Tag Archives: Jan

See a rare green comet closest to the sun on Jan. 12 in livestream

A comet that hasn’t visited Earth or the inner solar system since the last ice age will reach its closest point to the sun tonight (Jan. 12) and you can watch it live online in a free webcast.

The comet, designated C/2022 E3 (ZTF), will come to within around 100 million miles (160 million kilometers) of the sun as it reaches a closest point, called perihelion. The comet will then move towards Earth making its closest approach to our planet, its perigee, on Feb. 2 when it will whip past us at a distance of 26 million miles (42 million kilometers).

Though it won’t be visible to the naked eye during its close approach to the sun, the comet should be observable with binoculars. If C/2022 E3 (ZTF) continues to brighten the way it currently is, it could eventually be possible to spot it in the night sky with the naked eye. Whether or not you’ll be able to see it on your own, The Virtual Telescope Project will host a free livestream of the comet (opens in new tab) beginning at 11 p.m. EST on Jan. 12 (0400 GMT on Jan. 13). You can watch the live webcast courtesy of the project’s website (opens in new tab) or on its YouTube channel (opens in new tab). It will appear on this page at start time, as well.

Related: Amazing photos of gorgeously green Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF)

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Labs (NASA JPL) gives the period of this comet as 50,000 years. This means the last time the orbit of C/2022 E3 (ZTF) brought it so close to the Earth, our planet was in the midst of the last glacial period or “ice age” and early Homo sapiens and Neanderthals still shared the planet.

A photo of comet C/2022 E3 ZTF taken on Dec. 26, 2022 in Payson, Arizona by Chris Schur. (Image credit: Chris Schur)

According to In the Sky (opens in new tab) from New York City C/2022 E3 (ZTF) at perihelion will be visible in the dawn sky, rising at 11:18 p.m. EST (0418 GMT) and reaching an altitude of 64° over the eastern horizon. The comet will fade from view as dawn breaks around 6:07 a.m. EST (1107 GMT). 

C/2022 E3 (ZTF) will eventually reach its brightest on Feb. 2 when it will be at its closest to Earth, visible in the constellation Camelopardalis. 

The comet was first identified in March 2022 by the wide-field survey camera at the Zwicky Transient Facility and was initially believed to be an asteroid. It was the rapid brightening of C/2022 E3 (ZTF) as it moved from the inner orbit of Jupiter that indicated it true cometary nature.

The brightening of comets can be difficult to predict, but even if C/2022 E3 (ZTF) doesn’t brighten enough to become visible with the naked eye, it will still be observable during January and early February with binoculars and small telescopes. 

According to NASA (opens in new tab) observers in the Northern Hemisphere should be able to find C/2022 E3 (ZTF) in the morning sky, as it moves to the northwest throughout January. The comet will become visible for skywatchers in the Southern Hemisphere in early February 2023.

The new moon phase (when the moon is completely unilluminated) on Jan. 21 should provide the ideal dark skies needed to spot C/2022 E3 (ZTF), weather permitting. 

If you want to take a look at C/2022 E3 ZTF and don’t have the right gear, be sure to peruse our guides for the best binoculars and the best telescopes to view the comet or anything else in the sky. For capturing the best comet images you can, we have recommendations for the best cameras for astrophotography and best lenses for astrophotography.  

Editor’s Note: If you snap the comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF), and would like to share it with Space.com’s readers, send your photo(s), comments, and your name and location to spacephotos@space.com.

Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or on Facebook. 



Read original article here

Proud Boys trial: U.S. says defendants didn’t ‘stand back’ on Jan. 6

Opening statements are underway in the trial of longtime Proud Boys Chairman Henry “Enrique” Tarrio and four other associates of the right-wing group charged with seditious conspiracy in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot.

For over an hour, Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason McCullough showed jurors violent video and profane audio of the defendants, saying the evidence is overwhelming that they planned to keep President Donald Trump in power by force. Two years after the attack, the trial is one of the most high profile of the sprawling investigation into the day’s events.

“You will see the private communications, you will see the public statements, you will see their coordinated actions, you will see the celebration of the group’s activities, they will attempt to cover their tracks,” McCullough said. “You will know by the way they took direct aim at the certification of the election results, this is the direct result of their actions.” Invoking Trump’s infamous words at a 2020 presidential debate, McCullough said, “They did not stand back, they did not stand by.”

Read original article here

Watch SpaceX launch 51 Starlink internet satellites on Jan. 10

SpaceX plans to launch another big batch of its Starlink internet satellites to orbit on Tuesday (Jan. 10), and you can watch the action live.

A Falcon 9 rocket topped with 51 of SpaceX’s Starlink internet satellites is scheduled to lift off from California’s Vandenberg Space Force Base Tuesday at 11:02 p.m. EST (8:02 p.m. local California time; 0402 GMT on Jan. 11). The launch was originally targeted for Monday night (Jan. 9), but SpaceX stood down from that attempt due to bad weather.

Watch it live here at Space.com, courtesy of SpaceX, or directly via the company (opens in new tab). Coverage is expected to begin about five minutes before liftoff.

Related: 10 weird things about SpaceX’s Starlink internet satellites

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches for a record 15th time from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center on Dec. 17, 2022. (Image credit: SpaceX)

If all goes according to plan, the Falcon 9’s first stage will come back to Earth just under nine minutes after launch, touching down on the SpaceX droneship Of Course I Still Love You, which will be stationed in the Pacific Ocean. 

It will be the ninth launch and landing for this particular booster, according to EverydayAstronaut.com (opens in new tab).

The Falcon 9’s upper stage, meanwhile, will haul the Starlink satellites to low Earth orbit, deploying all 51 of them 29 minutes after liftoff, according to a SpaceX mission description (opens in new tab).

Starlink is SpaceX’s broadband constellation, which currently consists of more than 3,300 operational satellites (opens in new tab).

That number is ever-increasing, as Tuesday’s planned liftoff shows, and may eventually become truly staggering. SpaceX has approval to launch 12,000 Starlink spacecraft and has applied for permission to loft nearly 30,000 more on top of that.

The Starlink launch will be the second in two days for SpaceX, if all goes according to plan. A Falcon 9 also launched 40 OneWeb internet satellites from Florida’s Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Monday night (Jan. 9).

Editor’s note: This story was updated at 10:50 p.m. ET on Jan. 9 with the new launch time of 12:35 a.m. EST. It was updated again at 12:15 a.m. ET on Jan. 10 with the news that SpaceX decided to stand down from the Monday night/Tuesday morning attempt (opens in new tab) due to bad weather.

Mike Wall is the author of “Out There (opens in new tab)” (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or Facebook (opens in new tab).



Read original article here

Baron Corbin draws the ire of Kevin Owens: Raw, Jan. 9, 2023 – WWE

  1. Baron Corbin draws the ire of Kevin Owens: Raw, Jan. 9, 2023 WWE
  2. Baron Corbin’s Big Boast On WWE Raw Regarding Roman Reigns Is True Wrestling Inc.
  3. 1/9 WWE Raw results: Powell’s live review of The Street Profits vs. The OC vs. Alpha Academy vs. Cedric Alexander and Shelton Benjamin vs. Judgment Day in Tag Team Turmoil for a shot at the Undisputed WWE Tag Titles, Solo Sikoa vs. Dolph Ziggler, ProWrestling.net
  4. Kevin Owens will bring the beatdown to SmackDown like no other: Raw Exclusive, Jan. 9, 2023 WWE
  5. WWE RAW Results: Former WWE Champ returns; No.1 contenders crowned after hour-long match – Winners, Recap, Grades & Highlights (January 9, 2023) Sportskeeda
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

On this day in history, Jan. 9, 2007, Steve Jobs introduces Apple iPhone at Macworld in San Francisco

Apple CEO Steve Jobs gave the world its first look at the iPhone — as well as a glimpse into a radically different future of personal computing and communications — on this day in history, Jan. 9, 2007. 

“It’s not just the bestselling gadget ever created: It’s probably the most influential one, too,” Wired wrote in a 2018 retrospective of the first decade of the iPhone. 

“Its influence goes far beyond other phones — the infrastructure that made the iPhone also enabled drones, smart-home gadgets, wearables and self-driving cars.”

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, JAN. 8, 1790, GEORGE WASHINGTON DELIVERS FIRST-EVER STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS

The iPhone offered a fingertip touch screen, a powerful camera and easy access to the internet, among many other features, providing huge advances over existing smartphones such as the Blackberry, Moto Q and Palm Treo. 

“Every once in a while, a revolutionary product comes along that changes everything,” Jobs, dressed in his signature black mock turtleneck, boasted at the Macworld Expo in San Francisco.

Then-Apple CEO Steve Jobs holds the iPhone in San Francisco, California, on Jan. 9, 2007. 
(REUTERS/Kimberly White)

The Apple co-founder noted that the Macintosh in 1984 “changed the whole computer industry” and that the iPod (introduced on the same Jan. 9 date as the iPhone, but in 2001) “changed the entire music industry.”

He added, “Today, we’re introducing three revolutionary products.”

“Every once in a while, a revolutionary product comes along that changes everything.” — Steve Jobs

The new Apple offerings included “a widescreen iPod with touch controls” and a “breakthrough communications device.” 

The Macworld audience erupted, however, when he mentioned that among the three new products was “a revolutionary mobile phone.”

Apple had yet to enter the burgeoning smartphone market at that point. So tech enthusiasts eagerly awaited the pioneering computer giant’s long-rumored dramatic entry into the segment.

MEET THE AMERICAN WHO INVENTED THE TV REMOTE CONTROL: SELF-TAUGHT CHICAGO ENGINEER EUGENE POLLEY

Jobs, who died in October 2011 after a long battle with cancer, delivered on the drama. 

“These are not three separate devices,” he warned. “These are one device. And we’re calling it the iPhone.”

“The first generation iPhone was, in many days, quite different than the ones we see in use today. For one thing, it was small, just 4.5 inches by 2.4 inches. By comparison, the iPhone XS Max launched in 2018 is 6.2 inches by 3.05 inches,” Steven Silver wrote for Apple Insider in 2018. 

The latest model, the iPhone 14, comes with a 6.7-inch version.

Surrounded by cheering Apple Store employees, one of the first iPhone buyers leaves the store on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan on June 29, 2007. 
(REUTERS/Jeff Zelevansky)

Silver added that the first iPhone “also had no third-party apps whatsoever, and it topped out at 16GB of flash memory. The first iPhone was exclusive to AT&T, and ran only on AT&T’s notoriously slow and unreliable EDGE GSM network.”

Still, the author and other experts noted, “That first iPhone was hugely important.”

It was also hugely popular. 

“Sales of iPhones accounted for 52% of Apple’s $365 billion in sales in 2021.”

Apple sold 6.1 million first-generation iPhones between the time it released the product to the public on June 29, 2007, and discontinued it on July 15, 2008. 

Greg Packer, then 59, a former highway maintenance worker from Long Island, is credited with being the first person to purchase an iPhone on June 29 at the Apple Store on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan after he reportedly camped out all week. 

A general view of the audience during Avril Lavigne concert with smartphones at Espaco Unimed on Sept. 7, 2022, in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
(Mauricio Santana/Getty Images)

About 2 billion iPhones have been sold since its introduction, with nearly 800 million in use around the world today – about one for every 10 people on the planet, according to estimates by various tech analysts.

LOCAL STORE SIGN ABOUT ‘TRIGGERS’ IGNITES DEBATE ON REDDIT: ‘NOBODY’S RESPONSIBILITY BUT YOUR OWN’

The iPhone, and the advances in technology it forced on other smartphones, has had a profound impact on the way people live.

“Millions of people use an iPhone as their only computer,” Wired notes. “And their only camera, GPS device, music player, communicator, trip planner, sex finder and payment tool. It put the world in our pockets.” 

“Has it become a poor substitute for ‘real’ relationships?”

It also spawned an entire new industry of app developers, accessory makers and social-media giants. 

The iPhone also had an immediate and profound impact on Apple’s bottom line.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER

“Just under 40% of Apple’s revenue can now be attributed to the iPhone,” CNET reported in October 2008.

Sales of iPhones accounted for 52% of Apple’s $365 billion in sales in 2021, according to company reports.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduces the new iPhone at Macworld in San Francisco on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2007. 
(John Green, MediaNews Group/Bay Area News via Getty Images)

The iPhone’s impact on our lives has been profound. 

The way humans attend concerts and sporting events, follow directions and chronicle their daily lives all changed with the presence of the iPhone.

But whether the iPhone is a net positive on society remains to be seen, argue some experts. 

“In 2007, when the iPhone debuted, people eagerly welcomed it, says sociologist Judy Wajcman,” author Heidi Hackford wrote for the Computer History Museum in 2018. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“It was viewed, like mobile phones before it, as another helpful way to synchronize with family, friends and community. But, has that line between work time and personal time eroded even more because of the device? And has it become a poor substitute for ‘real’ relationships?”

The author also noted, “As with any new technology, the reviews are mixed.”

Read original article here

SpaceX to launch 1st rocket of 2023 with 114 satellites aboard on Jan. 3

SpaceX is ready to launch some belated New Year’s fireworks of its own on Tuesday with a mission to fly 114 different satellites into orbit to kick off 2023.

A Falcon 9 rocket from SpaceX will launch the company’s epic Transporter-6 rideshare mission at 9:56 a.m. EST (1355 GMT) from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. You can watch the launch live here at Space.com in a livestream brought to you by EOS Data Analytics (EOSDA).

The Transporter-6 mission will launch EOS SAT-1 for EOSDA on this mission; that’s the first of seven agriculture-focused satellites for the company’s new constellation. EOS SAT-1 will be the last of the 114 satellites to deploy during the Transporter-6 mission, according to a SpaceX mission timeline.

“This launch brings new game-changing possibilities of satellite technologies to the agricultural industry. EOSDA will now work with proprietary datasets to provide even deeper and more accurate insights for its customers and partners,” EOSDA CEO Artiom Anisimov said in a statement. 

Related: 8 ways SpaceX has transformed spaceflight forever

EOS SAT-1 is designed to scrutinize 386,000 miles (1 million square kilometers) daily using 11 bands of light. Examining the crop’s health in this way is expected to allow farmers to better customize their care for the crops, to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, energy consumption and water usage, among other benefits.

The full EOS SAT fleet, when ready around 2025, will aim to look at 4.6 million square miles (12 million sq. km.) every day, which is about a third more than the equivalent area of the United States. The seven satellites, built by Dragonfly Aerospace, aim to reach 100 percent of countries “with the largest areas of farmlands and forestlands,” EOSDA’s statement added. 

Engineers prepare the EOSDA satellite EOS SAT-1, the first agriculture-focused analytics satellite in a 7-craft constellation, for launch.  (Image credit: EOSDA)

There are other satellite crops that will fly to space aboard Transporter-6 as well. For example, Spire Global plans to launch six satellites (opens in new tab) to expand its constellation monitoring maritime and aviation traffic using ADS-B technology. 

Spaceflight Inc. plans to heft four Kleos spacecraft (opens in new tab) to a sun-synchronous orbit that keeps consistent lighting conditions below the fleet. Kleos examines radio frequency transmissions from space to search for “hidden and illegal activity”, its website states (opens in new tab).

The Transporter series of missions are “dedicated rideshares,” meaning that they feature what may be dozens of small satellites flying to space on a single Falcon 9 rocket. SpaceX has not confirmed the full manifest of Transporter-6 on its website. The first mission of the series, Transporter-1, launched a record 143 satellites on Jan. 24, 2021.

The Falcon 9 rocket for Transporter-6 has a first stage that is making its 15th flight. The booster previously launched SpaceX’s Transporter-2 rideshare mission, three commercial satellite flights and 10 Starlink satellite missions, SpaceX has said. If all goes well, the booster should return to a landing pad at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station for a touchdown.

Elizabeth Howell is the co-author of “Why Am I Taller (opens in new tab)?” (ECW Press, 2022; with Canadian astronaut Dave Williams), a book about space medicine. Follow her on Twitter @howellspace (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or Facebook (opens in new tab).



Read original article here

Trump news latest: Don Jr, Kimberly Guilfoyle, Ray Epps, Stephanie Grisham Jan 6 transcripts released

January 6 panel unveils report, describes Trump ‘conspiracy’

The January 6 House select committee investigating Donald Trump’s role in the 2021 Capitol riot has released another batch of interview and deposition transcripts.

Included in the latest release are some big names from Trumpworld, including Donald Trump Jr, Kimberly Guilfoyle, and Stephen Miller.

There are also White House insiders that turned against Trump including Stephanie Grisham and Alyssa Farah Griffin, as well as other key figures including Washington DC mayor Muriel Bowser and Steven Sund of the Capitol Police.

Also published was the interview with Ray Epps, a Trump supporter who marched on the Capitol and was accused of working for the FBI by rightwing conspiracists after he was filmed trying to calm the crowd.

Upon the new Congress taking office on 3 January, the committee will be dissolved. It published its full report before Christmas.

Tomorrow, Mr Trump’s finances will be under the spotlight when the House Ways and Means Committee is expected to release the former president’s tax returns.

1672333838

Don Jr asked about money raised after election and what happened to it

in his January 6 committee transcript, Donald Trump Jr is asked about the $250m raised by the Trump campaign after the election and what happened to all that money.

The former president’s son says he does not know.

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 17:10

1672333598

Don Jr and Kimberly Guilfoyle invoiced $60k for Jan 6 rally appearance

Donald Trump Jr and Kimberly Guilfoyle invoiced Turning Point $60,000 for their appearance at the January 6 rally at the Ellipse according to testimony by the former president’s eldest son. He is not aware if they were paid.

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 17:06

1672333300

Trump’s recycles accusations in latest attack on FBI

Donald Trump took to Truth Social on Thursday morning to launch a new attack against the FBI – citing many of his favourite baseless claims.

He wrote: “So, if the FBI illegally suppressed all of the really bad information on the Biden family (laptop!) at a level never seen before, (“it was Russian disinformation,” they said), while at the same time not letting the many positive things accomplished by “Trump” get out to the public, but would instead put out “bad stuff,” that would be the very definition of the Government’s RIGGING of an Election. Pollsters projected this Scam made a difference of Millions of votes. What are the CONSEQUENCES?”

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 17:01

1672332832

How do you contact a president? What about during an emergency?

Even in the age of smartphones, apparently, you still call the operator, even if the president is your father.

Failing that or in an emergency such as a violent assault on Congress, you text the chief of staff as Donald Trump Jr told the January 6 committee — in this case, Mark Meadows.

Mr Trump told the panel that he texted Mr Meadows telling him that his father need to “condemn this s***” as the Capitol was attacked.

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 16:53

1672332657

Jan 6: Stephanie Grisham reveals why Melania ‘didn’t trust’ Mark Meadows

Former First Lady Melania Trump did not trust her husband’s final chief of staff and was angered by the way he’d allow “harmful” people access to him and the White House’s private family quarters, her long-serving ex-spokesperson and former top White House aide has said.

Andrew Feinberg has the latest from Washington, DC.

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 16:50

1672331858

White House tells GOP to hold their horses on oversight requests

The White House has warned top Republicans who will chair the House Oversight and Judiciary committees that they will have to renew any requests for documents or other oversight requests once the GOP formally takes control of the chamber at the start of the 118th Congress next week.

The Independent obtained letters to Representatives James Comer and Jim Jordan — the incoming chairmen of both committees — from Special Counsel to the President Richard Sauber, in which the White House lawyer said the flurry of demands for documents made by the GOP during the 117th Congress carry no legal or constitutional weight because of longstanding executive branch policy which requires such requests to come from the House majority.

Andrew Feinberg reports from Washington, DC.

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 16:37

1672331560

‘Stop the steal’ organiser pushes blame onto far-right allies during Jan 6 testimony, transcript reveals

The organizer of the rally that preceded the Capitol riot reportedly threw his MAGA-world peer Charlie Kirk to the wolves during a meeting with the House Select Committee investigating the Capitol riot.

Ali Alexander, who organised “Stop the Steal,” told the House Select Committee during a closed-door deposition last year that right-wing media figure and Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk was among those at fault for the riot.

Read more about the infighting and backstabbing taking place on the far right in The Independent:

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 16:32

1672331260

Ray Epps told committee about impact of conspiracy theory on his family

Ray Epps, a Trump supporter and retired US Marine who found himself at the centre of a conspiracy theory that he was an undercover federal agent at the Capitol on January 6 to incite a false flag operation, told the committee about the impact of those accusations on his family.

He said he was saddened that leaders he respected tried to ride the baseless accusations for their own gain and that his family has been the subject of death threats and his business has suffered.

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 16:27

1672330960

Melania Trump ‘didn’t trust Meadows’

In her deposition to the Januayr 6 committee, Stephanie Grisham said former first lady Melania Trump “didn’t trust Mark Meadows” among other Trumpworld figures, and expressed frustration that the random people he let up to the White House residence would encounter her in a bathrobe.

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 16:22

1672330660

DC police chief couldn’t make contact with Capitol Police on Jan 6

Washington, DC, Mayor Muriel Bowser told the January 6 select committee that the DC Police Chief was trying to contact Steven Sund, the chief of USCP, and “couldn’t make contact with them.”

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 16:17

Read original article here

Trump news latest: Trump reacts as Jan 6 panel withdraws subpoena

January 6 panel unveils report, describes Trump ‘conspiracy’

Former president Donald Trump has gloated against “political thugs” in a new Truth Social rant as he said he did “nothing wrong” after the House select committee investigating the Jan 6 attack announced it would be withdrawing a subpoena against him.

In a statement on Truth Social, Mr Trump wrote: “Was just advised that the Unselect Committee of political Thugs has withdrawn the Subpoena of me concerning the January 6th Protest of the CROOKED 2020 Presidential Election.”

“They probably did so because they knew I did nothing wrong, or they were about to lose in Court. Perhaps the FBI’s involvement in RIGGING the Election played into their decision. In any event, the Subpoena is DEAD!”

The panel will be dissolved upon the new Congress taking office on 3 January.

The withdrawal of the subpoena comes ahead of Mr Trump’s finances falling under the spotlight later this week when the House Ways and Means Committee is expected to release the former president’s tax returns on Friday.

1672329981

Jan 6 committee releases another tranche of transcripts

The House select committee investigating the attack on the US Capitol on January 6 2021 has released another batch of interview and deposition transcripts.

Included in the latest release are some big names from Trumpworld, including Donald Trump Jr, Kimberly Guilfoyle, and Stephen Miller.

There are also White House insiders that turned against Trump including Stephanie Grisham and Alyssa Farah Griffin, and notably Ray Epps, a pro-Trump attendee of the January 6 rally who marched on the Capitol and was accused of working for the FBI by rightwing conspiracists.

Here’s the full list of what was released today:

The Independent will bring you highlights from these extensive interviews with key players relating to the events surrounding the Capitol riot.

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 16:06

1672329160

Trump only realised his schedule was public weeks before leaving office, Jan 6 committee told

White House staff began distributing a bizarre statement claiming then-president Donald Trump was spending his days making “many calls” and having “many meetings” in lieu of releasing a detailed daily schedule after Mr Trump discovered the decades-old practice during the final weeks of his term in office, a former press aide to Mr Trump has said.

The amusing revelation is a sign of just how little Mr Trump understood (or, more accurately, cared) about the inner working of his job nearly four years after being sworn in.

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 15:52

1672328020

Marjorie Taylor Greene spoke to Trump about QAnon before Jan 6

Marjorie Taylor Greene told Donald Trump days before the Capitol insurrection that some of her supporters who subscribed to QAnon were going to the January 6 rally, according to testimony from former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson.

The remarks by Ms Hutchinson were from her May and June interviews given to the Jan 6 Congressional committee investigating the Capitol riots.

The committee released additional sets of transcripts that revealed Mr Trump’s discussions involving the far-right conspiracy theory group.

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 15:33

1672326892

ICYMI: Trump lashes out at McConnell and wife over government funding bill

Former president Donald Trump took to social media to attack Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and the Kentucky Republican’s wife, who served as Mr Trump’s transportation secretary during his administration, after Mr McConnell declined to block a government funding bill.

Read the full story here:

Oliver O’Connell29 December 2022 15:14

1672324257

Trump launches new attack on FBI citing stale claims

Donald Trump took to Truth Social on Thursday morning to launch a new attack against the FBI – citing many of his favourite baseless claims.

“So, if the FBI illegally suppressed all of the really bad information on the Biden family (laptop!) at a level never seen before, (’it was Russian disinformation,’ they said), while at the same time not letting the many positive things accomplished by ‘Trump’ get out to the public, but would instead put out ‘bad stuff,’ that would be the very definition of the Government’s RIGGING of an Election,” he thundered.

“Pollsters projected this Scam made a difference of Millions of votes. What are the CONSEQUENCES?”

Megan Sheets29 December 2022 14:30

1672322400

Trump gloats after Jan 6 committee withdraws subpoena

Donald Trump has slammed the Jan 6 special committee after it decided to withdraw its subpoena as it concluded its investigation into the Capitol insurrection.

Megan Sheets29 December 2022 14:00

1672318815

‘Stop the steal’ organiser pushes blame onto far-right allies during Jan 6 testimony, transcript reveals

The organizer of the rally that preceded the Capitol riot reportedly threw his MAGA-world peer Charlie Kirk to the wolves during a meeting with the House Select Committee investigating the Capitol riot.

Ali Alexander, who organised “Stop the Steal,” told the House Select Committee during a closed-door deposition last year that right-wing media figure and Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk was among those at fault for the riot.

Read more about the infighting and backstabbing taking place on the far right in The Independent:

John Bowden29 December 2022 13:00

1672315215

Biden won’t speak freely near Secret Service

President Joe Biden was so disturbed by the Secret Service’s handling of text messages sought by the House January 6 select committee that he stopped speaking candidly in the presence of special agents assigned to his protection detail, a new book on the Biden White House has revealed.

The agency has been sharply criticised by lawmakers and others after text messages sent by agents on the day of the attack vanished during a scheduled software update — even after the Secret Service was instructed specifically to preserve them.

Read more from Andrew Feinberg:

John Bowden29 December 2022 12:00

1672314720

Trump declares he did ‘nothing wrong’

Donald Trump has reacted to the House select committee investigating the Jan 6 attack withdrawing its subpoena to him.

In a statement on Truth Social, Mr Trump wrote: “Was just advised that the Unselect Committee of political Thugs has withdrawn the Subpoena of me concerning the January 6th Protest of the CROOKED 2020 Presidential Election.”

“They probably did so because they knew I did nothing wrong, or they were about to lose in Court. Perhaps the FBI’s involvement in RIGGING the Election played into their decision. In any event, the Subpoena is DEAD!”

The panel will be dissolved after the new Congress takes office on 3 January.

Former US president Donald Trump is displayed on a screen during a meeting of the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 attack on the US Capitol in the Canon House Office Building on Capitol Hill on 19 December 2022 in Washington, DC

(Getty Images)

Sravasti Dasgupta29 December 2022 11:52

1672311615

Cassidy Hutchinson says Mark Meadows burned official papers in his office

Cassidy Hutchinson, the former aide to Mark Meadows, has revealed in her testimony to the Jan 6 House committee how the ex-chief of staff routinely burned documents in his office.

A fresh batch of transcripts released by the committee investigating the Capitol riots on Tuesday revealed Ms Hutchinson’s testimony from May in which she had told the committee that she saw Mr Meadows burn documents in his office fireplace around a dozen times – about once or twice a week – between December 2020 and mid January 2021.

John Bowden29 December 2022 11:00

Read original article here

Ship insurers to cancel war cover for Russia, Ukraine from Jan. 1

LONDON, Dec 28 (Reuters) – Ship insurers said they are cancelling war risk cover across Russia, Ukraine and Belarus, following an exit from the region by reinsurers in the face of steep losses.

Reinsurers, who insure the insurers, typically renew their 12-month contracts with insurance clients on Jan. 1, giving them the first opportunity to scale back exposure since the war in Ukraine started, after being hit this year by losses related to the conflict and from Hurricane Ian in Florida.

P&I (protection and indemnity) clubs American, North, UK and West are no longer able to offer war risk cover for some liabilities in the region from Jan. 1, they said in recent notices on their websites. The clubs are among the biggest P&I insurers who cover around 90% of the world’s ocean-going ships.

UK P&I Club said on Dec. 23 that the issue had arisen because of a lack of availability of reinsurance for reinsurers, also known as retrocession.

“The Club’s reinsurers are no longer able to secure reinsurance for war risk exposure to Russian, Ukrainian or Belarus territorial risks,” it said.

American P&I said on Dec. 23 that it had received a “notice of cancellation” for the region from its war risk reinsurers and was cancelling its own insurance as a result.

Ships typically have P&I insurance, which covers third-party liability claims including environmental damage and injury. Separate hull and machinery policies cover vessels against physical damage.

The withdrawal of cover for Ukraine and Russia applies to some but not all types of policy offered by the P&I clubs, three P&I insurance sources said.

“This is being driven by reinsurance,” said Stephen Rebair, deputy global director, underwriting at North, adding that reinsurers were limiting their exposure to the region and “those exclusions have to be passed down the line”.

The exclusions will make it harder for charterers to find insurance, increase prices and may mean some ships sail uninsured, industry sources say.

Providers of reinsurance and retrocession include global players Hannover Re (HNRGn.DE), Munich Re (MUVGn.DE) and Swiss Re (SRENH.S), as well as syndicates in the Lloyd’s of London (SOLYD.UL) market. The firms all declined to comment.

Reuters reported earlier this month that a proposed contract clause being circulated by reinsurers excluded war-related claims for both planes and ships in Ukraine, Russia and Belarus.

The Japanese government has urged insurers to take on additional risks to continue providing marine war insurance for liquefied natural gas (LNG) shippers in Russian waters, a senior official at the industry ministry said this week.

Reporting by Carolyn Cohn and Jonathan Saul in London
Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman and Matthew Lewis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Read original article here

Donald Trump news today: Jan 6 committee to release Donald Trump’s taxes on Friday

January 6 panel unveils report, describes Trump ‘conspiracy’

The House Select Committee investigating the January 6 riots is expected to release Donald Trump’s tax returns on Friday, a congressional aide said.

The committee voted last week to release Mr Trump’s returns, with some redactions of sensitive information, such as Social Security numbers and contact information.

Meanwhile, the January 6 committee has released another batch of transcripts, including another pair of interviews with former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson and other Trump administration officials.

The committee issued its final report into the pro-Trump insurrection last Thursday and is now in the process of releasing the transcripts of interviews that it is based on.

The panel conducted more than 1,000 interviews over the course of its 18-month investigation into the violence at the US Capitol that followed Donald Trump’s election defeat to Joe Biden.

The committee will formally be closed down when the GOP-controlled House begins its next session on 3 January.

In her May interview, Ms Hutchinson told the committee that she remembered Marjorie Taylor Greene discussing QAnon with Mr Trump during a rally in Georgia on 4 January 2021.

1672205274

Kimberly Guilfoyle chased up her $60k fee for introducing Trump at rally on January 6, committee was told

Graeme Massie28 December 2022 05:27

1672203894

Lake on hook for $33K in witness fees in failed challenge

A judge has ordered Kari Lake, the Republican who lost the Arizona governor’s race, to pay $33,000 in fees for witnesses who helped defend officials against Lake’s failed challenge of her defeat to Democrat Katie Hobbs.

Graeme Massie28 December 2022 05:04

1672202214

Trump only realised his presidential schedule was public days before leaving office, Jan 6 committee was told

Graeme Massie28 December 2022 04:36

1672200234

GOP begins to turn on newly-elected George Santos over ‘despicable and unfathomable’ lies

The New York Republican admitted this week to lying about his work history, education and religious background while insisting he’s not a fraud.

Graeme Massie28 December 2022 04:03

1672198374

Georgia official believed Trump was threatening him with violence during call demanding he ‘find’ him 11,780 votes

Graeme Massie28 December 2022 03:32

1672196754

Co-leader of plot to kidnap Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer sentenced to 16 years in prison

Plot was uncovered months before 2020 election.

Graeme Massie28 December 2022 03:05

1672193754

Andy Biggs becomes latest MAGA Republican to spar with Marjorie Taylor Greene: ‘She’s crossed the Rubicon’

Tensions have escalated in MAGA-world as Ms Greene continues to clash with several one-time allies in her opinions about the House speaker role.

Graeme Massie28 December 2022 02:15

1672192914

Matt Gaetz asked Mark Meadows about a pardon over trafficking investigation, Trump insider told Jan 6 committee

Graeme Massie28 December 2022 02:01

1672191575

Cassidy Hutchinson says Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows used to burn official papers in his office

Graeme Massie28 December 2022 01:39

1672189314

Cassidy Hutchinson told JAN 6 committee that Taylor Greene discussed QAnon with Trump

The former aide to Mark Meadows told the committee in two interviews that the far-right conspiracy theory was discussed within White House circles.

She told the panel in her June interview that QAnon was discussed during a December 2020 meeting between Donald Trump and GOP lawmakers, including Marjorie Taylor Greene.

“I remember Marjorie Taylor Greene bringing QAnon up several times, though, in the presence of the president, privately with Mark,” Ms Hutchinson testified.

“I remember Mark having a few conversations, too, about – more specific to QAnon stuff and more about the idea that they had with the election and, you know, not as much pertaining to the planning of the January 6th rally.”

She also said in her May interview that Ms Greene brought up QAnon with Mr Trump during a rally in Georgia on 4 January 2021.

“Ms Greene came up and began talking to us about QAnon and QAnon going to the rally, and she had a lot of constituents that are QAnon, and they’ll all be there,” Ms Hutchinson said.

“And she was showing him pictures of them travelling up to Washington, D.C., for the rally on the 6th.”

(Getty Images)

Graeme Massie28 December 2022 01:01

Read original article here

The Ultimate News Site