he could misleadingly look ahead in the ballot count on election night only to fall behind once all of the ballots were counted. Nonetheless, Trump told his advisers that he would claim victory before the ballots were fully counted, prosecutors say.

 

One private political adviser, three days before Election Day 2020, described Trump’s plan as: “He’s going to declare victory. That doesn’t mean he’s the winner, he’s just going to say he’s the winner,” according to the filing.

 

That adviser, not identified by name by prosecutors, also described the Democratic lean of the mail ballot vote as “a natural disadvantage” and said, “Trump’s going to take advantage of it. That’s our strategy.”

 

Trump sought to ‘perpetuate himself in power’

Smith’s office stressed the private and political nature of Trump’s actions around the 2020 election.

 

“The executive branch,” prosecutors wrote, “has no authority or function to choose the next president.”

 

That argument appeared designed for federal appeals courts, including the Supreme Court, that have placed a heavy emphasis in recent years on the historical understanding of the separation of powers.

 

In other words, Smith is arguing that Trump’s effort to overturn the election was necessarily private because the Constitution gives a president no official authority for choosing his successor.

 

“The defendant’s charged conduct directly contravenes these foundational principles,” the motion reads. “He sought to encroach on powers specifically assigned by the Constitution to other branches, to advance his own self-interest and perpetuate himself in power, contrary to the will of the people.”

 

White House staffer ‘P9’ details planning meetings

Prosecutors focus in particular in the filing on what Trump learned from a White House staffer referred to in the filings as “P9,” as they try to show that Trump was well aware he had lost the election as he pressed on with the reversal schemes.

 

The person, identified only as “P9,” appears to have personally had discussions over the phone about the fake electors strategy with Trump, and had repeated text conversations with other people in the campaign about how the strategy was “crazy” or “illegal,” according to the filing.

 

When Trump told the staffer he would not pay the private lawyer spearheading his legal challenges unless the challenges were successful, the staffer told Trump that the private attorney would never be paid. That prompted a laugh and a “we’ll see” from Trump, the filings said. (The private attorney is identified by prosecutors as co-conspirator 1, who CNN has previously identified as Rudy Giuliani. Ted Goodman, a spokesman for Giuliani, told CNN Wednesday night that the brief was “blatant election interference by Jack Smith, a person with a long track record of weaponizing the law for political gain.”)

 

In a follow up conversation, the White House official told Trump that Giuliani would not be able to prove his false claims in a court and Trump told the staffer, “The details don’t matter.”

 

The brief lays out several other interactions between the White House staffer and Trump in which Trump was told that the election fraud claims wouldn’t hold up in court.

 

Prosecutors say they would call election officials in battleground states at Trump trial

In the filing released Wednesday, prosecutors identify witnesses they hope to call at a trial to testify against Trump – including election officials in battleground states and his White House deputy chief of staff.

 

The prosecutors say they also want to show a jury at trial Trump’s campaign speech on January 4, 2021, in Georgia, and his campaign speech on the Ellipse on January 6, 2021, just before the riot at the US Capitol.

 

And, they’d like to show the jury tweets that they say can prove Trump was driving the public campaign of fraud in the election, as he knew there was none that was widespread enough to overturn his loss. They argue those tweets weren’t part of Trump’s official work as president.

 

At trial, prosecutors say they would like to call the only other adviser to Trump who had access to his Twitter account to testify that Trump was sending tweets on January 6 that would put pressure on Pence to stop the counting of the electoral votes at the Capitol. The person is described as White House deputy chief of staff.

 

“The Government will elicit from Person 45 at trial that he was the only person other than the defendant with the ability to post to the defendant’s Twitter account, that he sent tweets only at the defendant’s express direction, and that person 45 did not send certain specific Tweets” – specifically a tweet Trump sent that said Pence didn’t have the courage to block the certification of the vote.

 

That type of testimony would allow prosecutors to assert in court they have evidence of a moment like this:

 

“At 2:24 p.m., Trump was alone in his dining room,” prosecutors write in the filing, “when he issued a Tweet attacking Pence and fueling the ongoing riot: ‘Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution, giving States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify. USA demands the truth!’”

 

Secret Service was warned about Pence’s safety, prosecutors say

According to prosecutors, the Secret Service was warned about Trump threatening to criticize Pence if he failed to overthrow the election results.

 

On January 5, 2021, Trump once again met with Pence to allegedly try to pressure him not to certify the Electoral College votes. In that meeting, the special counsel wrote that Trump threatened to criticize him publicly.

 

Smith says that Pence told someone identified only as “P8” about that comment, and that P8 was so concerned by the prospect that he alerted Pence’s Secret Service detail.

 

Trump tried again to pressure Pence on the morning of January 6, shortly before driving to deliver his speech at the Ellipse, prosecutors say.

 

Pence, however, again refused and Trump “was incensed,” the filing says.

 

It was then that Trump “set into motion the last plan in furtherance of his conspiracies: if Pence would not do as he asked, (Trump) needed to find another way to prevent the certification of Biden as president,” the filing says.

 

“So on January 6, (Trump) sent to the Capitol a crowd of angry supporters, whom the defendant had called to the city and inundate with false claims of outcome-determinative election fraud, to induce Pence not to certify the legitimate electoral votes and to obstruct the certification,” the filing says.

 

According to prosecutors, Trump also showed his “desperate conduct as a candidate rather than a President” when rioters stormed the Capitol, forcing Pence to be moved to a secure location.

 

An unnamed White House aide, according to the filing, ran to Trump when he received a phone call that Pence had been taken to a secure location “in hopes that (Trump) would take action to ensure Pence’s safety.”

 

Trump, according to prosecutors, looked at the aide and simply replied, “So what?”

 

Prosecutors lean on Hatch Act to bolster Trump charges

Smith is again using the Hatch Act – which limits the political activities of federal employees – to bolster the 2020 election subversion charges against Trump.

 

Prosecutors said in the filing that the Hatch Act allows White House staffers to “wear two hats,” separating out their official conduct to serve the public from their political conduct to help a candidate.

 

Therefore, even if some of Trump’s alleged wrongdoing occurred on White House grounds and in front of White House staff, he doesn’t have immunity because that fell under the “political” umbrella, Smith’s team wrote.

 

“When the defendant’s White House staff participated in political activity on his behalf as a candidate, they were not exercising their official authority or carrying out official responsibilities,” prosecutors wrote. “And when the President, acting as a candidate, engaged in Campaign-related activities with these officials or in their presence, he too was not engaging in official presidential conduct.”

 

‘Make them riot’ and ‘create chaos’

Prosecutors describe an effort by Trump operatives to “create chaos” in the immediate aftermath of the 2020 election when the voting looked to be going for Biden.

 

In Philadelphia, prosecutors allege campaign operatives sought to create confrontations at polling places and then “falsely claim that his election observers were being denied proper access” as a predicate to claim fraud.

 

Prosecutors also raised the fracas at the Detroit Counting Center, pointing to evidence that a campaign staffer, upon learning a heavy incoming batch of votes leaned Biden, asked for “options to file litigation” even if (it) was “itbis[sic}.”

 

The same campaign operative said “make them riot” when told that protests at the counting center were heading in the direction of the so-called Brooks Brothers Riot that disrupted the 2000 Florida count between Al Gore and George W. Bush.

 

Bill Barr decided to speak out against Trump’s election lies after seeing him on Fox News

Then-Attorney General Bill Barr decided in 2020 to publicly rebut Trump’s false claims that the election was rigged after watching Trump spread these lies on Fox News, prosecutors say.

 

“On November 29, [Barr] saw the defendant appear on the Maria Bartiromo Show and claim, among other false things, that the Justice Department was ‘missing in action’ and had ignored evidence of fraud,” prosecutors wrote.

 

They continued, “[Barr] decided it was time to speak publicly in contravention of the defendant’s false claims, set up a lunch with a reporter for the Associated Press, and made his statement.”

 

This was the December 1, 2020, statement in which Barr infamously said the Justice Department had looked into potential election irregularities but didn’t find any widespread fraud that could’ve tipped the results. This was a major move by Barr, a lifelong Republican who at the time was a staunch Trump ally.

 

Barr’s name is redacted in the filing, and he is referred to as “P52.” But P52 is described as the “attorney general,” and Barr was the attorney general at that time.

 

Barr resigned just before Christmas 2020.

 

https://www.cnn.com/2024/10/02/politics/jack-smith-donald-trump-filing/index.html

Anonymous ID: 3bc0d7 Oct. 2, 2024, 9:16 p.m. No.21699858   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9958 >>9968

Port Workers Strike: Demand Higher Wages and Resist Automation of Jobs

 

For the first time since 1977, almost 50,000 port workers and members of the International Longshoreman's Association (ILA) went on strike on Tuesday. The negotiation represents a contract dispute between the ILA and the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX). The previously negotiated Master Contract represented a six-year term (2018-2024) that expired on Sept. 30.

 

Contract negotiations began in February 2023, according to the Freightwaves publication. However, ILA President, Harold Daggett ended the talks prematurely, asserting that USMX companies allegedly violated its agreement promising not to automate human jobs. USMX states on its website that it has already "successfully negotiated ten new contracts with ILA without a coast-wide work stoppage."

 

The three dozen ports affected by the East Coast strike are Boston, New York/New Jersey, Philadelphia, Wilmington, North Carolina, Baltimore, Norfolk, Charleston, Savannah, Jacksonville, Tampa, Miami, New Orleans, Mobile, and Houston. White House officials say the president does not plan to step in to help negotiate an end to the strike. Dock workers can earn more than $200,000 a year, but their work involves the "dangerous and physically exhausting job of moving containers on and off vessels."

 

The walk-out may be one of the most crippling work stoppages in decades, affecting the delivery of all manner of household and commercial goods. Americans may be looking at devastating supply chain issues right before the 2024 election and the upcoming holiday season.

 

The 1977 ILA strike lasted 45 days, but the impact was not as profound. In 1977, the economy was not as globalized as it is now. ILA union members in 1977 successfully negotiated a hefty pay hike and, before that, in 1964, negotiated "guaranteed annual income (GAI) for union workers" whether on the job or not. According to the Washington Post, global trade "accounted for just 16 percent of the U.S. economy, far below the current 27 percent, according to the World Bank." The strike affects "a little over half the nation's trade in shipping containers."

 

According to one estimate from JP Morgan, every day the strike continues costs the U.S. economy between $3.8 billion to $4.5 billion a day, "with some of that recovered over time after normal operations continue." The strike comes at a particularly difficult time when many Americans in Eastern states are trying to resupply and rebuild after the devastating effects of Hurricane Helene.

 

However, the story is more profound for some working Americans than a supply shortage. It involves what some see as an international sellout of American workers in favor of automation. Not only are dock workers demanding higher wages, but they are, by some accounts, standing up against corporations that are attempting to replace human jobs with machines. Many industry leaders believe port jobs should be fully automated. Those jobs include operating cranes and moving containers around.

 

A guide published in 2020 by Thetius.com looks at both sides of the coin.

 

"Supporters say automated ports are fast, safe, and easy to scale. They are good for the environment and the economy, and they create jobs. Detractors cite job and skill losses, high capital investment and maintenance costs, union battles, and cybersecurity challenges. Both groups are correct. Part of the problem is the definition of port automation."

 

The guide goes on to explain that the "financial, environmental, and safety benefits of port automation are inarguable. However, the implications for some employees are unavoidable. Erwin Rademaker, a programmer manager at the Port of Rotterdam, explains, 'Autonomous isn't the same as unmanned. But if objects are talking with each other and making autonomous decisions, certain jobs will disappear. While that's true, automated ports create jobs in maintaining and supervising the robots. Rather than seeing the shortage of skilled people for these roles as a barrier, ports can upskill their existing workforce as part of the transition."

 

Three terminals in Los Angeles and Long Beach are considered fully automated. A 2022 study funded by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Coast Longshore Division, which represents West Coast dockworkers, found that 572 jobs a year were eliminated after the automation of ports in California. The study also maintains that "productivity of automated ports is 7-15 percent lower than for non-automated ports," and most of the profits go to foreign owners.

 

Whether you believe in the automation of ports or not, the fact remains that the union means to raise wages and secure human jobs. In a Sept. 20, 2024, press release, ILA's boss Daggett maintained that his Longshore workers "never took a day off" during the pandemic. He blames Foreign-owned companies for "disrespecting" his workforce and "increasing surcharges while using external crises as an excuse." Daggett cited a shipper "who normally pays $8,000 to ship a container from Asia to New Jersey" just paid $30,000 to do the same route. Daggett also railed against governments that do not "stand up for American workers" but instead support "foreign-owned corporations."

 

USMX and ILA have been trading counteroffers related to wages and other issues over the past few days. There is yet to be a settlement even though USMX increased its offer, promising a "nearly" 50-percent increase in wages over the next six years, would triple employer contributions to retirement plans, strengthen health care options, and keep the "current language" that limits automation and semi-automation of dock worker jobs.

 

There are 13 members on the USMX board, seven of which represent foreign shipping firms; one represents Chinese interests (COSCO); three represent port associations in the U.S., and three are direct employees, one of whom is Canadian.

 

On Oct. 1, President Biden "urged USMX" to "come to the table and present a fair offer" to ILA workers but stopped short of invoking the Taft-Hartley Act, which would force workers to go back to work during which there would be an 80-day cooling off period while negotiations continue.

 

https://www.uncoverdc.com/2024/10/01/port-workers-demand-higher-wages-and-resist-automation-of-jobs

Anonymous ID: 3bc0d7 Oct. 2, 2024, 9:26 p.m. No.21699916   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9958 >>9968

The billionaire Murdoch heirs are battling for Fox News and their lucrative media empire in a Succession-style court drama

 

In an obscure courtroom in Nevada, one of the world’s richest families has been battling over the future of a conservative media empire that includes iconic brands like the Wall Street Journal and Fox News. When the Reno court issues a decision on the case, it could alter not only the future of news and entertainment—but also the U.S. political landscape.

 

The high-profile clash has all the trappings of a Shakespearean play or the HBO drama Succession, which is based on real-life events. The star at the story’s center is Rupert Murdoch, the 93-year-old billionaire media mogul who has for years used his control of brands like Fox News, WSJ, and the New York Post to push an aggressive conservative agenda, and to elevate figures like former President Donald Trump.

 

Exactly who will take control of the media conglomerate when the patriarch dies has been a source of fascination for onlookers for years. And in late 2023, the plot thickened in the family’s well-publicized succession saga, when the elder Murdoch reportedly decided to amend the irrevocable trust he constructed decades ago to “ensure that his eldest son and chosen successor, Lachlan, would remain in charge of his vast collection of television networks and newspapers,” the New York Times wrote earlier this year, citing sealed court records. Lachlan is currently chief executive officer of Fox and chairman of News Corp., and his politics are seen to align more closely with his father’s than those of his more liberal-leaning siblings.

 

Prior to that late-season plot twist, Murdoch’s four eldest children were set to receive equal shares of the patriarch’s empire, which also includes outlets in Australia and Britain. His recent change of heart and the ensuing legal battle has come as a surprise to Murdoch’s other children, James, Elisabeth, and Prudence, the Times reports, who are fighting against the changes.

 

As its name implies, an irrevocable trust cannot be changed or amended. The legal vehicle is often used by the ultrawealthy for estate planning purposes, in order to avoid probate and, typically, estate taxes.

 

But earlier this year, a judge in Nevada, where the trust was formed, ruled that “Mr. Murdoch could amend the trust if he is able to show he is acting in good faith and for the sole benefit of his heirs,” the Times reported. The family was back in court last week, and a decision is expected in the coming days or weeks (though the exact timeline is unknown).

 

Exactly what went on in the courtroom isn’t open to the public, and news outlets including the Times and CNN unsuccessfully tried to open up the proceedings. That’s one of the reasons that the Murdochs likely decided to form their trust in Nevada, experts tell Fortune. The state is known for its friendly trust laws: It does not impose state income tax on the vehicles (which file their own income taxes), and it does not require them to be filed with a state agency or court, like some other states do—shielding the terms from the press and other third parties.

 

The state also allows trusts to last up to 365 years, enabling assets to be passed on through the generations without paying estate taxes; permissible as well are so-called silent trusts, which don’t require the trustee to reveal the existence of the trust to beneficiaries, among other benefits.

 

What’s good for the family’s privacy, however, leaves investors and other shareholders less certain about the future of the companies Murdoch controls. These businesses are making decisions based on the structure and design that is currently in place, says Monique Hayes, an estate and succession planning attorney at South Florida–based DGIM Law.

 

“If you’ve had [a trust] in place for decades, people start to make business decisions and family decisions based on that design,” Hayes tells Fortune of the stakes.

 

The outcome of the court battle also carries big implications for the public, because the companies in question have such a significant impact on the political environment in the U.S. and the everyday lives of Americans, she says. This isn’t a simple disagreement between family members.

 

According to the Times, the patriarch’s lawyers are arguing that giving more control to Lachlan will “protect” the other siblings “by ensuring that they won’t be able to moderate Fox’s politics or disrupt its operations with constant fights over leadership.”

 

“In this case it is not just a family business. Whoever has control of that empire will have an impact on the United States,” notes Hayes. “For a normal person, maybe you’ll have a difficult Thanksgiving, but it won’t have an effect on an election or different corporate industries involved.”

 

How to make an irrevocable trust more revocable

 

Though irrevocable trusts are mostly set in stone, there are a few ways they can be changed. Some states, including Nevada, allow them to be modified if all of the beneficiaries agree to the changes, says Warren Racusin, a trust and estate attorney at Lowenstein Sandler.

 

“Clearly, here, they don’t all agree,” says Racusin of the Murdoch situation. But “there apparently is a specific provision in this trust to let somebody modify the trust if it would be in the best interests of the beneficiaries. It would be interesting to know, who has that power?”

 

Hayes says the judge will have to accept the argument that giving more control to Lachlan will not prejudice another party, and will in fact be in his siblings’ best interest. If the change does hurt their bottom line, for example, they will need to be compensated in another way. In this case, swapping control of one company worth $100 million for another of equal value probably doesn’t work, “because the assets in this dynasty don’t have the same long-term social and political value,” she says.

 

It isn’t clear which way the decision will go, but in recent years, laws and court decisions in various states have allowed more flexibility in modifying irrevocable trusts, says Racusin. It’s also become table stakes to include provisions in irrevocable trusts that allow for some changes without needing to rely on the courts or state laws, he says.

 

“Years ago, they probably couldn’t have changed it, he says. “Now, the answer is probably or maybe.”

 

Whatever the outcome, Racusin says it’s likely the losing side will appeal and that the case will make it to the Nevada Supreme Court. Given Murdoch’s advanced age, it is possible that the succession battle won’t be resolved in his lifetime.

 

“It will make a messier situation even messier, that’s for sure,” says Racusin. “King Lear is the greatest example in the English language of how not to do estate planning. This kind of reminds me of that.”

 

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

 

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/billionaire-murdoch-heirs-battling-fox-155638798.html