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- Chuck Todd rips GOP senator for responding to Trump-Ukraine question with 'Fox News conspiracy propaganda stuff'
- The Latest: Justices weigh case over unanimous verdicts
- Israel unveils remains of 5,000-year-old city
- 10 Parking Feats on Video That Are Completely Next Level
- UPDATE 1-Fearing Islamic State revival, France warns U.S, Turkey after Syria moves
- China's Xi and India's Modi to hold summit this week amid strains
- Boris Johnson Says He’s Ready to Press Trump on U.K. Teenager’s Death
- Sen. Graham: Congress will call for Turkey's NATO suspension and hit it with sanctions if it attacks Kurds
- Supreme Court, trying to remain above the partisan fray, opens 2019 term with a debate about insanity
- Taliban commanders released as hopes rise for resumption of US peace negotiations
- North Korea accuses the Trump administration of 'misleading' the public after nuclear talks break down
- Israeli PM's pre-indictment hearing concludes: lawyer
- Woman 'Consumed' by Columbine and Oklahoma City Killings Had 24 Pipe Bombs, Police Say
- If a War Happened, Iran Would Train Its Missile on the Navy
- 'Idiot press!': Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani launches wild Fox News rant in latest meltdown on live TV
- Why the EU is rejecting Boris Johnson's latest Brexit plan
- Witness: 'El Chapo' gave $1M to Honduran president's brother
- Portals to history and conflict: the gates of Jerusalem's Old City
- 'Great and unmatched wisdom': Trump tweets about Turkish assault
- Extinction Rebellion protesters pour fake blood over New York's capitalist bull
- A senior border patrol agent quietly retired after he was charged with sexually assaulting a junior agent
- As PG&E Is Remade, Will Wildfire Victims Be Left Behind?
- Everything we know about Hunter Biden's business connections in China
- The True Cost of the Attack on Saudi Arabia's Oil Supply
- Pope Francis considers dropping celibacy requirements for some priests
- Kentucky officials are getting a lot of attention from Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao
- Russian village's last teacher stays on for her one remaining pupil
- Democrat Amy Klobuchar raises $4.8M for presidential bid
- Tourists to be welcomed back to Indian Kashmir: governor
- Chicago Attorney Who Interfered In Jussie Smollet Probe Tapped to Run ‘Time’s Up’ Women’s Org
- FBI: Most prolific serial killer in U.S. murdered at least 50
- Lawyer Claims Congress Is ‘Harassing’ Rudy Giuliani’s Allies—by Asking Them for Ukraine Documents
- Homeless man charged with murder after killing spree in New York City's Chinatown neighborhood
- Why China Engages in Such Massive Live Fire Military Drills
- Gandhi memorial defaced, ashes allegedly stolen on his 150th birthday
- Report: Iran plans to start using more advanced centrifuges
- Disney World visitors left dangling for hours after cable car gondolas break down
- S.Sudan says renegotiating oil deal with Sudan
- Google suspended facial recognition research for the Pixel 4 smartphone after reportedly targeting homeless black people
- Rudy Giuliani brags about his law school grades as he promises to sue Adam Schiff
- One suspect nabbed, one sought in shooting rampage that killed 4, wounded 5 in Kansas bar
- The B-2 Stealth Bomber: America's Most Powerful Bomber Ever?
- UPDATE 1-Russian defence minister holds talks by phone with U.S. counterpart -RIA
Posted: 06 Oct 2019 09:30 AM PDT |
The Latest: Justices weigh case over unanimous verdicts Posted: 07 Oct 2019 11:42 AM PDT The Supreme Court appears ready to require that juries in state criminal trials be unanimous. The justices heard arguments on the first day of the term Monday in an appeal by a Louisiana man who is serving a life term for killing a woman after a jury voted 10-2 to convict him. The Supreme Court has begun its election-year term by wrestling over whether states must allow criminal defendants to mount an insanity defense. |
Israel unveils remains of 5,000-year-old city Posted: 06 Oct 2019 12:51 PM PDT Israeli archaeologists on Sunday unveiled the remains of a 5,000-year-old city they said was among the biggest from its era in the region, including fortifications, a ritual temple and a cemetery. "We have here an immense urban construction, planned with streets that separate neighbourhoods and public spaces," Yitzhak Paz of the Israel Antiquities Authority told AFP at the site near the Mediterranean in the country's centre. The archaeological site known as En Esur "is the largest site and the most important from that era" in the region, said Itai Elad, another archaeologist overseeing the excavation. |
10 Parking Feats on Video That Are Completely Next Level Posted: 07 Oct 2019 02:00 PM PDT |
UPDATE 1-Fearing Islamic State revival, France warns U.S, Turkey after Syria moves Posted: 07 Oct 2019 09:36 AM PDT The U.S. decision to withdraw from northeastern Syria leaving Turkey to launch an offensive against Kurdish militants in the region could open the door to a revival of Islamic State, France's armed forces minister said on Monday. France is one of Washington's main allies in the U.S.-led coalition fighting Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, with its warplanes used to strike militant targets and its special forces on the ground coordinating with local Kurdish and Arab fighters. The United States began pulling troops back from the northeast Syria border on Monday, in a move U.S. President Donald Trump hailed as a bid to quit "endless wars". |
China's Xi and India's Modi to hold summit this week amid strains Posted: 06 Oct 2019 05:04 PM PDT India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi and China's President Xi Jinping will hold an informal summit in southern India on Friday, officials said, amid strains in their relationship. India's foreign ministry has not formally announced the meeting in the Tamil Nadu town of Mamallapuram, known for its historic temples and architecture. Indian media reports said Xi and Modi will visit Mamallapuram's attractions on the follow up to their first informal summit in Wuhan, China, in April last year. |
Boris Johnson Says He’s Ready to Press Trump on U.K. Teenager’s Death Posted: 07 Oct 2019 06:57 AM PDT (Bloomberg) -- Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he's prepared to raise the death of a British teenager with U.S. President Donald Trump after the wife of an American diplomat left the U.K. following a fatal road accident.The diplomatic spat comes at a time when Johnson is looking to strengthen ties with the U.S. as he negotiates Britain's departure from the European Union. The prime minister is caught between championing a cause that has sparked a public outcry in the U.K. media -- as he prepares to fight an election -- and remaining on good terms with Trump.Motorcyclist Harry Dunn died after a collision with a car on Aug. 27 near a U.S. Airbase at Croughton, central England, according to Northamptonshire Police. The force said "a 42-year-old American woman being treated as a suspect in our investigation" has since left the country.A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in London confirmed the driver of the car had diplomatic immunity, but declined to identify her."I do not think that it can be right to use the process of diplomatic immunity for this type of purpose," Johnson told Sky News on Monday. He said Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab is raising the issue with the U.S. Embassy. "If we can't resolve it, then of course I will be raising it myself personally with the White House," Johnson said.The U.S. Embassy issued a statement expressing sympathy to Dunn's family but said diplomatic immunity is "rarely waived.""Any questions regarding a waiver of the immunity with regard to our diplomats and their family members overseas in a case like this receive intense attention at senior levels and are considered carefully given the global impact such decisions carry," the embassy statement said. "Immunity is rarely waived."To contact the reporter on this story: Alex Morales in London at amorales2@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Tim Ross at tross54@bloomberg.net, Thomas PennyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Posted: 07 Oct 2019 12:43 PM PDT |
Posted: 07 Oct 2019 12:50 PM PDT |
Taliban commanders released as hopes rise for resumption of US peace negotiations Posted: 07 Oct 2019 11:34 AM PDT Hopes are rising for the resumption of the abandoned Taliban and US peace talks after eleven senior Taliban members were freed from prison in an exchange with three kidnapped Indian engineers. Among those freed are two former provincial governors of the Taliban and Abdul Rashid Baluch, a notorious regional leader sentenced to 18 years imprisonment for trafficking opium. The men were being held near Bagram air base outside Kabul. It is believed American authorities must have given permission for the swap as Baluch was previously on their 'Specially Designated Global Terrorist' list. Last month, Donald Trump cancelled over a year's worth of on-going peace negotiations with the Taliban after the group claimed a Kabul bomb attack that killed 11 people, including an American soldier. However, relations appear to be thawing again after Zalmay Khalilzad, the Special Representative for Afghanistan Reconciliation at the State Department, met senior Taliban leaders on Friday for clandestine talks in Islamabad. It is unclear whether the exchange of the Taliban leaders was discussed during the meeting. While the Afghan authorities do intermittently release prisoners early as gestures of goodwill it is rare to see such high-profile members of the Taliban freed. Abdul Rashid Baluch was a regional official for the group in the southwestern province of Nimroz when he was apprehended while personally escorting an almost one-tonne consignment of opium in 2014. Baluch's arrest was trumpeted by the U.S-Afghan authorities as proof of Taliban involvement in the international drug trade. Officials said Sheikh Abdur Rahim and Mawlawi Abdur Rashid – provincial governors in the Taliban administration when it was defeated by U.S-led forces in 2001 – were also released. The three Indians set free were working as engineers in the northern Afghan province of Baghlan when they were kidnapped in May 2018, along with four other colleagues. One man was released in March but the whereabouts of the three remaining Indians is unknown. |
Posted: 06 Oct 2019 01:10 PM PDT |
Israeli PM's pre-indictment hearing concludes: lawyer Posted: 07 Oct 2019 01:04 PM PDT A four-day hearing into allegations of corruption against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu came to an end on Monday, one of his lawyers said. "The hearing ended tonight," the premier's lawyer, Yossi Ashkenazy, told reporters. "We presented all our arguments which must, logically, confirm that all the indictments must be annulled," he added. |
Woman 'Consumed' by Columbine and Oklahoma City Killings Had 24 Pipe Bombs, Police Say Posted: 06 Oct 2019 08:47 AM PDT A Florida woman obsessed with the Columbine High School massacre and the Oklahoma City bombing was arrested after her parents discovered two dozen pipe bombs in her bedroom, authorities said Friday.The woman, Michelle Kolts, 27, was charged with 24 counts of making a destructive device with intent to harm, Chad Chronister, the sheriff of Hillsborough County, said at a news conference.Kolts had been on the radar of authorities for more than a year, Chronister said.A printing company had contacted his department in 2018 because Kolts had ordered "several" manifestos and "anarchist instructions," the sheriff said, adding, "She became consumed with the Columbine and Oklahoma killings."In 1995, a homemade bomb planted outside a federal office building in Oklahoma City killed 168 people. The 1999 Columbine shooting, in which two gunmen killed 13 and wounded 21 in Littleton, Colorado, has "infatuated" some young people and prompted copycat shootings across the country."While checking Michelle's bedroom, her parents found what appeared to be a significant amount of pipe bombs, other bomb-making materials and numerous weapons," Chronister said. Her parents, who were in the military, called authorities Thursday, he said.When police arrived, they evacuated the home, in Wimauma, Florida, about 30 miles south of Tampa, and called the bomb squad.Police discovered 24 pipe bombs, smokeless pistol powder, fuse material, 23 different knives, two hatchets, two BB-pellet-type rifles, six BB-pellet-type handguns and dozens of books and DVDs about murder, mass killing, domestic terrorism and bomb making, Chronister said."The amount of highly destructive materials we found in this home were astonishing," he said, adding, "If used, these bombs could have caused catastrophic damage and harm to hundreds, even thousands of people."Police found Kolts at her job, he said. Arrest records listed her occupation as laborer, but no additional details were available. Kolts admitted to detectives that she made the devices and had planned to use them, though it was unclear how, the sheriff said.Kolts was being held with bail set at $180,000. Records showed no lawyer listed for her and attempts to reach her parents Saturday were unsuccessful."Who knows the amount of harm that could have been done, or how many lives could have been lost, had these parents not found the courage to call the sheriff's office and seek help," Chronister said.This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2019 The New York Times Company |
If a War Happened, Iran Would Train Its Missile on the Navy Posted: 07 Oct 2019 12:43 PM PDT |
Posted: 07 Oct 2019 06:16 AM PDT Donald Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani lashed out at the "idiot press" during his latest TV interview about the impeachment inquiry.The former mayor of New York even turned on Fox News host Howard Kurtz for daring to contradict his allegations about the US president's 2020 main rival Joe Biden. |
Why the EU is rejecting Boris Johnson's latest Brexit plan Posted: 07 Oct 2019 01:43 PM PDT It was no secret that the European Union wasn't prepared to accept U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson's latest Brexit proposal, but The Guardian obtained leaked documents with the EU's point-by-point reasoning for its rejection.Johnson's plan included Northern Ireland remaining in an all-Ireland regulatory zone within the EU's single market for goods and electricity, but with a catch that the EU reportedly couldn't come to terms with. Northern Ireland's parliament would hang on to veto powers to block the arrangement every four years, which was cause for concern for the EU.Beyond that, The Guardian reports that the EU believes Johnson's plan could eventually result in abuses within the trading market. For example, they argue Johnson and his team provided no details about how to combat smuggling and that they removed assurances made by previous Prime Minister Theresa May that Northern Ireland would not enjoy a competitive advantage when it comes to trade. The EU also noted that the U.K. would have access to EU databases which would allow it to police the Irish customs border and the U.K.-Northern Ireland regulatory border even if the proposal was vetoed.EU sources denied that Brussels would present a counteroffer to Downing Street. "It is the U.K. that wants to replace the backstop -- and that is our solution," one senior EU diplomat said. Read more at The Guardian. |
Witness: 'El Chapo' gave $1M to Honduran president's brother Posted: 07 Oct 2019 05:04 PM PDT A Honduran former mayor and drug trafficker testified Monday that Mexican kingpin Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán personally gave $1 million to the brother of Honduras' president in 2013 for the politician's presidential campaign. The longtime Sinaloa cartel boss made the payment to be able to smuggle cocaine through Honduras to Guatemala, Amílcar Alexander Ardón alleged in testimony on the fourth day of the Manhattan drug trial of Tony Hernández, brother of President Juan Orlando Hernández. |
Portals to history and conflict: the gates of Jerusalem's Old City Posted: 07 Oct 2019 10:38 AM PDT Jews, Muslims and Christians pass daily through the gates of Jerusalem's Old City, on their way to and from prayers or simply to go about their everyday business in one of the most politically sensitive spots on earth. There are eight gates - seven are open and one is sealed - along the Old City walls that were built in the 16th century by Turkish sultan Suleiman the Magnificent. It is often crowded with Muslim worshippers after prayers at al-Aqsa mosque, Islam's third holiest shrine. |
'Great and unmatched wisdom': Trump tweets about Turkish assault Posted: 07 Oct 2019 10:39 AM PDT President Trump tweeted about his "great and unmatched wisdom" in response to Sunday's White House announcement that U.S. forces in northeast Syria will move aside for an expected Turkish assault. The move abandons Kurdish fighters who fought alongside American forces in the years-long battle to defeat ISIS militants. |
Extinction Rebellion protesters pour fake blood over New York's capitalist bull Posted: 07 Oct 2019 11:26 AM PDT Demonstrators were arrested in a wave of US protests that are part of a global week of action by the UK-based groupExtinction Rebellion climate crisis activists protest at New York City's famous Charging Bull statue. Photograph: Mike Segar/ReutersMore than 20 people were arrested by police in New York City's financial district after Extinction Rebellion climate protesters poured fake blood over the famous Charging Bull statue, a symbol of American capitalist might.The protesters launched a wave of disruptive protests in the city on Monday. A smaller number of arrests were made at a "die in" outside New York's stock exchange, with protesters subsequently blocking a nearby road to traffic.Protests are also taking place in other US cities, including Washington DC and Chicago, as part of a global week of action by the UK-founded activist group, which is seeking to make its first major mark in America.Climate crisis activists demonstrate in New York City where Extinction Rebellion organizers expect several thousand to congregate this week. Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/ReutersExtinction Rebellion organizers expect several thousand people will congregate in New York's Washington Square Park for a week of protests and speeches that are expected to involve actions that will prompt further arrests."There will be broad disruption of business as usual," said a New York-based Extinction Rebellion spokesman. "Frankly we don't have time to wait for an opportune moment. Climate breakdown is under way and we can't afford to wait."Extinction Rebellion has a philosophy of nonviolent direct action aimed at pushing governments to confront the climate crisis. A key demand is that planet-warming carbon dioxide emissions are reduced to net zero within six years.A climate crisis activist covered in fake blood is arrested in New York City during the Extinction Rebellion demonstration. Photograph: Timothy A Clary/AFP via Getty ImagesThe activist network has gained a high profile in the UK, following successful attempts to shut down parts of central London. Activists are hoping for a similar impact in the US, despite concerns over a more aggressive style of policing and an unsympathetic federal government, led by Donald Trump, that actively promotes fossil fuels and is regularly derisive of climate science."We need to account for the damage caused by fossil fuels because we have the chance of losing it all," said Jim Navarre, a protestor from New York's Long Island who help up a sign reading "You can't comb over climate change" with a picture of Trump's hair atop the globe.Climate crisis activists gather in Battery Park during Extinction Rebellion demonstrations in New York. Photograph: Timothy A Clary/AFP via Getty ImagesYana Landowne, also from New York, said she was inspired to join the protests by British friends. "I see this as a movement I need to get behind, I realized I had to bring my whole being to this movement," she said.The stock exchange protest featured a mock funeral with people strewn on the ground, covered in blood. Tombstones mentioning hurricanes and fires made worse by the climate crisis were held aloft, along with a coffin with the words "Our future" written on the side. A New Orleans-style funereal band played for the several hundred protestors."It's a powerful message," Landowne said. "But more than death I fear living amongst the terror of people killing each other for water and food." |
Posted: 07 Oct 2019 10:58 AM PDT |
As PG&E Is Remade, Will Wildfire Victims Be Left Behind? Posted: 07 Oct 2019 11:53 AM PDT SAN FRANCISCO -- After a succession of devastating wildfires in the last four years, tens of thousands of Californians -- many with broken spirits, many homeless -- may now lose out on compensation from the company that was to blame.A deadline for victims to file claims is less than three weeks away. About 30,000 have done so with the help of lawyers, along with 1,500 acting on their own. But the deadline could pass without claims from as many as 70,000 others eligible for compensation.They include Steve Kane, who fears he would take away money from those needing it more, and Kelly Boyer, who says he can't prove the value of all his losses when the town of Paradise was destroyed last year.The filing deadline, part of the bankruptcy case of Pacific Gas & Electric, California's biggest utility, is the victims' chance to piece together at least parts of their shattered lives. The stakes are high: If people like Kane and Boyer do not file claims, investors in the utility -- whose equipment has been blamed for several major fires -- will retain that much more. PG&E filed for bankruptcy protection in January as it amassed billions of dollars in potential liability for years of wildfires. It has set a target of $8.4 billion for payouts to wildfire victims, while pledging that all court-approved claims from victims will be honored."PG&E remains focused on doing right by the customers and communities we serve," Andrew Castagnola, a PG&E spokesman, said in a statement. The utility says it has mailed 6.2 million claim forms to possible victims of about two dozen fires, calling attention to the process through websites, email, social media, and radio and television ads.But some lawyers for wildfire victims say the utility's bankruptcy proceeding has been used to prevent as many people as possible from filing a claim."They wanted to use the bankruptcy rules to their benefit to limit their liability to victims," said Mike Danko, a lawyer in the Bay Area who represents about 4,000 victims from fires in 2015, 2017 and 2018. He said the Oct. 21 deadline for claims was unduly rigid and was meant by PG&E "to end up with a smaller number."Many wildfire victims are still displaced, sometimes living in tent cities or on the streets, often confused about the convoluted claims process and traumatized by their losses. Their failure to come forward could benefit PG&E and its investors."There are probably thousands, if not tens of thousands, that have had some impact from these Northern California fires that are not going to seek anything from PG&E," said Cecily Dumas, a lawyer for the Official Committee of Tort Claimants, a group appointed by the court to represent all wildfire victims in the bankruptcy."If people choose not to file claims in the PG&E bankruptcy case," she added, "at least they know they can."Weighing a 'Moral Dilemma'Eleven months after a 100-year-old utility tower is suspected of sparking California's most devastating wildfire, known as the Camp Fire, Kane barely recognizes his quiet corner of Paradise in the Sierra Nevada foothills north of Sacramento.The beauty of the roomy lots and old-growth pine trees that lured the retired contractor and his wife from the high desert outside Los Angeles have been replaced by trailers, scorched basketball hoops and the skeleton of a former hospital.After a long week in limbo last November with other evacuated members of their family, the couple learned that a guesthouse, a workshop and nine other structures on the property had burned -- and that insurance covered less than half the approximately $250,000 in damage. But the main house survived, and after a brief attempt at selling the property, Kane, 61, threw himself into scrubbing away ash, installing a water purification system and salvaging the property.He did not, however, file a claim against PG&E for the roughly $150,000 in uninsured losses."Every time I've got to deal with it, it just brings me back to what I don't really want to think about anyway, you know?" Kane said. "When I'm working on my house, I'm not thinking about those problems."Before he was asked whether he planned to file a claim, Kane said he was unaware he could do so without a lawyer. He said he was unsure whether he had received forms from PG&E to file a claim by mail.But even if he had a claim form to file, Kane fears that it would take away from those who suffered more profound losses, like neighbors who lost relatives, pets, homes or businesses."That is where I wrestle with the moral dilemma," said Kane, who is housing some of those whose properties burned. "It's like if I join the club and then seek recovery, they're going to get less, when they need more than I need."Such views trouble lawyers arguing for victims' interests, who have argued in court and in legal filings that victims often believe there is a lack of money to pay them because of PG&E's bankruptcy. They also say many do not understand that they can collect compensation from PG&E even if insurance companies have covered some losses, and that the payments would not force them to rebuild where they formerly lived if they had moved away or wanted to start over.In addition, one of the lawyers said, it is a common misconception that people who do not have proof cannot file a claim. Just having to flee the fire enables a claim, the lawyer said."The legacy of this bankruptcy should not be that tens of thousands of underinformed, displaced and traumatized fire victims have their substantial claims precluded," Steven Skikos, one of the court-appointed lawyers representing victims' interests, said by email. "Thousands of fire victims have lost everything and now, without their knowledge or informed consent, are about to lose their opportunity to recover anything."From interviews with wildfire victims, confusion about what is available to them appears widespread.Helen Sedwick and her husband lost their home in Santa Rosa, near the state's wine country, in a 2017 fire. PG&E was not found responsible for the fire, but the court has allowed victims to pursue a lawsuit against the utility for damage based on evidence that suggests that the power company was at fault.Sedwick, a lawyer, said she was filing a claim and urging other victims to do so. But she said many did not understand the process or were simply too traumatized to focus on it."Losing your home is profoundly disorienting," Sedwick said. "A lot of people are not filing because they are intimidated by the process. They think that because PG&E filed bankruptcy, they're broke."'I Don't Really Have Any Proof'Boyer, 49, a former construction worker whose rented trailer in Paradise was destroyed in the Camp Fire, spent the first week afterward in a tent city outside the Walmart in Chico, a nearby town. For the next 10 months, he shuffled among an organic farm, a refugee camp at the county fairgrounds and encampments along rural highways.Life outside finally took its toll. Boyer had settled into a campsite near Butte Creek, serene but a steep 15-mile hike to and from the convenience store where he stocked up on 100 pounds of food twice a month. A cut on his toe became badly infected, and Boyer was admitted to a hospital for an amputation in August. After a few days, wary of losing his few remaining belongings, he left."The nurses down there are probably cussing me out, because when I left it was still an open wound," Boyer said. "I told them: 'I've got to go. I've got to get up there and check my camp. If I'm not careful, everything I own is going to be gone again.'"After the medical scare, with his foot still in thick bandages, Boyer sought help from an old friend and a few Facebook groups for fire survivors. He soon had a 1980s-vintage recreational vehicle and a three-month offer to stay on a parcel where the owners are finishing building plans. He considers himself lucky to have shelter and hopes to take advantage of aid programs to channel his love of guitar into sound-engineering classes at Butte College.Boyer said he did not have a lawyer and had not filed a claim against PG&E for his belongings or expensive musical equipment lost in the fire."See, I don't really have any proof of anything I had there," he said. "I'm wondering if it's worth the effort."A Looming DeadlineAny doubts, anxieties or crossed signals that limit the number of claims could benefit PG&E and its investors.Before the 2017 wildfires, PG&E stock was trading above $70 a share, a five-year high. But with the bankruptcy and investigators' determination that the utility was responsible for the Camp Fire and several others, the stock price is barely above $10.PG&E has proposed terms in the bankruptcy that would put its overall payments for wildfire-related losses at $20.4 billion. In addition to earmarking $8.4 billion for victims, it has committed $11 billion to insurers and $1 billion to public agencies, subject to court approval.It is pushing to complete the Chapter 11 bankruptcy process by June 30 so it can qualify for a newly created state program that will provide utilities with a backstop against liability in future fires.Ahead of the Oct. 21 cutoff for claims, a series of critical hearings is scheduled, starting Monday. Frank Pitre, a lawyer who represents wildfire victims, has signaled a possible move to push the deadline farther out."We may be coming before you and asking for an extension of time for the claims process," Pitre told the court last month. "I'm very concerned that we are not getting in the requisite claims that should come in based on what we believed, in good faith, are the number of people who have been impacted."He said the total number, including those who had already filed claims, could be 75,000 to 100,000."PG&E's game is to cut the time period for victims' compensation way down," Pitre said in an interview. "That works to the advantage of PG&E and their shareholders. They want to game the system."Asked to address the assertion, Castagnola, the company spokesman, said, "PG&E believes the Chapter 11 process will support the orderly, fair and expeditious resolution of claims, including wildfire claims."Victims like Sedwick said that with the trauma of dealing with their losses, filing a claim was not on a lot of victims' minds. Many assumed the 13-page claim package that PG&E sent was junk mail and threw it away, she said. Others, like Kane, aren't sure they ever got it.Kane is unsure whether he will stay in Paradise in the long term. He worries that it will remain a "trailer city," and that businesses won't return. He empathizes with those who lost everything, he said, but he hopes that the town will move forward with stricter rules for rebuilding, and he is wary of high costs for insurance, taxes and utilities."Life is messy," he said, "and it's not necessarily fair."This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2019 The New York Times Company |
Everything we know about Hunter Biden's business connections in China Posted: 07 Oct 2019 07:16 AM PDT |
The True Cost of the Attack on Saudi Arabia's Oil Supply Posted: 07 Oct 2019 10:39 AM PDT |
Pope Francis considers dropping celibacy requirements for some priests Posted: 07 Oct 2019 04:42 PM PDT |
Kentucky officials are getting a lot of attention from Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao Posted: 07 Oct 2019 11:43 AM PDT Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao's frequent meetings with officials from Kentucky are raising some eyebrows, Politico reports.Between January 2017 and March 2018, records show that 25 percent of Chao's scheduled meetings with local officials of any state seeking federal grant money were with Kentuckians. For reference, Indiana and Georgia were next in line with 6 percent of the meetings apiece, Politico reports.Chao is married to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who represents the Bluegrass State in the upper chamber, so the news hasn't been received particularly well. In fact, at least five of Chao's 18 meetings with Kentucky officials were requested by McConnell staffers, who reportedly told Chao's team if the officials were "friends" or "loyal supporters" of McConnell. "The marriage is the thing that underlies all of this," said Mel Dubnick, a professor of government ethics and accountability at the University of New Hampshire.Chao has maintained she shows no favoritism toward McConnell's state, but the numbers are not insignificant, especially when local officials from other states have complained about how difficult is to schedule a meeting with her office.A Department of Transportation spokesperson told Politico that Chao has traveled to and met with officials from 31 states since she's been in office, and that her meetings with Kentucky officials are natural due to her ties to the state. Read more at Politico. |
Russian village's last teacher stays on for her one remaining pupil Posted: 07 Oct 2019 12:53 AM PDT Uminur Kuchukova, 61, could have retired years ago, but she continues to teach at this dying Russian village's once bustling school for the sake of its last pupil, a 9-year-old boy. Like thousands of villages dotted across Russia, the remote Siberian village of Sibilyakovo emptied after the closure of its state-run collective farm following the 1991 collapse of the Soviet planned economy. Kuchukova has taught at the school for 42 years. |
Democrat Amy Klobuchar raises $4.8M for presidential bid Posted: 07 Oct 2019 01:47 PM PDT Amy Klobuchar said Monday that she raised $4.8 million in the third quarter for her 2020 presidential campaign, a total that places the Minnesota senator in the middle of the Democratic field in fundraising for the third straight quarter. Klobuchar has raised more than some rivals but less than top-tier candidates such as Sen. Bernie Sanders, who raised $25.3 million last quarter, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who raised $24.6 million. Klobuchar said during a stop in New Hampshire on Sunday that she's been careful about how the campaign spends money and "we have money in the bank." The campaign, which announced its total ahead of the Oct. 15 filing deadline, did not disclose how much cash it has on hand. |
Tourists to be welcomed back to Indian Kashmir: governor Posted: 07 Oct 2019 10:05 AM PDT Tourists warned by India to leave Kashmir just days before stripping the restive valley of its autonomy will be welcomed back later this week, the region's governor said Monday. Authorities in early August called for holiday-makers to leave "immediately" over "terror threats" to a major Hindu pilgrimage, sending thousands scrambling for places on planes and buses. New Delhi also imposed a clampdown on movement and cut off all communications including the internet and phone lines just before the controversial autonomy decision to quell unrest. |
Chicago Attorney Who Interfered In Jussie Smollet Probe Tapped to Run ‘Time’s Up’ Women’s Org Posted: 07 Oct 2019 12:50 PM PDT Tina Tchen, a Chicago attorney who served as Michelle Obama's chief-of-staff, was tapped as the new chief executive of the national advocacy organization "Time's Up" on Monday. "[We're going to] work hard at the root cause of sexual harassment: because sexual harassment occurs when we have workplaces that aren't diverse, that aren't inclusive, that don't respect their workers," Tchen said in the announcement on Twitter. "And so we're going to work with companies, with employers, with employees to make those workplaces ones that are safe, respectful, and where everyone can reach their full potential."Tchen co-founded Time's Up's legal-defense fund, the organization's signature initiative to offer legal support for women in all industries facing workplace sexual harassment. The fund has so far raised more than $24 million.Tchen, who was tapped in March to review a series of workplace-harassment allegations for the Southern Poverty Law Center, played a key role in the dropping of 16 felony charges against actor Jessie Smollett, who falsely claimed to be the target of a racially-motivated attack. Per reporting from the Chicago Sun Times, Tchen, reportedly at the request of Smollett's family, texted Cook County state attorney Kim Foxx to ask that she persuade Chicago Police Department superintendent Eddie Johnson to turn Smollett's case over to the FBI. Tchen claims she made the request out of a desire to prevent media leaks. Just days after Smollett claimed the crime had occurred, Foxx replied to Tchen saying she had made her case to Eddie Johnson, who ultimately refused to relinquish control over the probe."OMG this would be a huge victory," Tchen wrote in response to a text message from Foxx. "I make no guarantees," Foxx answered, "but I'm trying."Foxx later recused herself from the case, a move that prompted a letter from the Chicago Fraternal Order of Police asking the Department of Justice to open an investigation into Foxx's handling of the situation. In June, a Chicago judge appointed a special prosecutor to look into the matter and suggested that Foxx acted improperly in her decision to hand over the case to a top deputy.Michelle Obama took to Twitter to celebrate the announcement.> I'm thrilled that @TIMESUPNOW named @TinaTchen—one of the most brilliant and purposeful leaders I've ever worked with—as its new president and CEO. I've seen how Tina's hustle and intellect can transform policies and touch lives, and I can't wait to see her thrive in this role! https://t.co/iWxPIaRQv0> > -- Michelle Obama (@MichelleObama) October 7, 2019 |
FBI: Most prolific serial killer in U.S. murdered at least 50 Posted: 07 Oct 2019 04:23 AM PDT |
Lawyer Claims Congress Is ‘Harassing’ Rudy Giuliani’s Allies—by Asking Them for Ukraine Documents Posted: 07 Oct 2019 12:42 PM PDT REUTERSTwo of Rudy Giuliani's associates will not meet a congressional committee's deadline to produce documents related to their work in Ukraine, according to their lawyer. That attorney, who previously represented President Donald Trump, accused congressional investigators of trying to harass and intimidate the two men in a letter that The Daily Beast obtained. The men—Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman—had tried to help Giuliani investigate Hunter Biden, a project at the core of Democrats' impeachment inquiry. The House Intelligence, Foreign Affairs, and Oversight committees had set an October 7 deadline for Parnas and Fruman to voluntarily turn over records related to their activities with Giuiliani. "Your request for documents and communications is overly broad and unduly burdensome," wrote their attorney, John Dowd. "The subject matter of your requests is well beyond the scope of your inquiry. This, in combination with requiring immediate responses, leads me to the inescapable conclusion that the Democratic Committee members' intent is to harass, intimidate and embarrass my clients."Dowd said "The 'Committees'"—in scare quotes—violated their standard procedures by asking the two men to turn over documents within seven days and testify within 15. "Considering the important factual questions and legal issues attendant to the alleged whistleblower, your investigation, your authority and requests for information, your charter should be amended to exhibit some semblance of due process, fairness, justice and common decency," Dowd's letter concluded. Parnas and Fruman, two Soviet-born Floridians, have connected Giuliani to various Ukrainian officials, including the ex-prosecutor who Trump and Giuliani claim was fired at Biden's behest to protect his son, Hunter Biden.According to the Associated Press, Parnas and Fruman also worked to orchestrate political changes in Ukraine that might help their nascent natural gas company, Global Energy Producers LLC. With Giuliani's assistance, the two men successfully pressed for the ouster of America's ambassador to Kiev, Marie Yovanovitch, and, the AP reported on Sunday, advanced efforts to overhaul leadership at Ukraine's national oil and gas company, Naftogaz.House Dems Preparing Investigation of Rudy Giuliani for Ukraine ShenanigansCongressional Democrats asked Parnass and Fruman for documents on Sept. 30. They also subpoenaed Giuliani that same day for documents. Giuliani told The Daily Beast he has not decided whether or not to comply. "I have a real question about whether I should recognize their legitimacy," he said. "I think they are totally illegitimate... I'm going to go in front of a committee with a chairman who is a liar."Going on offense against congressional investigators is a central part of the strategy that Trump's allies are using to defend him. Chairman Adam Schiff of the Intelligence Committee has become their top foe. And the president himself has also lambasted the California Democrat, calling him "Shifty Schiff." "I haven't made up my mind," Giuliani continued, "but one of the issues is, do you acknowledge an illicit committee?"Administration officials have already stiff-armed the Hill. Last week, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo missed a deadline to turn over documents that Congress had subpoenaed. But members of Congress will still get face time with him soon; on October 15, he's scheduled to meet behind closed doors with members and staff of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees to discuss refugee caps. State Department officials have told Congress that Pompeo plans to be at the meeting, according to two sources familiar with the communications. Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Homeless man charged with murder after killing spree in New York City's Chinatown neighborhood Posted: 06 Oct 2019 04:04 PM PDT |
Why China Engages in Such Massive Live Fire Military Drills Posted: 06 Oct 2019 02:00 AM PDT |
Gandhi memorial defaced, ashes allegedly stolen on his 150th birthday Posted: 06 Oct 2019 07:15 PM PDT |
Report: Iran plans to start using more advanced centrifuges Posted: 07 Oct 2019 01:09 PM PDT Iran plans to start using a new array of advanced centrifuges for enriching uranium, the country's nuclear chief said Monday according to state television, in a move likely to intensify pressure on Europe to save Tehran's collapsing nuclear deal with world powers. Ali Akbar Salehi told Iranian state TV that an array of 30 IR-6 centrifuges will be inaugurated in the coming weeks. Under the terms of its 2015 deal — which the U.S. unilaterally withdrew from over a year ago — Iran had committed to not using the array until late 2023. |
Disney World visitors left dangling for hours after cable car gondolas break down Posted: 07 Oct 2019 12:32 AM PDT |
S.Sudan says renegotiating oil deal with Sudan Posted: 07 Oct 2019 07:37 AM PDT South Sudan said Monday it was renegotiating an oil deal with Khartoum, as it will not meet a December deadline to finish paying $3 billion (2.7 billion euros) agreed as compensation for the oil-rich nation's 2011 secession. South Sudan and Sudan in 2012 signed a deal in which Juba would pay the amount after it voted for independence, taking with it 70 percent of the oil fields Khartoum used to manage. Petroleum Minister Awou Daniel Chuang told journalists that the cash-strapped nation had paid $2.4 billion so far, but would not manage to pay the remaining $600 million by December. |
Posted: 07 Oct 2019 06:05 AM PDT |
Rudy Giuliani brags about his law school grades as he promises to sue Adam Schiff Posted: 07 Oct 2019 12:01 PM PDT Rudy Giuliani is an expert at the Constitution, thank you very much.The former New York City mayor turned personal lawyer to President Trump has been on an absolute media blitz in his attempt to defend Trump and himself in the impeachment inquiry -- not that it's gone too well. So he changed the subject during a series of weekend calls with Yahoo News, attempting to turn the blame on House Intelligence Chair Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and bringing up his own studies in constitutional law to back it up.Giuliani said over the weekend that he's working with outside lawyers to bring a lawsuit against Schiff, Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), and other Democrats backing Trump's impeachment. Schiff's investigation of Trump is intended to "deprive him of civil rights," and the intelligence is trying to "inhibit me in my ability to defend" Trump, Giuliani claimed to Yahoo News. Tlaib, meanwhile, is apparently engaging in witness intimidation because she appeared to agree that White House officials who don't respond to subpoenas should be hunted down, Giuliani continued. So he, along with an unnamed yet "very established law firm," are intending to sue both of those congressmembers.Critics have already suggested there are some constitutional flaws to Giuliani's plan, but Giuliani brushed one off as "nitwit" and claimed "I got the highest grade in constitutional law." Of course, news of a second whistleblower with firsthand knowledge of Trump's Ukraine dealings didn't help Guiliani's case, nor did the fact that Giuliani graduated law school more than 50 years ago. |
One suspect nabbed, one sought in shooting rampage that killed 4, wounded 5 in Kansas bar Posted: 07 Oct 2019 03:36 PM PDT |
The B-2 Stealth Bomber: America's Most Powerful Bomber Ever? Posted: 06 Oct 2019 02:45 AM PDT |
UPDATE 1-Russian defence minister holds talks by phone with U.S. counterpart -RIA Posted: 07 Oct 2019 11:32 AM PDT MOSCOW/WASHINGTON, Oct 7 (Reuters) - Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu held talks by phone with U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper, the RIA news agency reported on Monday, citing the Russian ministry. The Russian ministry did not disclose details of the talks, Interfax, another news agency, said. In Washington, the Pentagon confirmed Esper and his Russian counterpart had spoken but declined to provide any details on what was discussed. |
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