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‘A door has opened’: Pope Francis appoints first woman to senior synod post | Vatican

Breaking with tradition, Pope Francis has appointed Frenchwoman Nathalie Becquart as an undersecretary of the synod of bishops, the first woman to hold the post and have voting rights.

The 52-year-old is one of the two new undersecretaries named to the synod, the body of bishops that studies major questions of doctrine and where she has been a consultant since 2019.

Saturday’s appointment signals the pontiff’s desire “for a greater participation of women in the process of discernment and decision-making in the church”, said Cardinal Mario Grech, the secretary general of the synod.

“During the previous synods, the number of women participating as experts and listeners has increased,” he said.

“With the nomination of Sister Nathalie Becquart and her possibility of participating in voting, a door has opened.”

The synod is led by bishops and cardinals who have voting rights and also comprises experts who cannot vote.

The Argentinian-born pope has signalled his wish to reform the synod and have women and lay people play a greater role in the church.

The pope named Spaniard Luis Marin de San Martin as the other undersecretary.

Becquart, a member of the France-based Xaviere Sisters, has a master’s degree in management from the prestigious HEC business school in Paris and studied in Boston before joining the order.

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Washington Post editorial board calls for answers from China on pandemic origins; panned, praised on Twitter

The Washington Post’s Editorial Board is gathering both critical and positive reaction on social media after publishing a piece on Friday which called for answers from China on the origins of the coronavirus pandemic.

In the piece, the board writes that while scientists have theorized that the deadly virus had spread from animals like bats, the possibility of a laboratory accident or leak “must be investigated.” 

CNN MOCKED FOR REPORT TYING COVID ORIGINS TO CHINA AFTER ‘PARROTING CCP TALKING POINTS’ FOR 10 MONTHS

They referenced the Wuhan Institute of Virology’s (WIV) research on bat coronaviruses, noting that lead Dr. Shi Zhengli said that the genetic sequence of the new coronavirus did not match viruses that her team had sampled.

“But that must not be the end of the story,” they wrote. “China actively covered up the early stages of the pandemic, concealed the transmissibility of the virus from its own people and the world, and punished Wuhan doctors who expressed worry about it in late December 2019. President Xi Jinping did not warn the public in China or abroad until mid-January.”

The board pointed out that, since then, Chinese officials have perpetuated “a host of dubious theories” to suggest the COVID-19 virus’s origin was not in China.

“The disinformation only heightens suspicions that China is trying to distract from or conceal something,” the board said, adding that for investigators to uncover the truth of whether or not there was a leak or laboratory accident, “transparency and verification of data and sample provenance” would be a necessity. 

“But it has not been forthcoming,” they added.

The board also highlighted that a critical bat-coronavirus database and a portal of National Virus Resource Center databases both have gone offline — which Shi told the BBC was for security reasons — and cited a claim from former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that the U.S. government had reason to believe that “several researchers inside the WIV became sick in autumn 2019, before the first identified case of the outbreak, with symptoms consistent with both covid-19 and common seasonal illnesses.”

“If the U.S. government possesses information to corroborate that statement, it should release it, including declassifying any intelligence,” the Editorial Board wrote. 

“We don’t know where the pandemic began. But a major step toward finding the answer is to examine all the relevant databases and laboratory records, including those at the Wuhan Institute of Virology and elsewhere, and the clues they may hold,” they said.

Responding to The Washington Post’s article, Twitter users both applauded the work and panned it. 

“So dumb…@PostOpinions,” wrote one user. “How do ‘journalists’ not see the contradiction of (a) telling us China lies 24/7 and then (b) constructing a narrative based on Chinese sources? It was an obvious [bio-attack] on Defender-Europe, and Wuhan was a Truman Show.”

“This seems to uncritically recap assertions by DRASTIC, which strikes me as sloppy work,” a user stated. “And the ‘GOF’ work in question was largely inserting the spike sequences from novel coronaviruses into a well-characterized strain—arguably safer than working w the new virus itself.”

“It been fun watching the lab origin hypothesis go from ‘deranged science denier conspiracy theory!!!’ to mainstream academics/journalists asking the question,” a user tweeted.

“The obfuscating and [straight-up] lies from the regime about COVID’s origins are, justifiably, succeeding at mainstreaming questions about lab leaks,” a user pointed out.

A bus carrying members of the World Health Organization (WHO) team investigating the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic leaves the airport following their arrival at a cordoned-off section in the international arrivals area at the airport in Wuhan on January 14, 2021. (Photo by NICOLAS ASFOURI / AFP) (Photo by NICOLAS ASFOURI/AFP via Getty Images)

“I have seen so many studies on Covid #disinformation that contained this as one item in their disinformation battery. Serious question: will these studies have to be amended, now that this is being shared by major news outlets? #infodemic,” a user commented. 

“The „Wuhan lab leak story” is prominently [featured] on @Wikipedia‘s entry on „COVID-19 misinformation,” they continued. “So is @washingtonpost spreading misinformation or is this no longer considered „misinformation”? Seems like a serious challenge to #disinfo research, no?”

“But the news side at WaPo still studiously ignores the subject,” a user said in response to the @WashPostPR account.

“Bravo, @washingtonpost! You nailed it in this editorial. Thank you,” another user exclaimed.

CHINA’S CORONAVIRUS CASES: IS THE COMMUNIST REGIME LYING TO THE WORLD?

“Finally asking the right questions,” one wrote. 

Previous coverage from The Washington Post on China’s role in the pandemic has been mixed.

A December piece from columnist Marc Thiessen — who is also a Fox News contributor — posed the question: “can we finally blame the Chinese communist regime for the covid-19 pandemic?”

Twitter users criticized Thiessen for even asking, calling it “drivel.”

The Washington Post’s “Monkey Cage” politics team wrote in a September article that President Trump’s attempt to shift “blame for the pandemic by redirecting anger toward China” was an “old strategy.”

Notably and horrifically, racially-motivated hate crimes against Asian Americans have surged during the pandemic — a statistic which many argue was fueled by Trump’s rhetoric, coining terms like the “Kung Flu” and “China Virus.” 

For months, Republican lawmakers and then-President Trump spearheaded the effort to hold China accountable for the devastating impact of the pandemic.

Alternatively, some Democrats like then-candidate Joe Biden reprimanded the Trump administration — although it’s notable that those in the Blue Dog Coalition introduced a bill aimed at stopping China from exploiting the pandemic.

On Jan.6, The Washington Post wrote that politics itself was the real culprit stymieing attempts to get real answers, with Duke-NUS Medical School zoonotic diseases expert Wang Linfa saying any progress would be much harder because “the politics is ahead of the science now.”

In January, a team of World Health Organization (WHO) researchers traveled to Wuhan to begin an inquiry, visiting the Huanan Seafood Market and the WIV.

The Trump administration submitted a notice of withdrawal from the agency after criticism over its handling of the pandemic, but Biden reversed that decision last month.

China has been openly opposed to the independent investigation, and Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying revived unsubstantiated calls for a WHO investigation of a U.S. military lab in Maryland.

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“If America respects the truth, then please open up Ft. Detrick and make public more information about the 200 or more bio-labs outside of the U.S., and please allow the WHO expert group to go to the U.S. to investigate the origins,” Hua said.

Last week, the U.S. reached a grim milestone, surpassing 450,000 deaths due of the virus over the course of around a year’s time.

To date, more than 2.3 million people have died worldwide from the COVID-19 virus, according to data from the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.

China has been accused of underreporting its case numbers.



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“I would rather have Nolan” – The Denver Post

The day after trading away their franchise’s biggest star, Rockies owner Dick Monfort and general manager Jeff Bridich tried to explain themselves to the media.

It wasn’t pretty.

The surreal hour-long news conference Tuesday took on the tenor of a public flogging as Monfort and Bridich attempted to explain why they sent Nolan Arenado to St. Louis, and also agreed to send along $51 million to make the deal fly. Monfort could only lament Arenado’s departure as he struggled to come to grips with a trade that had already been widely panned by Rockies fans.

“I’m a fan. I truly am,” Monfort said. “I understand how they feel. And to be quite honest, I would probably feel the same way and maybe I do even feel the same way. When we signed Nolan, it was an attempt to keep Nolan for the rest of his career. But things do change.”

Meanwhile, in another Zoom news conference going on at the same time, Arenado fielded softball questions from St. Louis media about the Cardinals’ glorious past and bright future.

“As a kid, you dream of winning a World Series, and that’s still the dream now,” he said. “To join this organization, they care about winning and about getting things done, and that’s really exciting.”

Less than two years after Arenado signed the biggest contract in Denver professional sports history — eight years, $260 million — he’s gone. On Monday, he was officially traded to the Cardinals in a lopsided deal which saw the Rockies acquire left-handed starter Austin Gomber and four prospects, none of whom were among the Cardinals’ top five.

The trade was more than a year in the making. According to the Rockies, Arenado asked to be traded after a disheartening 2019 season in which they finished 71-91 after going to the playoffs in back-to-back years.

“If I had my druthers, I would rather have Nolan Arenado,” Monfort said. “But it was no one’s choice. He wanted to move on. I’ve speculated over the last year (as to) why. I’ve talked to Nolan a lot about it, over the last year. But the fact remains that I think he just felt it was time for him to try something else.”

Reporters pressed Bridich and asked if the trade was the result of the organization’s failure, the result of a feud that developed between Bridich and his third baseman — or both.

“If you’re looking to pass blame, blame me,” Bridich said. “It’s the job of the GM to create a team that competes and wins as much as humanly possible.”

About a year ago, Arenado, upset about the team’s direction, and angry that Bridich had shut down trade talks with multiple teams, famously said he felt “disrespected” by Bridich.

On Tuesday, grinning from ear to ear as he joined his new team, Arenado did not want to revisit the feud.

“I think when you have a contract like mine, and you’re losing, usually a lot of contracts get moved,” he said. “That’s kind of what happened now. I signed in (Colorado) to be there for a long time. I wanted to win there, it didn’t work out, so you move on.”

Bridich, who had never spoke publicly about his deteriorating relationship with Arenado, said: “It wasn’t always peaches and cream. There were bumps here and there and relationships change over time.

“There are relationships in our human existence that do last forever. But we are human beings in a business where sometimes relationships don’t last forever and commitments don’t last forever. … In this case, Nolan’s desire was to move on and be with a different organization. We tried to honor that.”

The Rockies attempted to trade Arenado last year but teams balked at the high asking price. As the losing continued in the pandemic-shortened 2020 season and financial losses mounted while the Arenado situation festered, the Rockies decided the time to move was now.

Monfort calculated that Arenado would use his opt-out clause after the 2021 season and figured picking up five players now would be better than getting only a single draft pick in compensation when Arenado walked away.

“We tried to get the greatest return possible,” Monfort said. “Many teams we talked to about deals made no sense. There were times in the last two weeks when I didn’t think the St. Louis trade made sense.”

Arenado, however, said he wasn’t sure he would have exercised the opt-out clause after the 2021 season, thus leaving $164 million on the table during a time when the pandemic has significantly altered baseball’s financial landscape.

“I don’t know if I would have done that,” he said Tuesday. “That would have been a (hard) decision to leave my contract out there, obviously.”

Regardless, the eight-year Arenado era in Colorado is over. He’s taking his eight Gold Gloves, four Platinum Gloves, .293 career batting average and 235 home runs to Busch Stadium, in the shadow of the Gateway Arch.

The Rockies? Despite losing their marquee player, and despite a depleted farm system that ranks in the bottom five, they insist Arenado’s departure is not the first swing of the wrecking ball. Bridich, in fact, discounted the idea that the Rockies are starting over.

“There are levels and variations of the rebuild process, but this certainly is not a total teardown and rebuild like certain teams have chosen to go,” he said. “I think if that were the case that certain players would have already been traded.”

Finally, near the end of the ordeal, Monfort was asked if he had thought about firing Bridich based on Colorado’s performance after the 2017 and ’18 playoff runs.

“No, I have not thought about firing Jeff,” he said. “I have thought about firing myself, but I have not thought about firing Jeff.”

How have the Rockies fared under their general managers?

The Colorado Rockies have had three general managers in their history: Bob Gebhard from 1993 to 1999, Dan O’Dowd from 2000 to 2014 and Jeff Bridich since 2015. None possess an overall winning record over their time with the Rockies. The chart shows in what place the Rockies finished in the NL West in each season*. Circle size corresponds to games back from first place. WC=lost in wild card game, DS=lost in division series; WS=lost in World Series. Click/hover for details.

The Trade
In February 2019, Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado signed an eight-year, $260 million contract that owner Dick Monfort believed would keep Arenado in Colorado for his entire career.

On Monday, Arenado was dealt to the St. Louis Cardinals. Here are the details of the trade:

  • Rockies agreed to send $51 million to the Cardinals, over a number of years, to help pay for his new deal.
  • Arenado agreed to defer money, but also added one more year to his contract ($15 million), taking him to 2027 with St. Louis.
  • Arenado waived his no-clause contract to join the Cardinals but the no-trade clause has since been reinstated.
  • Arenado retained opt-out clauses after the 2021 and ’22 seasons.
  • The Rockies received five players in return: big-league, left-handed starter Austin Gomber, as well as right-handed prospects Tony Locey and Jake Sommer, and infield prospects Elehuris Montero and Mateo Gil.

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Kourtney Kardashian Has the Best Reaction to Boyfriend Travis Barker’s Latest Post

Kourtney Kardashian is impressed by boyfriend Travis Barker‘s early musical endeavor.

On Jan. 31, Travis—the drummer for Blink-182 and the former star of reality series Meet the Barkers—took to Instagram to share a throwback video of himself playing with his former band. “My first punk band FEEBLE,” the artist wrote in the caption, which showed the group playing on a much smaller stage than Travis is now used to performing on.

The Keeping Up With the Kardashians star shared her reaction in the comments, writing just “wow” in response to the fun throwback.

This is just one example of how the just-confirmed couple is making their romance known on social media. Earlier this month, fans noticed that Travis had taken to commenting flower emojis on multiple of Kourtney’s Instagram pics. Kourtney also shared photos from the movie True Romance, one of Travis’ favorite films, to which he commented, “You’re So Cool.”

While fans may be fascinated by how these two went from neighbors in the California community of Calabasas to dating, a source told E! News that the relationship is very “low-key.”

Kourtney Kardashian’s Hottest Bikini Photos

“They are a really good match, and Kourtney’s entire family already loves Travis,” the insider shared. “They have been neighbors and great friends for years, and it just recently turned romantic.”

Kourtney Kardashian, Travis Barker

The source added that while the two aren’t putting any “pressure” on the relationship, “the chemistry and flirtation has always been there.”

“They have a lot in common, and Kourtney has always been attracted to how Travis is as a parent,” the insider continued “He’s an amazing, hands-on dad, and Kourtney loves that about him.”



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Eva Mendes denies plastic surgery accusation left on her Instagram post: ‘My little ones need me’

Eva Mendes directly denied a plastic surgery accusation that was doled out by an Instagram user on Saturday.

The 46-year-old actress shared a happy birthday message to a friend with a black-and-white photo on Instagarm that prompted one curious fan to inquire about why Mendes has been absent from social media.

EVA MENDES SPEAKS ON SOCIAL MEDIA HIATUS: ‘MY LITTLE ONE TOLD ME I WAS ON THE PHONE TOO MUCH’

“Why you post on insta… so less ????” The inquisitive Instagram user wrote.

But, before Mendes could respond, another commenter suggested the actress stopped posting because she got “work done” in a now deleted reply.

“She’s had work done and I don’t think she’s happy with it,” the commenter wrote. “She was beautiful without.”

EVA MENDES IS FEELING ‘MOM PANDEMIC GUILT’ WHILE ENTERTAINING KIDS

Mendes quickly set the story straight and explained that she has spent less time on Instagram so she can live in the moment more.

Eva Mendes directly denied a plastic surgery accusation that was doled out by an Instagram user who suggested she took a social media hiatus because she had “work done.” (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

“I’m not sure why I’m answering you but here I go. I’m posting less because I really want to be present for my family. My little ones need me and posting takes up too much time,” Mendes replied. “As far as getting work done, I’ll do that whenever I please. But no, that’s not the reason. The reason is I personally cannot juggle family and social media. So -big shocker -I choose family. Lotsa love to you out there.”

EVA MENDES SAYS SHE DIDN’T WANT BABIES UNTIL SHE MET RYAN GOSLING

Mendes, who is married to actor Ryan Gosling, has two daughters, Esmeralda, 6, and Amada, 4.

She hasn’t been that active on Instagram throughout the pandemic, mostly sharing throwback photos and images related to other people’s work.

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Occasionally, the actress shares posts about her beauty routine, which largely appears to be non-invasive.

In November, she shared an Instagram photo of herself getting a “Mono-Threads” treatment at a spa in Beverly Hills.

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And four months before that, Mendes shared a brief video of herself getting a facial massage with a “Golden Wand,” which is supposed to enhance lymphatic drainage, accord to the doctor who performed it.



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Katherine Heigl is done apologizing – The Washington Post

  1. Katherine Heigl is done apologizing The Washington Post
  2. Katherine Heigl Reacts to Alex and Izzie’s Surprise Grey’s Anatomy Reunion: ‘Isn’t That an A–hole Move?’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. My Head Is Spinning From Katherine Heigl’s Reaction To Alex And Izzie’s “Grey’s Anatomy” Reunion BuzzFeed
  4. ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Fans Can’t Stop Laughing at the ‘Longest Relationship’ In the Show’s History Showbiz Cheat Sheet
  5. Katherine Heigl On Returning To ‘Grey’s Anatomy:’ ‘I Would Never Say Never’ Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Hit-and-runs killing one in Portland, Ore., were deliberate but not terrorism, police say – Washington Post

  1. Hit-and-runs killing one in Portland, Ore., were deliberate but not terrorism, police say Washington Post
  2. ‘A lot of chaos’: 1 dead, at least 5 injured after driver strikes pedestrians across 15 blocks in Portland, police say Yahoo! Voices
  3. Police: Terrorism didn’t motivate fatal Portland car attack WBOY.com
  4. Driver in SE Portland car attack showed no terrorism, bias or political intent, police say OregonLive
  5. Man in custody after Portland vehicle killed one pedestrian and injured at least five others News-Daily.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Shaq doubles down on criticism of Donovan Mitchell with Instagram post on ‘greatness at the guard position’

Shaquille O’Neal has never been particularly supportive of the generation of players that followed him. Feuds with other big men like Dwight Howard, JaVale McGee and Rudy Gobert have become common for the current TNT broadcaster and Hall of Fame center, but his criticism reached a nadir in a recent interview with Utah Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell. Speaking to Mitchell on live television, O’Neal told him that “you don’t have what it takes to get to the next level,” and justified the statement by suggesting that he wanted Mitchell to hear it as a form of motivation. 

O’Neal has been roundly criticized for the interview, with both fans and modern stars like Kevin Durant and LeBron James speaking in Mitchell’s defense. But rather than apologize for his statement, O’Neal has doubled down on it. On Monday, O’Neal posted an Instagram slideshow showcasing former teammates Kobe Bryant, Dwyane Wade, Steve Nash, Gary Payton, Penny Hardaway and LeBron James with a caption that read: “This is what greatness at the guard position looks like. I played with the best ever-to do it. You know I know what best look like. #donthavetohate. Y’all kno I got G14 classification to say what I say.”

The post was strange on a number of levels. James criticized O’Neal for what he said to Mitchell, yet he appears in the slideshow. While Mitchell is not nearly as accomplished, he is frequently compared to Wade, who also shows up. It should also be noted that Mitchell, 24, is in only his fourth NBA season and is currently leading a contender. He may not be the equal of the players shown yet, but suggesting that he doesn’t have a chance to get there seems enormously premature. 

But O’Neal is hardly known for his restraint. He frequently feuded with opponents (and even teammates) as a player, and now that has carried over into his broadcasting career. He has seemingly committed to his anti-Mitchell take, but if the young Jazz star continues to grow at the rate that he has so far, Shaq may soon regret that stance. 

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British Economy, Post Brexit and Pummeled by Covid, Is Worst in G-7

The U.K.’s economy shrank more last year than any of the G-7, in what the Bank of England says will be the country’s biggest economic slump in more than 300 years.

What went wrong? Shutdowns caused greater pain for the U.K. than other members of the Group of Seven advanced economies in part because it is especially dependent on consumer spending, which evaporated amid one of Europe’s deadliest Covid-19 outbreaks. The economy was already weak after the four years of negotiations over Britain’s exit from the European Union, during which business investment sagged and households held back on spending.

This is the starting point for Britain’s new relationship with the EU, which began Jan. 1 with a loose free-trade agreement. Earlier this month, Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced another nationwide lockdown to fight a new, more-contagious variant of the coronavirus. That puts the U.K. economy on course to shrink again in the first quarter of the year, when businesses must also get to grips with new European trading arrangements.

Growth in the U.K. was already weak going into the pandemic because of feeble business investment, poor productivity and scant growth in incomes. Once the coronavirus set in, the British economy shrank by more than its peers in the G-7 in the first nine months of the year. Figures for the final quarter, due Feb. 12, are expected to show the economy contracted again.

The U.K. took a bigger hit because around 13% of its annual gross domestic product comes from spending on recreation and culture and in restaurants and hotels, a higher share than any other G-7 country. Businesses that depend on direct contact with consumers—bars and restaurants, sports events, hotels and theaters, cinemas and museums—were hobbled when social distancing became the norm and when the spread of the virus forced them to close. The current lockdown, in place through mid-February, closes schools and nonessential shops, and people have been told to leave home only if necessary.

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Washington Post: DOJ watchdog investigating Atlanta US attorney’s resignation

The paper, citing people familiar with the matter, reported that the probe by Inspector General Michael Horowitz appears nascent, noting that investigators had not spoken to Pak and the bounds of the investigation remain unclear.

A spokesperson for the inspector general’s office declined to comment when reached by CNN. Pak declined to comment to the Post.

Pak, a Trump appointee who had served in the office since 2017, left his job abruptly on January 4 as the US attorney for the Northern District of Georgia, which includes Atlanta and Fulton County, citing “unforeseen circumstances” in a memo to staff. Pak’s departure followed fallout over a phone call the previous weekend in which Trump had pressured Republican Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” votes to overturn the election in the state, which he lost to President Joe Biden.
In audio of the phone call obtained by CNN and first reported by the Post, Trump is also heard making baseless claims about the state’s election and at one point, when questioning the audit of ballots, he tells Raffensperger, “You have your never-Trumper US attorney there,” without mentioning a name. The comment appears to reference Pak.

Trump, in turn, ordered a US attorney from southern Georgia to take over the Atlanta office, in an unusual move. The Justice Department said the Southern District of Georgia’s US attorney, Bobby Christine, who is also a Trump appointee and has been in the job since 2017, would take over as acting head in Atlanta, handling both roles. The Atlanta office’s top assistant US attorney, Kurt Erskine, normally would have taken on the acting US attorney role but was passed over.

Two people familiar with the matter told the Post in Thursday’s story that a call from a senior Justice Department official in Washington had indicated to Pak that he should resign. Trump was angry at what he viewed as the department’s insufficient pursuit of his baseless allegations about Georgia’s election and the nation overall, people familiar with the matter told the paper at the time.

As CNN has previously reported, there have been no credible allegations of any issues with voting that would have impacted the election, as affirmed by dozens of judges, governors, election officials, the Electoral College, the Justice Department, the Department of Homeland Security and the US Supreme Court.

The law firm Alston & Bird announced Thursday that Pak was returning to the firm in February as a partner in its Litigation & Trial Practice Group in Atlanta. Pak was formerly a litigation associate at Alston & Bird and began his private practice career there in 2000, according to a news release from the firm.
In the statement from the Justice Department announcing his resignation early this month, Pak said he was grateful to Trump for the opportunity to serve and thanked former Attorneys General William Barr and Jeff Sessions.

“It has been the greatest honor of my professional career to have been able to serve my fellow citizens as the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia,” he said. “I have done my best to be thoughtful and consistent, and to provide justice for my fellow citizens in a fair, effective and efficient manner.”

CNN’s Katelyn Polantz, Evan Perez, Chandelis Duster and Kelly Mena contributed to this report.

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