Anonymous ID: 85cf3d Jan. 22, 2019, 12:28 p.m. No.4863751   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4161 >>4333 >>4372

Supreme Court to hear biggest gun rights case since 2010

 

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The conservative-majority U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday took up its biggest gun rights case in nearly a decade, agreeing to hear a challenge backed by the influential National Rifle Association lobby group to New York City’s strict limits on handgun owners transporting their firearms outside of the home. The nine justices will review a 2018 lower court ruling upholding the city’s restrictions after three gun owners and the NRA’s New York state affiliate sued claiming the regulations imposed in the largest American city violated the U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment right to “keep and bear arms.”

 

The decision indicates a new interest regarding gun rights on the court, where conservatives hold a 5-4 majority. The Supreme Court had not taken up a major firearms case since issuing important rulings in 2008 and 2010 that established an individual right to own guns for self-defense inside the home. The court’s conservative wing has been bolstered in the past two years by President Donald Trump’s appointment of Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh. Kavanaugh last year replaced the retired conservative Justice Anthony Kennedy, who sometimes sided with the court’s liberals on high-profile social issues.

 

The issue of gun rights is contentious in the United States, which has experienced a succession of mass shootings in recent decades and calls from many Americans for stricter regulation of firearms and ammunition. But, citing the Second Amendment, the NRA and gun rights activists have consistently resisted any major gun control measures. “The issue in the case seems small, but the implications could be tremendous,” said Adam Winkler, a professor at the University of California Los Angeles School of Law. Although a ruling striking down the restrictions would not necessarily have broad impact, the court’s majority could use the case to set a new precedent that makes it easier for gun rights activists to challenge other regulations, Winkler added.

 

The New York case concerned people who have licenses to possess guns at home, known as “premises” licenses, and already are allowed to take unloaded guns to shooting ranges within New York City. The plaintiffs said the city’s rules forbidding them from taking their guns to ranges or other homes outside city limits amounted to a “draconian” transport ban in violation of the Second Amendment. Premises licenses are different from “carry” licenses, which give holders broader freedom to take guns outside the home and are not at issue in the case. The gun owners and the New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, an NRA affiliate, filed suit in 2013 challenging the transport limits in federal court in New York. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan last year rejected the constitutional challenge and said the restrictions advanced the city’s interest in protecting public safety. The appeals court said the restrictions did not run afoul of the Supreme Court’s 2008 ruling that found for the first time that the Second Amendment protected an individual’s right to gun ownership under federal law, specifically to keep a handgun at home for self-defense. The high court in 2010 extended that right to state and local laws as well.

 

Since then, the justices had avoided taking up another major firearms case, despite gun rights proponents’ repeated attempts to extend those rights to other types of weapons and the hotly contested question of to what extent that right applies outside the home. In recent years, the court has left in place assault-weapons bans in New York, Connecticut and Maryland, as well as laws over gun waiting periods and concealed-carrying permits in California. The case will be heard and decided in the court’s next term, which starts in October and ends in June 2020.

 

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-court-guns/supreme-court-to-hear-biggest-gun-rights-case-since-2010-idUSKCN1PG1QQ

Anonymous ID: 85cf3d Jan. 22, 2019, 12:35 p.m. No.4863813   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Trump seeks to move ahead with big speech despite Pelosi shutdown concerns

 

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump on Tuesday attempted to move ahead with planning for a State of the Union speech to the U.S. Congress on Jan. 29 despite pressure from Democrats to delay it due to the partial government shutdown. Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he would bring up Trump’s proposal for ending the shutdown - and getting funding for the president’s promised border wall - for a vote on Thursday. The plan was unlikely to pass in the Senate and had even less chance in the Democratic-dominated House of Representatives.

 

Trump’s cause was hurt on Tuesday by a U.S. Supreme Court ruling regarding “Dreamers,” people brought illegally to the United States as children and who had been a key bargaining chip for the Republican president in his wall-funding battle. No clear way was evident to end the shutdown, which began on Dec. 22, increasing the anxiety level of 800,000 federal workers who are furloughed with some struggling to make ends meet. As the fight over the border wall and government funding raged, a sideshow over Trump’s upcoming State of the Union speech also boiled over.

 

A Trump administration official said the president still intends to deliver that speech on Jan. 29, even though House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the top U.S. Democrat, had recommended he delay it, citing concerns about security for the event with some personnel furloughed during a monthlong shutdown. An administration official said the White House sought to have pre-speech preparations completed on Capitol Hill. The request seemed likely to set up another clash between Trump and Pelosi, days after Trump abruptly refused to let her use a U.S. military plane to go on an overseas trip hours before she was to depart. Aides to Pelosi did not respond to requests for comment on whether Trump’s invitation to speak would stand.

 

On Saturday, Trump proposed ending the government shutdown by fully funding the one-quarter of U.S. agencies that are affected. In return, he would get $5.7 billion toward building a southwestern border wall that Democrats oppose. Trump also is offering to restore temporary protections for the “Dreamer” immigrants. In 2017, Trump moved to end the Dreamers’ protections, triggering a court battle. Democrats promptly rejected Trump’s plan as insufficient, saying they would not trade a temporary restoration of the immigrants’ protections in return for a permanent border wall that they view as ineffective.

 

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-shutdown/trump-seeks-to-move-ahead-with-big-speech-despite-pelosi-shutdown-concerns-idUSKCN1PG235

Anonymous ID: 85cf3d Jan. 22, 2019, 12:41 p.m. No.4863883   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4010 >>4161 >>4333

North Carolina judge refuses to certify Republican as winner of U.S. House vote

 

(Reuters) - A North Carolina judge on Tuesday rejected Republican Mark Harris’ bid to be certified as the winner of a congressional vote at the center of an election fraud investigation, saying doing so would be a “dramatic intervention.” Harris claimed victory over Democrat Dan McCready, after initial results of the November election showed he had won the Ninth Congressional District race by 905 votes. Harris filed a petition earlier this month to certify the results of the vote.

 

Judge Paul Ridgeway said at a hearing in Raleigh, North Carolina, that it would be premature for him to intervene before the state elections board finished its investigation. “Certification is not appropriate until the investigation into the protest is concluded by final decision,” the judge said, noting “it would be highly unusual for this court to step in.”

 

Since the election, residents of rural Bladen County have stated in affidavits that people had come to their homes and collected incomplete absentee ballots. It is illegal in North Carolina for a third party to turn in absentee ballots. The State Board of Elections was to hold a hearing on Jan. 11 as part of its probe into possible election fraud involving the collection of absentee ballots. But Republicans refused to participate in the creation of an interim election board, which has left the race in limbo. Lawyers for McCready and the state elections board told the judge on Tuesday that completion of the investigation was necessary because it could reveal evidence that calls into question the results of the vote. Lawyers for Harris urged the judge to certify Harris as the district’s new congressman, saying there was nothing to contradict him as the winner and residents needed representation in Washington. Neither candidate attended Tuesday’s hearing. Harris’ campaign said he was dealing with an illness.

 

A new state elections board will go into effect on Jan. 31. Board members will be able to call for an evidentiary hearing and could order a new vote. The U.S. House of Representatives also could rule on the election outcome. “We are pleased that Harris’ frivolous request has been denied and that North Carolina can get back to investigating allegations of systematic electoral fraud committed on behalf of Harris’ campaign,” Wayne Goodwin, North Carolina’s Democratic Party chairman, said in a statement. North Carolina Republican Party Chairman Robin Hayes said in a statement he was confident Harris would eventually be seated.

 

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-north-carolina/north-carolina-judge-refuses-to-certify-republican-as-winner-of-u-s-house-vote-idUSKCN1PG2CQ?il=0

Anonymous ID: 85cf3d Jan. 22, 2019, 1:08 p.m. No.4864176   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Here’s The Scientist Who Helped ISIS Get Its Chemical Weapons

 

An Iraqi man began creating chemical weapons for ISIS after the terrorist organization obliterated his city because he was afraid to be without a job. Suleiman al-Afari previously worked for Iraq’s Ministry of Industries and Minerals. Afari organized mustard gas supply chains for ISIS that were meant to create “horror.”

 

An Iraqi scientist agreed to work for the Islamic State (ISIS) and make chemical weapons for the terrorist organization, developing a mustard gas supply chain that would help spread chaos throughout the region. Suleiman al-Afari, 52, began working for ISIS after the terrorist organization attacked Mosul in June 2014, fighting Iraqi forces and taking control of parts of the government, as well as military bases and an airport. Thousands of residents fled following the attack, leaving roughly 600,000 residents remaining, according to TIME. ISIS kept control of the city for over two years.

 

After Mosul fell, Afari joined the group because it provided him with work, he says. “I was afraid that I would lose my job. Government jobs are hard to get, and it was important to hang on to it,” Afari said. He maintains ISIS did not force him to join. Afari did say, however, that when faced with the prospect of joining the group or no longer having a means of living, “You have no choice but to become one of them.” During his time working for the terrorist organization, Afari was tasked with procuring specific metal items for a group of labs and workshops. Those items included stainless-steel tanks, pipes, valves and tubes that could withstand extremely high temperatures and corrosive chemicals. Afari was not explicitly told he would be building chemical weapons, but quickly learned as much when he began working alongside other biologists and chemists, one of whom included a man who had worked under now-deceased Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, according to WaPo.

 

Afari organized a supply chain for sulfur mustard for the terrorist group. Prior to his work for ISIS, Afari worked in the metallurgical division for the Ministry of Industries and Minerals. Testing reveals the mustard gas Afari helped build was crude. “I don’t believe the quality of the weapons was ever at such a dangerous level,” he said, saying the gas was meant to create horror rather than seriously harm anyone. U.S. and Kurdish soldiers captured Afari in 2016. He is being held at a prison in Irbil.

 

After ISIS attacks made it clear the group was experimenting with and beginning to manufacture primitive chemical weapons, U.S. and Kurdish intelligence worked to identify and eliminate the scientists responsible for the developments. Chlorine and sulfur mustard were staples in 2015 and 2016 attacks by the group, according to WaPo. Two suspected ISIS chemists were killed in 2015 and 2016, but attacks using chemical weapons continued. Iraqi officials say ISIS leaders moved chemicals from Iraq to Syria in 2016 and might have also hidden chemicals. ISIS built mobile containers for the transportation of chemicals, one of which was destroyed during airstrikes in Mosul, WaPo reported. Authorities do not know how many other mobile structures might exist.

 

Aside from Afari, few people who worked in the group’s chemical weapons department have been captured alive. “We benefited quite a lot from his information, because he had access to all the sites,” a senior officer with the Kurd Counterterrorism Department told WaPo. Afari is on death row.

 

https://www.dailycaller.com/2019/01/22/scientist-isis-chemical-weapons/