Category Archives: US

Texas coach has broken arm after he’s chased, beaten by middle schoolers

A Texas physics teacher was chased and beaten by a group of middle school students who broke his arm in the attack, video shows.

The assault occurred at Langham Creek High School in Houston on Thursday when students from Aragon Middle School attacked assistant baseball coach and high school physics teacher Michael Shott during a baseball practice, according to reports.

Cell phone video posted on social media shows Shott sprinting away full speed through the high school parking lot attempting to evade several pursuing students while others follow, taking videos of the attack on their phones.

At one point, the attackers catch up and force their coach to the ground, before he gets up and runs out into an area of the parking lot away from them.

Shott’s mother, Peggy Shott, told KTRK that her son suffered a broken arm as a result.

“He’s doing fine. He’s at home. He has a broken arm, but the kids said that he’s doing what he’s always done and he’s fine,” she said.

A video shows middle school baseball coach Michael Shott getting chased and beaten by students.
Alisha Marie/Facebook

“The reason it happened to him was because he was doing his job. He stopped the kids. Well, there was only one kid at first. The reason the others came back is because they didn’t like him stopping them.”

Students and social media users say the coach was jumped because he told the students they couldn’t ride dirt bikes or ATVs on school grounds, KABB reported.

Following Thursday’s altercation, Cypress Fairbanks Independent School District confirmed that the school received threats of further violence via social media, prompting the deployment of security officers at the school.

Shott is a physics teacher at Aragon Middle School.
Aragon Middle School/Facebook

“Our campuses must be the safest places in our community for students, staff and visitors,” school officials said in a statement Friday. “We will not tolerate anyone compromising the safe environment of our campuses, and will address violations to the greatest extent possible.”

Four students involved in the attack were taken into custody and will be disciplined according to the code of conduct, district officials said in a letter to parents.

It’s unclear if the juveniles will face charges for the beat down.

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Moderate GOP governor tears into party’s direction: ‘I think they’re focused on the wrong things’

The comments from Hogan, a moderate Republican who frequently speaks out against his party and former President Donald Trump, come days after he declined to be a candidate for US Senate, disappointing GOP leaders who saw him as the party’s best shot at ousting one of the state’s incumbent Democratic senators.

“I think they’re, you know, sometimes focused on the wrong things. Not just being a roadblock to Biden. I mean there are certain things we want to stand up to President Biden. The inflation is out of control and we’re talking about billions in more spending — trillions of more spending,” Hogan told CNN’s Jake Tapper on “State of the Union.”

“We want to make sure that we do stand up and speak out. But I’m concerned that they’re focusing too much on looking at the past and trying to relitigate the last election and arguing about things instead of having a positive, hopeful vision for America,” he added.

Hogan, who is term-limited as governor and will leave office in January 2023, said he was “flattered” that party leaders saw him as possibly being a “voice of reason and sanity in Washington,” but added that he never had a desire to be in the US Senate.

“I have much more power as governor of Maryland and make decisions every day that impact people’s lives. And I like to get things done. And in Washington it seems as if there’s just a lot of divisiveness and dysfunction and not a lot gets done. So it wasn’t the right job, the right fit for me,” he said.

Hogan was first elected governor of Maryland in 2014 and was reelected four years later by more than 10 percentage points. His success in the heavily Democratic state, plus the perceived weakness of Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen, had prompted repeated overtures by GOP leaders to get the governor to run for Senate this year.

Hogan has hinted at larger ambitions than Capitol Hill.

When asked Sunday if he’s considering a 2024 presidential bid, he replied: “We’re certainly going to take a look at it after January of ’23.”

“I’m concerned about the direction of the party and the country. And I’ll make a decision about 2024 after I finish this job,” he said.

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Woman, 35, Followed and Stabbed Inside Her Chinatown Apartment

A 35-year-old woman was stabbed to death inside her Lower Manhattan apartment early Sunday by a man who had followed her from the street and into her building, the police said.

The woman, whom police identified as Christina Yuna Lee, was the latest person of Asian descent injured or killed in a string of random attacks in New York City, many of them committed by people who had severe mental illness.

Surveillance video obtained by The New York Post shows Ms. Lee being trailed to her building on Chrystie Street in Chinatown by a man who catches the door behind her and follows her inside. In the video, Ms. Lee enters the building vestibule minutes before 4:30 a.m. and walks down the hallway and out of the camera’s view as the man, identified by police officials as Assamad Nash, 25, trails her.

Neighbors called the police a short time later about a disturbance, the police said, and when they got to the building, the door to Ms. Lee’s apartment was locked, and Mr. Nash had barricaded himself into the apartment.

When Emergency Service Unit officers arrived and broke in, police officials said, Ms. Lee was found dead in her bathtub. Mr. Nash tried to escape out of a back window, the police said. He was arrested inside the apartment, they said. He had cuts and lacerations and was taken to Bellevue Hospital.

Mr. Nash has a history of misdemeanor arrests, court records show, including an incident in September in Grand Street station, near the building where the killing occurred, when a 62-year man told the police that Mr. Nash had punched him in the face after the man swiped his MetroCard for another passenger.

Though the police have not called the killing a hate crime, attacks against Asian Americans have been on the rise since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. Last December, the Police Department reported that such attacks were up 361 percent from the previous year, and last month, Michelle Alyssa Go, a 40-year-old Asian American woman, was pushed to her death while waiting for a southbound R train at Times Square.

Last week, Jarrod Powell, 50, was charged with second-degree murder as a hate crime in the death of Yao Pan Ma, a 61-year-old Chinese immigrant, who died on Dec. 31 from injuries he suffered in an East Harlem attack in April.

Police officials said it does not appear Ms. Lee knew her attacker or had any prior contact with him before he followed her home.

She lived in a six-story walk-up steps from the Grand Street subway station. As snow fell on Sunday afternoon, police guarded the building, allowing only residents and detectives to enter. A small grocery store advertising cigarettes and soda in Chinese was shuttered.

Andrew Oaks, 30, who lives in the building, said that he was awake at 4:30 a.m. when he heard screams that “sounded like something out of a movie.” He added that he “thought nothing of it,” until he heard banging on the door and the police began questioning residents later in the morning.

In a tweet Sunday afternoon, Mayor Eric Adams called the stabbing “horrific,” saying “we stand with our Asian community today.”

“While the suspect who committed this heinous act is now in custody, the conditions that created him remain,” Mr. Adams said in an official statement shortly after his tweet. “The mission of this administration is clear: We won’t let this violence go unchecked.”

Assemblywoman Yuh-Line Niou, who represents the district, called the details of the attack a “worst nightmare scenario.”

“She was still screaming and fighting for her life, and they weren’t able to get to her for almost an hour and a half,” Ms. Niou said.

She said she was emotionally drained from the string of rallies she and other Asian American community leaders have had to attend in recent weeks, including one two days ago about a Korean diplomat who was assaulted.

“This has happened so many times, and we have attended too many vigils,” she said.

Mr. Nash had been arrested at least four times last year on misdemeanor charges, including assault, harassment and selling a fare card, court records show. Three of the cases remain open, according to online court records. A spokesman for the Legal Aid Society, which is representing him in the open matters, declined to comment.

Police released Mr. Nash with a desk-appearance ticket in the assault case and in an earlier arrest in connection with the unlawful sale of a fare card, according to court records shared by the Manhattan district attorney’s office. At his arraignment on Oct. 13 on the assault case, the judge released him without bail, the records show.

On Jan. 8, Mr. Nash was arrested again and charged with criminal mischief and possession of a forged instrument. According to a criminal complaint, he disabled several MetroCard vending machines at Herald Square, Penn Station and Second Avenue over a monthlong spree. When he was arrested, the police said, he tried to escape from a holding van after cops found bent MetroCards in his pockets.

At his arraignment, a judge put Mr. Nash under supervised release, requiring him to check in three times a month, twice in person and once by phone, according to the records.

Jeffrey E. Singer contributed reporting.



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Canada truckers protests: Protesters blocking a US-Canada border crossing over Covid-19 mandates can face severe penalties, official says

Now, those refusing to budge will face severe consequences, the leader of Ontario province said.

“Fines for noncompliance will be severe, with a maximum penalty of $100,000 and up to a year imprisonment.”

The protests stemmed from truckers opposing Canada’s new mandate requiring them to either be fully vaccinated when crossing the Canadian-US border or face a two-week quarantine.

Their “Freedom Convoy” has since drawn supporters resisting other Covid-19 prevention measures, including mask mandates, lockdowns and restrictions on gatherings.

Up to 30 protesters have been arrested near the Ambassador Bridge, most of whom were charged with “criminal mischief,” Windsor Police Chief Pamela Mizuno told reporters Sunday afternoon. Windsor police also seized five vehicles from protesters Sunday, Mizuno said, and seven vehicles were towed Saturday.

The police chief did not provide a timeline for when the bridge was expected to reopen, but said police were focusing on restoring traffic flow in the area and would open it as soon as they could.

“From the onset of the demonstration, our goal was to resolve this situation safely and peacefully,” Mizuno said, adding “while police officers are authorized by law to use force, at this time I’m not aware of any injuries as a result of any police interaction that has occurred since the onset of the protest.”

Police expect to have a heightened presence in the region to maintain order, the chief said.

‘It’s not just Canada. It’s worldwide now’

Despite the new crackdown by police, some protesters weren’t ready to go home.

Eunice Lucas-Logan showed up for her third day of protests Sunday with a quilt she made in the design of the Canadian sesquicentennial flag.

“You have the vaccinations for the measles, mumps and stuff. I’m allergic to eggs. They don’t work on me. How do you know if I got that stuff in my body, I’m not going to have an anaphylactic shock to it?” she asked. “Right now, because they can’t tell me for sure that it’s not going to affect me down the line, I won’t do it.”

None of the four Covid-19 vaccines authorized for use in Canada have egg products nor egg culture in them.

“A friend of mine texted me … ‘Who imagined that little old Canada started this?’ I said, yes. And take a look, it’s just not staying in Canada. Australia, my cousin in Australia said it’s happening there. New Zealand, Spain, it’s not just Canada. It’s worldwide now.”

Lucas-Logan said she hopes Prime Minister Justin Trudeau finds “a very fast way of getting rid of our mandates.”

“If he was a wise man, he would say, ‘You know what? We don’t have to do the vaccination stuff anymore,'” she said.

An ‘economic crisis’ may be over

Almost a week after protesters started blocking the bridge, the mayor of Windsor said the the economic fallout is ending.

“Today, our national economic crisis at the Ambassador bridge came to an end,” Mayor Drew Dilkens said in a written statement Sunday.

“Border crossings will reopen when it is safe to do so and I defer to police and border agencies to make that determination.”

Canada-bound traffic at the bridge was still suspended early Sunday, according to a Canadian website tracking traffic at border crossings. US-bound traffic was open, according to the US Customs and Border Protection website.
Police started detaining protesters after a judge ordered them to leave the Ambassador Bridge by 7 p.m. Friday. Some protesters moved away on their own as police approached Saturday morning.

And for two weeks, protesters have blocked the downtown core of Canada’s capital, Ottawa including at its main airport.

On Sunday, Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson announced he reached an agreement with organizers to exit residential areas of the capital’s downtown core and restrict their demonstrations to streets directly in front of Canada’s national parliament.

Watson recognized this was not a long-term solution but told city councilors in a statement provided to CNN “it represents a positive first step.”

In a letter provided to CNN from the mayor’s office, Tamara Lich, one of the “Freedom Convoy” organizers, wrote while some residents have supported and encouraged them, she realized others have been disturbed.

“We will be working hard over the next 24 hours to get buy in from the truckers,” Lich wrote in the letter addressed to Watson. “We hope to start repositioning our trucks on Monday,” Lich wrote.

Most Canadians (including truckers) are vaccinated

Canada has one of the highest vaccination rates in the world, with about 4 in every 5 Canadians fully vaccinated, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

And nearly 90% of the country’s truckers are fully vaccinated and eligible to cross the border, according to the Canadian government.

Still, the protesters have been vocal and blared the horns of their vehicles, prompting a judge in Ottawa to rule Monday they must stop honking for 10 days.

Protesters have also used semitrailers — and sometimes farm equipment and other vehicles — to block crossings between Emerson, Manitoba, and Pembina, North Dakota, as well as at the Coutts access point between Alberta and Montana.

And about 50 vehicles have blocked access to the Canadian-US border at Emerson since Thursday, the Manitoba Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Saturday.

The behavior of some protesters is ‘completely unacceptable’

Trudeau and other government officials were briefed on the law enforcement action in Windsor Saturday, a statement from his office said.

“The Prime Minister stressed border crossings cannot, and will not, remain closed, and all options remain on the table,” the statement said.

Across the border, the blockade has also hurt Americans, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said Friday.

“We are at an economic crisis because of this illegal blockade,” which is becoming a homeland security issue, Whitmer said.

Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson told CNN more protests might develop.

“It’s completely unacceptable — particularly in the neighborhoods where some of the protesters are going into restaurants and refusing to wear a mask and harassing staff and really being belligerent to the residents of our city,” the mayor said.

Officials in US ‘ready’ if similar protests break out

US officials are gearing up in case similar protests emerge — including the possibility of a protest affecting Sunday’s Super Bowl in Southern California.

“The convoy will potentially begin in California as early as mid-February and arrive in Washington, DC, as late as mid-March, potentially impacting the Super Bowl LVI scheduled for 13 February and the State of the Union Address scheduled for 1 March,” a bulletin from the Department of Homeland Security said.

And a group in the US said it’s organizing two trucker convoys that will head to the US-Canadian border in Buffalo, New York, this weekend.

But the city said Friday no group had applied for permits to hold events.

“Nor have the organizers contacted our Special Events Office to arrange for the appropriate insurance and public safety planning that is required for all events in the City to ensure the health and safety of residents and visitors,” Buffalo city spokesperson Michael DeGeorge told CNN.

“It is always a concern when laws that are designed to keep people and property protected are willfully ignored.”

Buffalo’s mayor said the city is ready to handle what might happen.

“We’re ready for these trucks,” Mayor Byron Brown said Saturday. “But our goal is to keep our roadways open and to make sure that residents and visitors are safe and healthy.”

CNN’s Kim Berryman and Miguel Marquez reported from Windsor. Paula Newton, Chuck Johnson, Amanda Sealy, Paradise Afshar, Chris Isidore, Lucy Kafanov and Dakin Andone also contributed to this report.



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What to know ahead of a verdict in Palin vs NYT case

More than four years after former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) sued The New York Times over an editorial linking her to a deadly 2011 shooting in an Arizona parking lot, she finally took the stand in a trial last week. 

James Bennet, then the editorial page editor at the Times, has denied the newspaper intentionally tried to blame Palin for the shooting in the since-corrected article, and the Times also also argued that it did not harm her reputation. 

Palin and her legal team must now persuade jurors that the Times and Bennet’s actions were made with “actual malice,” a high bar for defamation cases against public figures. 

The jury of nine people began deliberations on Friday in the case and are expected to resume their work on Monday morning.

Here’s what you need to know ahead of the verdict. 

The article

At the center of the trial is an editorial, titled “America’s Lethal Politics,” that drew a link between Palin’s political action committee and the 2011 shooting that wounded several people, including Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Ariz.), and killed six. 

The piece stated that the shooting took place after Palin’s PAC shared a map placing 20 Democratic lawmakers including Giffords in “stylized cross hairs.” It was published on the same day as a shooting at a baseball field where Republican lawmakers were practicing. 

The editorial was later corrected to say that the opinion piece “incorrectly stated that a link existed between political rhetoric and the 2011 shooting.” 

Palin’s testimony 

The former governor and 2008 Republican U.S. vice presidential candidate has previously been an outspoken critic of what she has called “lame stream” media. 

In her testimony during the trial, she described herself as feeling “powerless” as a result of the editorial, according to Reuters.

“It was devastating to read, again, an accusation, a false accusation that I had anything to do with murder, murdering innocent people,” Palin said. “And I felt powerless.”

“It’s hard to lay your head on a pillow and have a restful night when you know that lies are told about you, a specific lie that was not going to be fixed,” she added, arguing that the paper was “trying to score political points” as the “the be-all, end-all, the loud voice in American media.”

Bennet’s testimony:

Bennet, who was the former editor-in-chief of The Atlantic before becoming the opinion page editor at the Times, resigned from the newspaper in June 2020 following the publication of a highly criticized op-ed piece by Sen. Tom CottonTom Bryant CottonOvernight Health Care — GOP shows support for Canadian protesters Overdose epidemic costs US T per year: research This plan for US critical minerals works around supply chain woes MORE, calling for a military response to civil unrest taking place in the U.S. at the time.

The piece at the center of the Palin trial was originally drafted by Elizabeth Williamson before Bennet added the part that stated “the link to political incitement was clear.”  

Bennet was also asked why the Times never formally apologized to Palin, to which he explained that the paper has a policy of “not apologizing for corrections.”

“The feeling of the standards editors, I think, was that of course The Times regrets its errors,” Bennet said, according to NPR. “They’re correcting them. That’s an extremely painful thing for the journalists and is an expression of regret.”

Closing Arguments: 

In closing arguments on Friday, David AxelrodDavid AxelrodTester knocks Democrats on rural outreach The Memo: No more ‘the former guy’ as Biden tackles Trump head-on Biden’s to-do list for 2022 looks a lot like 2021’s MORE, a lawyer for the Times, argued that the newspaper made a mistake but did not intentionally harm Palin’s reputation, according to The Associated Press

Axelrod asserted that the First Amendment protects journalists ​​“who make an honest mistake when they write about a person like Sarah Palin … That’s all this was about — an honest mistake.”

Meanwhile, Palin’s attorney, Kenneth Turkel, said the newspaper’s lack of apology was “indicative of an arrogance and sense of power that’s uncontrolled,” the AP reported.

“What this dispute is about in its simplest form is power, and lack of power,” Turkel said, claiming this was an example of how the Times “treated people on the right they don’t agree with. … They don’t care. She’s just one of ‘them.’”



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In Arbery Hate Crimes Trial, Racism Will Take Center Stage

ATLANTA — The killing of George Floyd catalyzed a period of national soul-searching about race and racism that has touched nearly every aspect of American life. But in a number of high-profile trials since then — including in the murder of Mr. Floyd and the killing of Ahmaud Arbery — prosecutors have carefully avoided putting racism itself on center stage.

That changes as soon as this week, as federal prosecutors try to prove that the white men who killed Mr. Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man, committed a federal hate crime when they chased and killed him “because of Arbery’s race and color,” as their indictment puts it.

In the upcoming trial, prosecutors are almost certain to feature ugly evidence, culled from seized cellphones and other sources, seeking to prove that the three Georgia residents — Travis McMichael, 36, his father, Gregory McMichael, 66, and their neighbor William Bryan, 52 — harbored racist views before the afternoon in February 2020 when they gave chase to Mr. Arbery.

In one potential preview of the evidence to come, an F.B.I. agent testified at a Jan. 31 hearing that Travis McMichael’s text message history and social media posts include instances of his calling Black people “monkeys” and “savages,” and contain “evidence where the defendant expressed desires for crimes to be committed against African Americans.”

But racism alone isn’t a crime; experts say that prosecutors must convince a jury that it motivated the men to pursue and harm Mr. Arbery. The defendants have said that they pursued Mr. Arbery because they suspected him of break-ins in their neighborhood.

As a result, the trial presents a test for President Biden’s Justice Department and for Attorney General Merrick B. Garland, who has made the prosecution of hate crimes one of his top priorities.

“This is going to be a difficult case to prove,” said Deval L. Patrick, the former governor of Massachusetts who headed the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division under President Bill Clinton. “It doesn’t mean the case isn’t there to be made.”

In state court, the three defendants have already been convicted of murder and have been sentenced to life in prison, with only Mr. Bryan’s sentence including the possibility of parole. All three could each face a maximum life sentence if found guilty in the federal trial.

On a practical level, a conviction in federal court would ensure that the defendants receive significant prison time even if their state murder convictions get overturned or their sentences reduced on appeal. On a symbolic level, the federal case gives prosecutors the opportunity to demonstrate the Justice Department’s commitment in fighting hate crimes.

But as prosecutors present the jury with explicit expressions of bigotry, the trial may also prove to be a difficult moment for a nation that remains bitterly torn over the extent to which its residents should openly confront the realities of American racism, both past and present.

Many are welcoming that confrontation, no matter how the jury rules. In Brunswick, the coastal Georgia city close to the neighborhood where Mr. Arbery was killed, the Rev. Darren West viewed the original murder trial as about not just a heinous crime but also the story of the everyday inequities and injustices experienced by African Americans in his community. In the murder trial, prosecutors made what appeared to be a strategic decision to largely sidestep issues of race as they presented their case to a nearly all-white jury.

Now, Mr. West is bracing for a new trial that will reveal the harsh and casual language of racism. It will be both uncomfortable and necessary, he said.

“Race and racism was always a part of this case. It was just unspoken. Now, race or racism will actually be on trial,” said Mr. West, who has led marches and rallies protesting Mr. Arbery’s death. “I think what we will hear is the kind of stuff this nation has been running away from or covering up for a very long time.”

The three men were charged with hate crimes and attempted kidnapping in a federal grand jury indictment in April 2021, nearly a year after their arrest on murder charges by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. The McMichaels are also charged with one count each of having or discharging a firearm during a violent crime.

A jury will decide their fate at a time of rising hate-fueled violence and intimidation in the United States. According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, there were 8,263 reported hate crimes in 2020, the highest level since 2001.

A forthcoming study by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University in San Bernardino notes that the number of anti-Black hate crimes in 2020 was the highest recorded since 2008, the year of Barack Obama’s presidential win.

Mr. Garland has vowed to sharpen the federal response, including better incident reporting and law-enforcement training.

But hate crimes are particularly hard to prove. Between 2005 and 2019, the Justice Department pursued just 17 percent of suspected hate crime cases for prosecution, according to a report released in July 2021.

When it does decide to prosecute, the cases usually end with defendants pleading guilty. In the Arbery case, a judge in late January rejected a proposed plea deal between federal prosecutors and the McMichaels after Mr. Arbery’s family members objected.

The federal government has a number of statutes it may rely upon to accuse someone of a hate crime. The Georgia defendants were charged under a 1960s-era statute that prohibits using threats or violence to prevent people from engaging in activities like voting, attending a school, dining at a lunch counter or, as in Mr. Arbery’s case, enjoying the use of a public street, because of their “race, color, religion or national origin.”

The Justice Department’s decisions about whether to bring hate-crimes or other civil rights-related charges have become a common plot point in a number of infamous acts of violence.

After a group of Los Angeles Police Department officers involved in the 1991 beating of Rodney King, a Black motorist, was acquitted by a California jury, setting off days of rioting, justice officials secured civil-rights indictments against the officers and won convictions against two of them.

Decades later, the Justice Department declined to bring civil rights charges against George Zimmerman, the Florida man who in 2012 fatally shot Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old Black youth.

More recently, in a highly publicized state trial last April, a jury found Derek Chauvin, the white former Minneapolis police officer, guilty of murder in the killing of George Floyd. In December, Mr. Chauvin pleaded guilty to federal charges of depriving Mr. Floyd of his civil rights by using unreasonable force on him.

But the lawyers in Mr. Chauvin’s murder trial treaded lightly when it came to race matters, much like the murder trial of the three Georgia men. In both trials, video footage of the violence perpetrated against the Black victims gave prosecutors a powerful tool in persuading jurors to arrive at guilty verdicts.

In the Arbery case, it is unclear if federal prosecutors will be able to introduce one of the most explosive allegations of racism, which emerged in a pretrial hearing in the state case: an accusation by Mr. Bryan that Travis McMichael used a racist slur shortly after fatally shooting Mr. Arbery.

Legal experts say that because Mr. McMichael has a constitutional right to confront his accuser, the judge may allow the accusation to be aired only if Mr. Bryan takes the stand. And because Mr. Bryan is also on trial, he could exercise his right not to testify. (Mr. McMichael’s lawyers dispute that he used the slur after the shooting.)

The proposed plea deals for the McMichaels amounted to an admission, on their parts, that they had been motivated by race when they went after Mr. Arbery. But the details of their scuttled agreements will not be admissible at trial.

A possible blueprint for the federal prosecutors’ case emerged at the Jan. 31 hearing over the plea deals. Tara M. Lyons, assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Georgia, said that Travis McMichael did not belong to hate groups and did not “set out” to harm a Black person on the day of the killing. Rather, she said, “he had made assumptions about Ahmaud Arbery that he would not have made if Ahmaud Arbery had been white.”

The jury may have to decide whether such assumptions amount to sufficient evidence to prove a racial motive for the crime.

If that is what the trial boils down to, it may prove difficult to secure convictions, said Arthur Ago, director of the Criminal Justice Project at the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

But no matter the outcome, Mr. Ago said, the trial will send a signal from the federal government: “If you have biases, and you are acting on those biases in a way that might not be explicit, we will come after you. Because that is a hate crime.”


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Florida agriculture officer dies in crash on I-95 in Nassau County

NASSAU COUNTY, Fla. – A Florida Agricultural Law Enforcement Officer died after a crash on I-95 in Nassau County, the Florida Highway Patrol said Sunday.

At around 8:30 p.m., Officer James McWhorter, 31, was attempting to cross the southbound lanes of I-95 at the median in a marked Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services patrol car near mile marker 380. When he pulled out he was struck by a Ford F-150 truck on the passenger side. Both vehicles ended up on the right shoulder of the highway.

The four passengers of the Ford were transported to a local hospital with minor injuries.

Officer McWhorter worked in the Law Enforcement Division of the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services for over two years. He leaves behind a fiancée and four children.

FHP is investigating this crash.

Joe Tillman said McWhorter and he went to the police academy together.

“I can say that James through our academy was the most genuine people in the class. He was always friendly, willing to help out another classmate,” Tillman said. “I know James had children and my heart breaks for his family.”

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Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried issued a statement Sunday about McWhorter: “The Florida Department of Agriculture is devastated to learn of the passing of one of our own while on duty last night. Our hearts are with Officer McWhorter’s loved ones during this incredibly difficult time. We are so grateful to him for his service to our state, and we owe him and his family a debt of gratitude that can never be repaid.”

McWhorter was hired by the Office of Agricultural Law Enforcement in January 2019 and sponsored through the law enforcement academy at the Florida Gateway College Public Safety Training Center where he graduated and was certified in June 2019. He was stationed on Interstate 95 in Nassau County where he was well-liked and respected by his peers. Officer McWhorter is described as a loving family man who loved helping people and was a great listener.

“Officer McWhorter was an excellent officer and devoted to his family, co-workers and the public he served. We will miss him greatly and send our condolences to his family, friends and fellow officers during this difficult time,” said Colonel James Wiggins, Director of the Office of Agricultural Law Enforcement.

Copyright 2022 by WJXT News4Jax – All rights reserved.



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Updated forecast: Snow ending after coating to 2 inches, very cold tonight

This is our last update. Stay tuned for our PM forecast update for the forecast for tonight into tomorrow. That should publish by around 5 p.m. Otherwise, scroll down for our earlier forecast for the next few days.

12:45 p.m. update: Light snow continues falling in a strip from roughly Charlottesville through the D.C. area and up to Baltimore. Temperatures range from 30 to 35 degrees from northwest to southeast. While you may encounter a few slick spots in our colder areas well north and west of Washington, for the most part this snow is non-accumulating, except on grassy areas — very slowly.

So far, trace amounts (from downtown Washington south and east) to a couple inches of snow have fallen, with the highest amounts in our far north and west areas (there have been some isolated 2- to 4- inch totals). It seems like our snowfall forecast has worked out well.

Light snow may linger in the immediate area through mid-to-late afternoon before ending with little additional accumulation.. Toward Southern Maryland, the snow may linger into early evening and there might be a more moderate burst there that puts down a quick coating, mainly on grassy areas.

If you’re driving to a Super Bowl party this evening, the snow will probably have ended in most spots and we don’t expect widespread iciness on roads but an icy patch or two may be possible — especially in our colder areas.

9:45 a.m. update: Snow has tapered to just flurries or a mist for most of us, except for some light snow that will briefly linger south and east of D.C. Most roads should remain just wet, but take it slow on elevated surfaces like ramps and bridges, which could have a few icy spots.

Areas from around D.C. and I-95 and east could see another band of light snow between approximately 12:30 and 4 p.m., but temperatures should be warm enough to prevent any impact on roads, with maybe another dusting or so possible on the grass.

The National Weather Service has now cancelled the winter weather advisory for the entire D.C. area.

We may pause updates until steadier snow develops toward midday. Check back around then.

9:30 a.m. update: A somewhat persistent band of light snow covering D.C., near and along I-95, and just to the south and east is now giving some of those areas that missed out on the snow earlier this morning a very light accumulation mainly on grass. Temperatures are actually quite chilly, around 30-33F where currently snowing. But with the warm ground the past couple of days, not cold enough for icy spots, except for perhaps a few on elevated surfaces like ramps and bridges.

Elsewhere, radar is pretty quiet now for areas north and west of D.C. that saw a coating to 2 inches earlier this morning.

8 a.m. update: Scattered light snow showers should continue to linger into early afternoon. Most roads are just wet, but some icy spots remain possible mainly from around northern Montgomery, northern Howard, western Loudoun, and northern Fauquier counties to the north and west. The winter advisory remains in effect west of D.C. and I-95, but has been cancelled from D.C. and I-95 to the east, where temperatures are at or above freezing.

Here are some snow totals thus far from NWS and social media reports: Damascus (2.0″), Clarksburg (1.5″), North Potomac (1.1″), Columbia (1.0″), Olney (0.8″), Rockville, (0.6″), Silver Spring (0.2″), Warrenton (2.0″), Chantilly (1.1″), Ashburn (1.1″), Dulles (0.6″), Wolf Trap (0.6″), Herndon (0.9″), Falls Church (0.2″), Fairfax (0.2″), Reagan National (Trace).

And some pictures to go with the snow totals…

6:45 a.m. update: A period of heavier overnight snow left a coating to an inch of snow in many spots, with the highest amounts north and west of the Beltway, where some roads were briefly covered. But the remaining snow showers are light and roads are mainly just wet across the area now.

Scattered light snow showers should continue on and off into early afternoon, but should be light enough for not much more accumulation and mostly just wet roads across most of the DMV. That said, some slick spots are possible from around northern Montgomery, northern Howard, western Loudoun, and northern Fauquier counties to the north and west, where temperatures are currently 28-30F (see recent temperature map below, courtesy Weather Underground).

A somewhat subjective rating of the day’s weather, on a scale of 0 to 10.

5/10: A rude return to winter with a little snow and much colder. Slight improvement as lingering snow showers taper midday and sunshine tries to peek through later in the afternoon.

  • Today: Light snow and snow showers gradually taper. Highs: Mid-30s.
  • Tonight: Partly cloudy and cold. Lows: Mid-teens to mid-20s.
  • Tomorrow: Early snow shower? Breezy. Highs: Low to mid-30s.

Winter has returned, with a little snow today, and much lower temperatures through tomorrow with highs only in the 30s. Temperatures trend closer to average on Tuesday, rising to the 40s, before returning to above-average territory (in the 50s) on Wednesday. Our next storm looks like rain on Thursday, when highs could reach the 60s.

Today (Sunday): Light snow or snow showers taper late morning into early afternoon from west to east. A dusting to 2 inches is most likely (highest north and west, lowest south and east), particularly on grassy surfaces. Even with morning temperatures near freezing, the warm ground leading up to the storm should limit accumulation on paved surfaces, but proceed with caution regardless, especially north and west of D.C., where it could be a little snowier and colder.

Afternoon highs reach only the mid-30s with wind chills mainly in the 20s to near 30, as a wind from the north occasionally gusts near 20 mph. Confidence: Medium

Tonight: Skies are partly cloudy with very chilly low temperatures bottoming out near dawn in the mid-teens to mid-20s. Northerly winds around 10 mph, gusting near 20 mph, keep wind chills mostly in the teens. Some patchy icy spots are possible in those areas where snow accumulated and melted a bit during the day; even if it looks darker and simply wet, it may in fact be “black ice.” Confidence: Medium

Tomorrow (Monday): Other than a morning snow flurry or quick snow shower, we should have partly to mostly sunny skies much of the day. It’s still wintry and chilly, though, with high temperatures about 15 degrees below average, in the low to mid-30s. Northwest winds gusting near 25 mph a few times help keep wind chills in the 20s. Confidence: Medium

Tomorrow night: Skies are mostly clear and winds should calm. Lows again range from the mid-teens in our colder suburbs to around 20 to the low 20s downtown and inside the Beltway. Confidence: Medium

With high pressure very much in control on Tuesday, sunshine helps warm us a bit closer toward average, with highs near 40 to the mid-40s. Southwesterly breezes probably remain light, helping us stay fairly comfortable for mid-February. Overnight lows trend a bit warmer, only dropping to the upper 20s to low 30s under fairly clear skies. Confidence: Medium

Wednesday should start off with a good deal of sunshine, with perhaps increasing clouds later in the day ahead of the next storm system eyeing our region. We should stay rain-free, though, with highs in the 50s as a milder breeze comes from the south. The early outlook for Thursday is even warmer with highs 60s, but with rain possible. Confidence: Medium



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Canadian Police Clear Protesters Disrupting Cross-Border Bridge Traffic

Canadian police on Sunday arrested protesters and towed vehicles to clear access to a crucial bridge connecting Detroit with the Canadian border city of Windsor, Ontario, a move local officials say marks an end to a week of economic turbulence.

Law-enforcement and border officials are working on a timetable as to when the 1.6-mile Ambassador Bridge might reopen. Windsor police said Sunday that they hoped to allow traffic to resume on the bridge at some point during the day.

Protesters had succeeded in largely blocking most two-way bridge traffic since Monday in an attempt to persuade governments in Canada to drop Covid-19 vaccine mandates and related social restrictions.

Over 100 police officers surrounded the remaining protesters shortly after 8 a.m. ET Sunday on a main street that leads to access to the bridge, over which hundreds of millions of dollars of goods are transported by trucks into the U.S. and Canada each day.

A spokesman for the Windsor Police Service said roughly 12 protesters were arrested on Sunday and two or more vehicles were towed. Sgt. Steve Betteridge said protesters who were arrested weren’t violent and police didn’t have to use force.

“We are hoping to have the roadway open and the bridge open later today,” Sgt. Betteridge said. “But as you can appreciate, it’s a very fluid situation.”

Windsor police added that officers would remain in the vicinity of the bridge until they judged it safe for regular traffic to resume. “There will be zero tolerance for illegal activity,” the police force said in a tweet.

A Canadian judge granted police permission to forcibly remove the protesters starting Friday evening, following a petition from the City of Windsor and auto-industry representatives.

“Today, our national economic crisis at the Ambassador Bridge came to an end,” Windsor Mayor

Drew Dilkens

said Sunday. “Border crossings will reopen when it is safe to do so and I defer to police and border agencies to make that determination.”

Police officers moved along a road leading to the Ambassador Bridge on Sunday after clearing demonstrators.



Photo:

CARLOS OSORIO/REUTERS

A spokeswoman for the Canada Border Services Agency said officials were working with police to restore normal border operations as quickly as possible.

North American auto makers, including

General Motors Co.

,

Stellantis

NV, and

Ford Motor Co.

, have curtailed production over the past week and sent employees home in some cases because parts required for assembly couldn’t be delivered. Some Canadian auto-parts suppliers have also begun to reduce production because they have been unable to ship orders to the U.S.

Auto-industry representatives on Saturday applauded efforts by police in their initial efforts to clear access to the Ambassador Bridge.

With authorities moving to reopen the bridge, the focus in Canada will now turn to ending a protest in Ottawa, which on Sunday entered its 17th day. Protest organizers have repeatedly said they won’t leave the capital until governments in Canada drop the vaccine mandates and social restrictions. Over 400 heavy-duty trucks and other vehicles have turned the capital’s downtown into a parking lot, clogging traffic in the core and disrupting residents’ lives. Some Windsor protesters said their blockade was inspired by events in Ottawa.

“The country needs the police to do their job…and restore order,” Bill Blair, Canada’s Emergency Preparedness Minister, told CTV News on Sunday. He added that federal officials have discussed the rarely-used powers available in Canada’s federal Emergencies Act to help end protests. The act permits the national government to impose temporary measures, such as deployment of the military, if it believes local authorities are unable to maintain security.

At another Canadian border town, Fort Erie, Ontario, Canadian police on Sunday restricted traffic to the Peace Bridge, which crosses from the community into Buffalo, New York, after protesters attempted to block bridge traffic. Fort Erie Mayor Wayne Redekop said police weren’t allowing vehicles onto the bridge unless they were essential workers or had a legitimate commercial reason for traveling. He said town officials learned of a potential blockade through social-media posts, with protesters demanding an end to Covid-19 restrictions.

The Ambassador Bridge, one of the busiest border crossings in North America, accommodates roughly 30% of annual two-way U.S.-Canada trade, which recent U.S. data pegs at more than $600 billion. Two-way U.S.-Canada trade of over $28 billion in motor vehicles and auto parts was transported last year over the bridge, according to Statistics Canada.

Efforts to clear protesters blocking access to a key U.S.-Canada trade corridor appeared to have stalled Saturday afternoon as the crowd near the Ambassador Bridge entrance grew. Photo: Cole Burston/Getty Images

Write to Paul Vieira at paul.vieira@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8



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Ex-Afghan president: Biden order on frozen funds an atrocity

KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghanistan’s former president on Sunday called a White House order to unfreeze $3.5 billion in Afghan assets held in the U.S. for families of 9/11 victims an atrocity against the Afghan people.

Former President Hamid Karzai at a packed news conference sought the help of Americans, particularly the families of the thousands killed in the 9/11 terrorist attacks, to press President Joe Biden to rescind last week’s order. He called it “unjust and unfair,” saying Afghans have also been victims of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.

Bin Laden was brought to Afghanistan by Afghan warlords after being expelled from Sudan in 1996. Those same warlords would later ally with the U.S.-led coalition to oust the Taliban in 2001. However, it was Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar who refused to hand over bin Laden to the U.S. after the devastating 9/11 attacks that killed thousands.

“The people of Afghanistan share the pain of the American people, share the pain of the families and loved ones of those who died, who lost their lives in the tragedy of September 11,” said Karzai. “We commiserate with them (but) Afghan people are as much victims as those families who lost their lives. … Withholding money or seizing money from the people of Afghanistan in their name is unjust and unfair and an atrocity against Afghan people.”

President Biden’s order signed last Friday freed $7 billion in Afghan assets currently held in the United States, to be divided between 9/11 victims and humanitarian aid to Afghans.

Sept. 11 victims and their families have legal claims against the Taliban and the $7 billion in the U.S. banking system. The $3.5 billion was set aside for a U.S. court to decide whether it can be used to settle claims by families of 9/11 victims. U.S. courts would also have to sign off before the release of humanitarian assistance money.

We “ask the U.S. courts to do the opposite, to return the Afghan money back to the Afghan people,” said Karzai. “This money does not belong to any government ,,, this money belongs to the people of Afghanistan.”

Meanwhile, Biden’s order calls for the $3.5 billion allocated to humanitarian aid to be put into a trust and be used to assist Afghans, bypassing their Taliban rulers.

But Karzai demanded all $7 billion be returned to Afghanistan’s central bank to further its monetary policy. He argued against giving Afghan reserves to international aid organizations to provide humanitarian aid.

“You give us our own money so that it can be spent for those foreigners who come here, to pay their salaries, to give it to (non-governmental organizations),” he said.

Afghanistan’s economy is teetering on the brink of collapse after international money stopped coming into the country with the arrival in mid-August of the Taliban. Last month, the United Nations made a $5 billion appeal for Afghanistan. The U.N. warns that 1 million children are in danger of starving and 90% of Afghans live below the poverty level of just $1.90 a day.

Karzai was Afghanistan’s first democratically elected president after the U.S.-led coalition ousted the Taliban in 2001. He served until 2014 before Ashraf Ghani, who fled the country on Aug. 15, leaving the doors open for the Taliban takeover of Kabul. Karzai was highly regarded as embracing all of Afghanistan’s many ethnic groups but his administration, like subsequent Afghan administrations, was dogged by charges of widespread corruption.

Karzai spoke to a packed press conference inside his sprawling compound in the capital of Kabul. Dozens of Afghanistan’s Pashto- and Persian-language journalists jockeyed for space in a second-floor conference room with more than a dozen television cameras.

Karzai used the news conference to press the country’s Taliban rulers and their opponents to find a way to come together. He lobbied for the traditional Afghan grand council, or loya jirga, as a means to find consensus and establish a more representative administration.

“We, as Afghans, and the current acting Islamic government must do our best to not give America or any other country any excuse to be against us,” he said.

Anger has been growing in Afghanistan since Friday’s White House announcement. Demonstrators marched again in Kabul on Sunday demanding the money be returned to Afghanistan. However, the Taliban, who have also condemned Biden’s order, dispersed protesters as they tried to gather near the city’s Eid Gah mosque.

Meanwhile the United Nations Assistance Mission in a tweet late Sunday said four women activists who disappeared more than two weeks ago have returned home.

In late January Tamana Zaryabi Paryani, and her three sisters disappeared, allegedly seized by a group of men after they participated in a demonstration against the forced wearing of the Islamic hijab.

The Taliban denied taking them.

“The UN welcomes the encouraging reports that the four ‘disappeared’ Afghan women activists, some missing for weeks, are being enabled to return home. Their well-being and safety is of paramount concern,” the U.N. agency said.

International media, however, has reported that several British nationals and an American are still being held by the Taliban, including freelance cameraman Peter Jouvenal, a dual British and German citizen who has covered Afghanistan for more than 40 years. He has been missing since December and the Taliban have not responded to queries by the Associated Press.

His wife, an Afghan, has issued a plea for his release.

US national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Sunday on CNN’s `State of the Union,’ that an American was in Taliban custody along with “a number of U.K. nationals.” He gave no further information, saying only that Washington was “ actively working to get his release.”

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