Category Archives: US

New York judge strikes down Democratic-drawn maps

New York Democrats drew a new congressional map with boundaries that could gain their party as many as three new seats, a crucial advantage at a time when the House majority will come down to just a handful of wins.

The New York congressional map ruled unconstitutional by the state judge would give Democrats 22 seats to four Republican ones. The New York delegation is composed of 19 Democratic seats to eight seats for Republicans. The state lost a seat because of slow growth over the past 10 years.

Democrats, who had full control of New York state government for the first time in a century, argued they were using their power to right wrongs in previous maps. But Republicans decried it as a partisan gerrymander that ran afoul of voters’ wishes to take raw politics out of redistricting.

In 2014, New York voters approved a constitutional amendment to set up a separate entity outside the state legislature to control redistricting. The 10-member commission was split equally along partisan lines. Of the members, eight were appointed by partisan legislative leaders.

The commission was supposed to present a single map to the legislature that state lawmakers could adopt or reject. But beset with its own partisan infighting, the commission did not come up with a unified map, instead submitting two sets of lines, one drawn by the Democrats on the panel and another drawn by the Republicans. The commission’s drama effectively allowed state lawmakers to dismiss its work and create their own map.

“The scourge of gerrymandering is not unique to New York,” McAllister, a Republican, wrote. “In 2014, New York State took major steps to avoid being plagued by gerrymandering. … The 2020 census was the first time after the constitutional amendment that led New York to draw new districts. Therefore, this is a case of first impression in many respects.”

Democrats involved in the redistricting effort said that Republicans purposely took the case to a rural, conservative judge and that the outcome would ultimately be decided by a higher court, where they will fight for the maps to stand.

“This is one step in the process,” said Mike Murphy, a spokesman for New York state Senate Democrats. “We always knew this case would be decided by the appellate courts. We are appealing this decision and expect this decision will be stayed as the appeal process proceeds.”

Republicans cheered the lower-court decision, calling it a win for New York voters who wanted a less-partisan redistricting process. Democrats have made similar arguments in GOP-held states that also passed anti-gerrymandering ballot initiatives, such as Ohio.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R), a co-chairman of the National Republican Redistricting Trust, brushed aside a question about the similarity in circumstances between the two states.

“It’s very difficult to compare state to state in this,” he said during a call with reporters. “What we do see, though, is those who have looked at the New York map, independent experts and those like me involved in the political process, have stated right from the beginning that of all 50 states that have engaged in redistricting, this was by far the worst gerrymandering in the country.”

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Pelosi says Ginni Thomas texts show need for Supreme Court ethics code

Pelosi on Thursday declined to say whether Thomas should recuse himself or resign from the court, telling reporters, “I don’t think he should have ever been appointed, so, we could take it back to there.”

But she did say that the court’s lack of a code of ethics presents a serious problem.

“They have no code of ethics,” Pelosi said at her weekly news conference at the Capitol. “And it’s — really? The Supreme Court of the United States? They’re making judgments about the air we breathe and everything else, and we don’t even know what their ethical standard is? … Why should they have lower standards than members of Congress in terms of reporting and all the rest?”

Pelosi noted that H.R. 1, the For the People Act, includes language calling for the establishment of a judicial code of ethics. The measure passed the House this month in a largely party-line vote, but its chances are dim in the Senate.

The speaker suggested that a House committee may have a hearing on the code of conduct issue soon, although she did not elaborate.

On Thomas, in particular, Pelosi said little about the Supreme Court justice but did make a pointed remark about his wife’s text messages urging the Trump White House to work to overturn Biden’s win.

“I’ve heard people say from time to time, ‘Well, it’s a personal decision of a judge as to whether he should recuse himself,’ ” Pelosi said. “Well, if your wife is an admitted and proud contributor to a coup of our country, maybe you should weigh that in your ethical standards.”

Ginni Thomas’s text messages were among thousands of documents related to the Jan. 6 insurrection, including other text messages and emails, that former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows turned over to the House select committee investigating the attack before he abruptly stopped fully cooperating with the panel in December.

In some comments, Ginni Thomas was zealous in appealing to Meadows to help overturn the 2020 election results. “Help This Great President stand firm, Mark,” she wrote on Nov. 10, 2020. “The majority knows Biden and the Left is attempting the greatest Heist of our History.”

Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) said he was planning to call for a Supreme Court code of ethics as well in remarks on the Senate floor Thursday.

“I’m on the way to the Senate floor to talk about my Supreme Court Ethics Act and the need for the Supreme Court to adopt a binding Code of Conduct,” Murphy tweeted Thursday morning. “The Thomas revelations make it clear — the Supreme Court cannot and should not police itself.”

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Mother of 3-Year-Old Fatally Shot in Dallas Monday Arrested – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

Dallas Police are expected to give an update after the mother of a fatally shot 3-year-old in Dallas was arrested. Video will appear in the player above.

The parents of a 3-year-old boy fatally shot Monday morning in Dallas have been arrested on outstanding warrants and now face additional charges, police say.

Lacravivonne Washington, 26, the mother of 3-year-old Jalexus Washington, was arrested Wednesday and was taken to Dallas police headquarters to be interviewed about her son’s death.

Police said the woman declined to speak with detectives and was taken to the Dallas County Jail for outstanding warrants out of Carrollton related to a speeding ticket and failure to use a child safety seat. Dallas police said she was also charged with endangering a child related to her son’s death.


NBC 5 News, Dallas Police Department

Lacravivonne Washington, mugshot.

According to an arrest warrant affidavit obtained by NBC 5, Washington told police Monday that she was involved in a road rage incident as she left a business with her three children, 2-year-old Layla Washington, 4-year-old Janiyah Washington and Jalexus, all of whom were unrestrained in her car.

An arrest has been made in connection with the shooting death of a 3-year-old in Dallas.

She said the driver followed her and that she pulled into a neighborhood to try to lose the person. She said she parked next to Forest Meadows Park and that as she was getting her children out of the car the driver returned and shot at them, striking her son. She said she then drove him to a nearby hospital.

Police said Washington signed a consent form at the hospital allowing police to search her vehicle for evidence. They said she stated there were no firearms in the vehicle, but while searching the vehicle for evidence of the road rage incident police found a handgun in the glove compartment.

Investigators later learned the gun was one of two that had been purchased on March 4 by Washington. The second gun was not found in the car or in a search of her home, police said.



NBC 5 News

A car outside Medical City Dallas is investigated after a 3-year-old boy was fatally shot on Monday, March 28, 2022.

During a subsequent videotaped interview at the Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center, police said Washington waived her Miranda rights and gave a voluntary statement where she said during the road rage incident she reached for her handgun in the glove compartment twice but never pulled it out. She said during this time her children were freely moving from the front to the back seats and that she then heard two gunshots, the first of which she said sounded far away.

Police said the investigation into the road rage story stalled after officers were unable to locate a crime scene. According to the arresting document, police said they found no evidence of a road rage incident.

Additionally, according to the boy’s autopsy referenced in the affidavit, there was unburned gunpowder residue on the boy’s body, indicating the gunshot that killed him came from close proximity and ruling out his being shot by someone in a passing vehicle.

The charge of endangering a child was added, police said, because a weapon was accessible to her children who were unrestrained in the vehicle. Police have not released any additional information about how the boy was shot.

Washington is currently in the Dallas County Jail on a bond of $25,000. It’s not clear if she’s obtained an attorney.

Washington’s husband, Jalexus Washington Sr., was also arrested on March 30 for outstanding traffic warrants and for unlawfully carrying a weapon. Police said he waived his rights and gave a statement, saying he was at work when his son was shot and that he was unaware of the location of his wife’s gun but that it would have been in her care. The gun he was carrying, police said, was the second one purchased by his wife on March 4.

The Texas Department of Family and Protective Services has had past involvement with the family, agency spokeswoman Tiffani Butler told NBC 5, though further details weren’t available due to state confidentiality laws. DFPS is investigating the fatality alongside Dallas Police, she said.

Police are asking for anyone with information regarding this investigation to contact Homicide Detective David Grubbs, #9159, at 214-671-3675 or by email at david.grubbsjr@dallascityhall.com. Please reference case number 053933-2022.

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Storms with damaging winds possible in D.C. area late Thursday

“Thunderstorms will continue to increase in coverage and intensity this afternoon and spread across the watch area,” writes the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center. “The strongest cells and lines will pose a risk of damaging wind gusts and a tornado or two.”

A severe thunderstorm watch means conditions are favorable for severe storms, but not a guarantee and that you should stay alert. If a severe thunderstorm (or tornado) warning is issued, it means a storm is imminent for your locations and that you should seek shelter immediately.

The Weather Service also increased the region’s storm risk level from “slight” (level 2 out of 5) to “enhanced.”

To our south, developing storms have already resulted in tornado warnings on the west and north side of Richmond. At this point, we have not seen reports of a confirmed tornado or damage.

Note that while our discussion below indicates the most intense storms are probable later this evening when the cold front passes, showers and storms developing ahead of it this afternoon and evening could be severe and produce damaging wind gusts and perhaps a brief tornado. This is especially true east of Interstate 95.

We will post updates if severe weather moves into the area.

Original article from 1:20 p.m.

After an outbreak of severe weather in the South on Wednesday into early Thursday, the cold front responsible for the dangerous storms is charging toward the East Coast. As the front encounters mild, humid air surging northward, strong to severe thunderstorms may erupt in the Washington region, mostly this evening and tonight.

The Storm Prediction Center (SPC) has placed much of the eastern United States in a slight risk zone for severe thunderstorms. This is Level 2 out of 5 on the severity threat scale.

The main threat with any storms will be damaging winds, although a short-lived tornado or two isn’t out of the question. It’s possible that the showers and storm pass through parts of the area without much fanfare. Although severe storms aren’t a sure thing, it would be wise to remain weather aware through late tonight.

Ahead of any thunderstorms, strong winds from the south — gusting up to 50 mph — have prompted a wind advisory for the region until 8 p.m.

“Gusty winds could blow around unsecured objects,” the Weather Service writes. “Isolated tree damage and a few power outages may result.”

  • Interstate 81: Between 4 and 8 p.m.
  • Germantown/Dulles/Warrenton: 6 to 10 p.m.
  • Interstate 95 and Beltway area: 8 p.m. and midnight.
  • Southern Maryland to Annapolis: 9 p.m. and 1 a.m.

Note that brief, gusty showers are possible before the mainline of showers and storms late this evening.

All clear: Midnight west of the Beltway, around 1 a.m. around the Beltway, and 2 a.m. near the Chesapeake Bay.

  • High (2-in-3) chance of: Gusty winds (30 to 50 mph), brief downpours.
  • Medium (1-in-3) chance of: Damaging winds (50 to 65 mph).
  • Small (1-in-10 or less) chance of: Brief tornado, small hail, destructive winds (over 65 mph), lightning, flooding.

Rainfall potential: Average 0.25 to 0.5 inches; locally amounts up to 1 inch or so possible.

A look at the day’s forecast map reveals that a warm front pushed through our region last night, ushering in wind from the south and a milder and humid air mass. This front is connected to a deepening low pressure system north of the Great Lakes. Our region will remain in this storm’s warm sector throughout the day and evening, as a cold front approaches from the Ohio Valley.

In the upper levels, a potent trough of low pressure is approaching the Eastern Seaboard. The uplift of air is expected to intensify across the D.C. area as the trough amplifies. With the influx of southern moisture and rising air, waves of showers will develop and transit our region through the afternoon and evening.

Our concern shifts to the early evening, as the front nears and a pocket of unstable air develops just along it. The early morning weather balloon at Dulles Airport shows that the atmosphere — for the moment — is quite stable and not conducive to deep thunderstorms. However, with arrival of milder air from the south (and cooling of the mid levels by the approaching trough), some measure of instability is expected to develop, at least through the middle atmosphere, by the early evening.

Extensive cloud cover through the day will probably prevent the strong, late March sun from destabilizing the atmosphere to any large degree.

While the instability may be somewhat lacking through a deep layer, the low-level wind fields are exceptionally strong and ideally configured such that any deeper cells may achieve rotation. A look at these very strong winds about a mile above the surface is shown below; note that they are in the range of 70+ mph.

Even with shallower convective clouds (lacking significant lightning and thunder), we are concerned that downdrafts within the clouds may bring down blasts of strong wind in locally damaging gusts. The strong wind shear (change in speed and direction with altitude) may also promote transient, rotating storm cells with the possibility of a short-lived tornado or two.

The two images below present radar snapshots as simulated by various forecast models. In the first, the high resolution NAM model suggests a squall line, with embedded strong to severe cells, will pass through the area between 10 p.m. and 1 a.m.

  • The second simulation (the HRRR model) presents an earlier scenario, with a line of storms traversing our region between 8 and 11 p.m.

The Capital Weather Gang will stay on top of this scenario through the day and post updates if a severe thunderstorm watch is issued and any local warnings are generated.



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Biden: Government standing up to ‘hateful’ transgender bills

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden said Thursday that his administration is “standing up” for transgender Americans against “hateful bills” being passed at the state level and that he is committed to advancing equality across society.

Biden commented in a brief video message commemorating Transgender Day of Visibility.

“The onslaught of anti-transgender state laws attacking you and your families is simply wrong,” Biden said in the video. “This administration is standing up for you against all these hateful bills. And we’re committed to advancing transgender equality in the classroom, on the playing field, at work, in our military and our housing and health care systems.”

“Everywhere. Simply everywhere,” Biden said.

The administration announced several actions to make the federal government more inclusive for transgender people. The steps come as Republican leaders have advanced state measures targeting transgender people as part of a broader push to stoke culture wars heading into a critical election season.

The administration said the federal government will become more inclusive for transgender people, including through the use of a new “X” gender marker on U.S. passport applications, beginning on April 11, and new Transportation Security Administration scanners that are gender-neutral.

It is working to expand the availability of the “X” gender marker to airlines and federal travel programs and will make it easier for transgender people to change their gender information in Social Security Administration records.

Visitors to the White House complex soon will also be able to choose an “X” gender marker option in the White House Worker and Visitor Entry System, which is used to conduct screening background checks.

At airports, changes will be made to screening scanners along with the introduction of the use of an “X” for travelers going through Precheck who do not identify as male or female. Transportation Security Administration agents will receive new instructions on how to make screening procedures less invasive and will work with airlines to promote acceptance of the “X” gender marker.

In the video, Biden said there is work still to be done to end “the epidemic of violence against transgender women of color and girls of color” and to ensure that transgender seniors “can age with dignity.” He called anew on Congress to pass the Equality Act to help transgender people around the world “live free from discrimination and violence.”

Biden tried to reassure any transgender person who is struggling, telling them to remember that “you’re not alone.”

“You’re so brave. You belong. And we have your back,” Biden said.

The administration’s actions follow recent steps at the state level to limit activity by transgender people. At least 10 states have banned transgender athletes from participating in sports at all levels in a way that is consistent with their gender identity.

In Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who is seeking reelection, has ordered the state’s child welfare agency to probe reports of gender-confirming care for kids as abuse.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican who is running for reelection and considering a 2024 presidential bid, on Monday signed into law a measure, dubbed by opponents as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, that forbids instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity in kindergarten through third grade. The law has drawn intense national scrutiny from critics who argue it marginalizes LGBTQ people. Republicans and advocates of the law argue that discussion of these topics should be between parents and their children.

At the White House, “Jeopardy!” champion Amy Schneider, the first openly transgender winner on the popular quiz show, will meet with second gentleman Doug Emhoff. Emhoff and Admiral Rachel Levine, the assistant secretary for health at the Department of Health and Human Services, separately will host a conversation with transgender kids and their parents. Levine is the first openly transgender federal official to be confirmed by the Senate.

In Florida, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona will meet with LGBTQ+ students.

HHS, the White House said, will also be the first agency to fly a trans pride flag.

___

Associated Press writers Meg Kinnard in Columbia, South Carolina, and Colleen Long and Ben Fox contributed to this report.

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Man tells jury: I never agreed to kidnap Gov. Whitmer

One of four men charged with conspiring to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer testified in his own defense Thursday, repeatedly telling jurors “absolutely not” when asked if he agreed to abduct her before the 2020 election.

Daniel Harris, a former Marine, said he wanted to maintain his infantry skills when he joined a militia, the Wolverine Watchmen, not take down a governor or blow up a bridge near her vacation home to foil police.

His testimony came on the 14th day of trial and a day after prosecutors finished presenting evidence including secret recordings, violent, profanity-filled posts from social media and vital testimony from two men who pleaded guilty.

Harris, Adam Fox, Barry Croft Jr., and Brandon Caserta are accused of plotting to kidnap Whitmer from her vacation home in northern Michigan because of their disgust with government and her tough COVID-19 restrictions.

Over roughly two hours, Harris, 24, rejected any claim that he was involved in a crime. He said “America was on fire” in 2020 over the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer, protests over police treatment of Black people and a pandemic that shut down parts of the economy.

Harris suggested that Fox, an alleged leader of the scheme, was a buffoon. He said he didn’t have Fox’s phone number and didn’t visit the basement of a Grand Rapids-area vacuum shop where an informant covertly recorded conversations.

Defense attorney Julia Kelly took Harris through key events raised by prosecutors earlier in the trial and repeatedly asked: “Did you agree to kidnap the governor of Michigan?”

“Absolutely not,” Harris replied.

A key part of the government’s case is a firearms training weekend at Luther, Michigan, in September 2020 with a “shoot house” that was intended to replicate Whitmer’s second home. Harris admitted that he brought material but said he didn’t build it with her property in mind.

Harris did not join Fox and Croft on an evening ride to Elk Rapids, Michigan, to scout Whitmer’s second home and a nearby bridge that same weekend. Harris said he had purchased $200 of cheap beer and cigarettes so he could return to the camp and “get wasted” with others.

“I had assumed they went to a strip club or a bar,” Harris said of Fox and Croft.

Defense attorneys claim the men were engaged in a lot of crazy talk fueled by agents and informants but no conspiracy.

The first defense witness, Colleen Kuester of Baraboo, Wisconsin, said she was invited by an acquaintance to a “family fun day” in Cambria, Wisconsin, in July 2020. Cambria was a training site for the group and other self-styled militia members, according to evidence.

Kuester said she found nothing sinister — just swimming, target shooting and bratwursts.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan Roth played secretly recorded audio of men talking about making bombs.

“Did you hear that at Cambria?” he asked.

“Absolutely not,” Kuester replied.

At least five other defense witnesses bowed out Wednesday, saying they would assert their right to remain silent if called to testify. They included an informant, Steve Robeson of Oxford, Wisconsin, who switched sides during the investigation and tipped off Croft that the FBI wanted to arrest him, according to the government.

The others who invoked the Fifth Amendment had participated in training as well as discussions about the plot but have not been charged.

The men were arrested in October 2020 amid talk of obtaining an explosive that could blow up a bridge and hold back police from responding to a kidnapping at Whitmer’s second home, according to trial testimony.

Ty Garbin, who pleaded guilty and cooperated with investigators, said the group acted willingly and had hoped to strike before the election, cause national chaos and prevent Joe Biden from winning the presidency.

Whitmer, a Democrat, rarely talks publicly about the kidnapping plot, though she referred to “surprises” during her term that seemed like “something out of fiction” when she filed for reelection on March 17.

She has blamed former President Donald Trump for fomenting anger over coronavirus restrictions and refusing to condemn right-wing extremists like those charged in the case. Whitmer has said Trump was complicit in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

___

Find AP’s full coverage of the Whitmer kidnap plot trial at: https://apnews.com/hub/whitmer-kidnap-plot-trial

___

White reported from Detroit.

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3 Democrats join Republicans in sinking Biden nominee to lead Labor division

Democratic Sens. Kyrsten Sinema, Joe Manchin and Mark Kelly voted against a procedural vote to advance David Weil’s nomination. The final vote count was 47-53, where a simple majority was needed to advance the nomination.

Weil previously served in this role during the Obama administration from 2014 to 2017 and faced criticism from conservative groups for policies he enacted at the time that they argue hurt small businesses, such as pushing to classify independent contractors as employees. Private groups were urging moderate Democrats to vote against Weil’s nomination.

Sinema’s spokesperson said the senator reviewed his nomination and “had concerns” without elaborating.

“As she promised Arizonans, Kyrsten evaluates all nominees based on three criteria: whether or not they are professionally qualified, believe in the missions of their agencies, and can be trusted to faithfully execute and uphold the law,” the spokesperson said. “Upon reviewing Mr. Weil’s nomination, she has concerns with his ability to faithfully execute and uphold the law.”

Manchin and Kelly did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment about opposing the nomination.

Democratic Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, the chairwoman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, expressed disappointment in a statement following the failed nomination.

“I’m incredibly disappointed to see Dr. Weil, an exceptionally qualified nominee with a long track record fighting to ensure workers get the wages they have earned, did not get the votes tonight to be confirmed as Administrator of the Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor. Despite this outcome, I will never stop fighting for working families and for a fully staffed DOL with leaders committed to protecting workers,” she said in a statement.

This comes as another one of Biden’s nominees is currently facing an uphill climb for confirmation. A number of Senate Democrats, including Sinema, have privately expressed concerns over Biden’s pick for Ambassador to India, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, raising concerns about whether his nomination will move forward.

Concerns center around allegations from a former mayor’s office employee, who has previously accused him of ignoring sexual harassment and bullying by one of his former senior aides. Garcetti has repeatedly denied the allegations.

This story has been updated with additional developments Thursday.

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Turkey seeks to move trial for Jamal Khashoggi’s murder to Saudi Arabia

Facing economic woes, including a weak currency and soaring cost of living, Turkey has sought to improve relations with Saudi Arabia in recent months.

If the ministry approves, “it will have terrible consequences for the idea of justice,” Onderoglu said. All the defendants are being tried in absentia and are believed to be in Saudi Arabia.

On Oct. 2, 2018, Saudi agents killed Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul. What has been done in the aftermath? (Video: Joyce Lee, Thomas LeGro, Dalton Bennett, John Parks/The Washington Post, Photo: The Washington Post)

The prosecutor’s action represents a significant turnabout by the government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. In the days and months after the murder, Erdogan, who counted Khashoggi as a friend, played a leading role in implicating Saudi Arabia and its Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in the killing.

Turkey released recordings, surveillance footage and other material that revealed a team of Saudi operatives had traveled to Istanbul and waited in the Saudi Consulate for Khashoggi, who was a contributing columnist for The Washington Post. The operatives then killed and dismembered him. His remains were never found.

Turkey’s release of evidence — and Erdogan’s outspoken disgust at the killing — spurred international outrage at Saudi Arabia for a time. Recently, as Turkey’s economy has struggled with inflation topping 50 percent, Erdogan has sought better relations with the kingdom as well as other countries in the Middle East.

The trial in Turkey was seen by some as symbolic since the defendants were absent. But the proceedings were held in public, with witness testimonies, in sharp contrast to a trial that was carried out behind closed doors in Saudi Arabia, Onderoglu said.

But in recent months, he added, it was clear that Turkey was no longer interested in pursuing the case. The court had refused to consider as evidence a U.S. intelligence report that found the Saudi crown prince had “approved” the operation that led to Khashoggi’s death.

“The recent diplomatic rapprochement between Turkey and Saudi Arabia has intensified our doubt in the search for justice in Turkey,” Onderoglu said, adding that the “international community” was also reluctant to pursue accountability.

In court Thursday, prosecutors noted the missing defendants and said attempts to pursue them through Interpol had been fruitless, Onderoglu said. Turkish officials have repeatedly denied that the judiciary is susceptible to government pressure. The next hearing is scheduled for April 7.

Saudi Arabia said in September 2020 that it had convicted eight people for the killing but did not name them. Saudi officials have denied that the crown prince ordered Khashoggi’s murder.

Hatice Cengiz, Khashoggi’s fiancee, also attended the hearing Thursday. In a message posted on Twitter afterward, she wrote about the decision facing Turkey’s Justice Ministry “showing the dilemma facing humanity in the modern era.”

“Which of the two will we choose?” she wrote. “To want to live like a virtuous human being or to build a life by holding material interests above all kinds of values. #justiceforjamal.”

Zeynep Karatas contributed to this report.



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Madison Cawthorn’s antics miff GOP

Rep. Madison Cawthorn’s (R-N.C.) unfounded allegations of being invited to orgies in Washington and seeing people do cocaine is prompting condemnation from his state’s GOP senators, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (Calif.) and other Republicans. 

The 26-year-old first-term lawmaker has been a minor irritation to some Republicans since he joined the House in 2021, but the most recent remarks have put tempers at the boiling point for House Republicans. They also come as an eight-way Republican primary for his seat ramps up.

There is just a month and a half to go until the May 17 primary, and Cawthorn needs to secure at least 30 percent support in order to avoid a primary runoff. 

But with the wave of recent controversies and a lack of allies in the Republican establishment in Washington or in his state, political operatives and primary opponents think he has a good chance of losing his seat.

“The negatives that Cawthorn are incurring are the worst kind of negatives an incumbent can incur, and those are the ones that are self-inflicted,” a longtime Republican political operative in North Carolina told The Hill.

It’s a running joke in Washington that the HBO comedy “Veep” much more accurately depicts lawmakers and administration officials than the provocative drama “House of Cards” on Netflix. 

But when Cawthorn was asked on the “Warrior Poet Society” podcast last week if “House of Cards” was “closer to a documentary,” he leaned in to its dark portrayal of Washington society.

“All of the sudden you get invited to, ‘Well hey, we’re going to have kind of a sexual get together at one of our homes, you should come’ … and then you realize they are asking you to come to an orgy,” Cawthorn said, adding that people who advocate for addiction treatment will do “a key bump of cocaine right in front of you.”

That frustrated Republican members, who said that they started getting questions about whether they attend orgies. Some said Cawthorn needs to name names if he is going to make such an allegation, and many suspect it is simply made up. 

Rep. Steve Womack (R-Ark.) brought his concerns about Cawthon up in Tuesday’s House Republican Conference meeting, which Cawthorn did not attend.

“The only orgy I’m aware of in D.C. is an orgy of spending,” Rep. Dan Bishop (R-N.C.) told The Hill.

Cawthorn’s office declined to comment for this story.

The firestorm over the “orgy” remarks is just the latest in a line of headaches that Cawthorn has caused McCarthy. 

Earlier in the month, Cawthorn called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky a “thug,” prompting a rebuke from McCarthy. He was also recently charged with driving with a revoked license and caused a stir when he likely broke House rules by bringing Tennessee congressional candidate Robby Starbuck onto the House floor in February.

McCarthy spoke to Cawthorn on Wednesday. He told reporters that Cawthorn had “no evidence behind the statements” about orgies and cocaine and that Cawthorn has “got to turn himself around.” The Republican leader did not rule out further disciplinary action for Cawthorn.

“He’s lost my trust, and he’s going to have to earn it back,” McCarthy said.

Criticism did not stop in the lower chamber. Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) told NBC News that Cawthorn has “been an embarrassment at times.” Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) told CNN that the orgy comment was the latest “silly statement” from Cawthorn.

“People in the district are going to have to vote for him, and I would ask them to look at his record and ask what has he done since he’s been here,” Tillis said, adding that Cawthorn has accomplished “not a lot, in my opinion.”

Cawthorn raised nearly $2.9 million in 2021 and has aimed to become an “America First” influencer with endorsements. But his celebrity and fundraising prowess has not translated to having allies in his state.

“I don’t think he’s made many friends amongst elected Republicans, particularly in the state legislature, simply because of the stunt he pulled with wanting to jump from his old congressional district into a newly drawn district,” said J. Michael Bitzer, chair of the political science department at Catawba College in Salisbury, N.C.

Before redistricting was set, Cawthorn moved to run in a different drafted Charlotte-area district rather than the mountainous 11th District and endorsed longtime Republican activist Michele Woodhouse. But when maps changed, he moved back.

Woodhouse stood her ground, and now Cawthorn’s comments are providing fuel for her campaign against him. 

“There’s a new headline of something that he does or says that’s, you know, bizarre comments, bizarre behavior, really unbecoming a member of Congress,” Woodhouse told The Hill.

Another top candidate in the race is state Sen. Chuck Edwards, who has been running television ads in the district for three weeks. He had been less direct about criticizing Cawthorn.

“When he makes headlines, he will be identified as a workhorse, not a show horse,” former North Carolina state Sen. Jim Davis said in an endorsement for Edwards announced Wednesday. 

According to a memorandum on an internal March 10-13 poll from the Edwards campaign obtained by The Hill, 73 percent of likely Republican primary voters were less likely to vote for Cawthorn when informed that he proposed a consumption tax in a “New Contract with America” resolution he released.

The Hill has removed its comment section, as there are many other forums for readers to participate in the conversation. We invite you to join the discussion on Facebook and Twitter.

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North Korea not telling the whole truth about latest ICBM test, South Korean official says

The official, who spoke under the condition of anonymity, said South Korean and US analysis of the March 24 launch of what North Korea claimed was a new Hwasong-17 ICBM, was in actual fact the older and slightly smaller Hwasong-15 — an ICBM last tested by Pyongyang in 2017.

Several missile experts have since reached a similar conclusion, but they caution the significance of last week’s successful ICBM launch — North Korea’s first in more than four years — should not be discounted, pointing out the test still demonstrated a weapon with the theoretical ability to hit all of the continental United States.

The ICBM fired by North Korea last Thursday flew to an altitude of 6,000 kilometers (3,728 miles) and to a distance of 1,080 kilometers (671 miles) with a flight time of 71 minutes before splashing down in waters off Japan’s western coast last Thursday, according to Japan’s Defense Ministry.

Japan’s Vice Defense Minister Makoto Oniki told reporters shortly afterward that the missile’s altitude would suggest it is a “new type of ICBM.”

Japanese officials were sticking to that assessment this week, with Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno saying on Monday that Tokyo judged the missile to be a new type based on flight altitude and other information.

And CNN previously reported that the Pentagon is still assessing to what extent the missile is an improved version of previous launches.

But the South Korean official and missile experts said further close analysis of images in North Korean state media of last week’s launch gave two potential clues relating to Pyongyang’s alleged subterfuge.

The South Korean official said assessments by Seoul and Washington showed the ICBM launched last week only had two engine nozzles, like Hwasong-15, whereas Hwasong-17 has four.

And video released last Friday by state-run Korean Central Television (KCTV) purporting to show Kim Jong Un guiding the launch reveal the North Korean leader’s shadow appearing westward, meaning it was filmed in the morning, but the launch took place in the afternoon, the official said.

Also, it was cloudy in the launch area last Thursday, but the weather in the KCTV video appears to be sunny, the official said.

Analysts say US must still be wary

Several missile experts have also begun to cast doubt on North Korea’s claim to have launched a Hwasong-17.

Jeffrey Lewis, director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, said the KCTV video appears to have been made during a failed launch on March 16, in which a North Korean missile exploded soon after liftoff around an altitude of 20 kilometers (12.5 miles).

“North Korea released a video after the March 24 test. We measured the shadows in it, however, and it is clear from the altitude and angle of the sun that the video is from the test on the morning of March 16,” Lewis said.

“The video is of the (previous) test that failed. That strongly suggests the other test was something different that they don’t want us to see.”

Ankit Panda, a nuclear policy expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said Pyongyang may have altered the Hwasong-15 — first tested nearly five years ago — to make it look like a more powerful missile.

“They claimed that it’s the Hwasong-17, which is the new, very large ICBM they inaugurated at a parade in October 2020, but it looks like what they actually did was they put a very light or perhaps no payload on a Hwasong-15, which is the ICBM they first tested in November 2017. And they used that to stage a demonstration,” Panda said.

Panda said Pyongyang’s apparently inflated claim was aimed at a domestic audience rather than internationally.

“The only thing going well in North Korea right now is the missile program, so perhaps Kim Jong Un plans to use this demonstration to indicate to his own people that they are suffering, the food shortages, the economic difficulties, the lockdown over Covid, that all of this has been worth it, because their national defense capabilities are still advancing,” he said.

On Tuesday, South Korean lawmaker Ha Tae-keung told reporters that, according to a military briefing, debris rained down over the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, following the failed March 16 test.

Ha’s office confirmed the lawmaker’s remarks to CNN on Thursday, adding North Korea may have been prompted to announce the March 24 Hwasong-15 launch as a Hwasong-17 to temper negative opinions in Pyongyang, where citizens witnessed the March 16 failure. North Korea has not acknowledged reports of a failed March 16 test.

Lewis, the nuclear weapons expert, said regardless of which missile was fired last Thursday, the test showed a powerful offensive capability that US defense officials have to be wary of.

“The missile fired on March 24 would have had a range of about 12,000 kilometers (7,500 miles), which is certainly within the capability of a Hwasong-15, which can deliver a nuclear weapon anywhere in the United States,” Lewis said.

And Matsuno, the Japanese official, said Monday that North Korea’s missile program remains a serious threat to the security of Japan, the region and the world.

CNN’s Yoonjung Seo and Junko Ogura contributed to this report.

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