Saturday 15 October 2016

Three Arrested in Bomb Plot Targeting Somalis in Kansas

Three Kansas men were arrested Friday and charged with plotting to attack an apartment building in Garden City, Kansas where Somali immigrants were living.
Prosecutors say the men — Curtis Allen and Gavin Wright, both 49, of Liberal, Kansas, and Patrick Eugene Stein, 47, of Wright, Kansas — who called themselves "The Crusaders," were unaware that the FBI was on to them since February and kept them under close surveillance.
The men had ties to an anti-government hate group, officials said, and talked about carrying out the attack after the election.

Image:

Gavin Wright. AP

According to the charges, they considered a number of possible targets before settling on the apartment building and talked about attacking it with car bombs which they said would "wake people up."
The men were arrested Friday morning in the Liberal, Kansas area, after receiving what they thought were working firearms from an FBI undercover operative, officials said.
All three were charged with one count each of conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction, prosecutors said.
"These individuals had desire, the means, and the capabilities and were committed to carrying out this act of domestic terrorism," Eric Jackson, FBI special agent in charge for District of Kansas, said at a press conference Friday.
There is a sizable Somali population in that area working in a Tyson foods processing plant.
The plot involved filling four vehicles with explosives and placing the car bombs at each corner of the building, which has 120 residents, Jackson and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Kansas said.

Pink: Stronger Than Heroin, But Legal In Most States

Two 13-year-old boys in the ski town of Park City, Utah died within 48 hours of each other in September, likely overdosing on a powerful heroin substitute that had been delivered — legally — to their homes by the U.S. mail, and is now turning up in cities across the nation.
Ryan Ainsworth was found dead on his couch two days after his best friend Grant Seaver passed away. "I wish I had been better warned," sang one of their friends at a massive memorial service. "But now it's too late."

Image: Grant Seaver

Grant Seaver of Park City, Utah died in September of a possible overdose of synthetic opioids. NBC News

The death toll could have been worse, say investigators, since as many as 100 Park City students had apparently been discussing the drug "Pink" on SnapChat and other social media.
"This stuff is so powerful that if you touch it, you could go into cardiac arrest," Park City Police Chief Wade Carpenter told NBC News. "The problem is if you have a credit card and a cell phone, you have access to it."
Pink, better known by chemists as U-47700, is eight times stronger than heroin, and is part of a family of deadly synthetic opioids, all of them more powerful than heroin, that includes ifentanyl, carfentanil and furanyl fentanyl. By themselves or mixed with other drugs, in forms ranging from pills to powder to mists, they're killing thousands of people across the country, say law enforcement and health officials. The powerful, ersatz opioids are part of a surge of synthetic drugs, including bath salts and mock-ups of ecstasy, being shipped into the U.S. from China and other nations.

Image: Ryan Ainsworth

Two days after the death of his friend Grant Seaver, Ryan Ainsworth (above) also died of a possible synthetic opioid overdose. NBC News

So far, however, only four states have made Pink illegal. It can still be ordered legally on-line and delivered to your home. The internet has many websites a Google search away where the drug is available for as little as $5 plus shipping.
Melissa Davidson, mother of a Park City teen who had friends in common with the dead boys, showed NBC News on her home computer screen how easy it was to find the drug for sale with just a few keystrokes. "Look! There are like pages and pages that you can buy this stuff online."

Dangerous High Winds On The Way After Tornadoes Hit Region

The Pacific Northwest was bracing for more dangerous weather Saturday, a day after storms slammed the region and touched off two tornadoes.
Forecasters warned residents from Northern California to British Columbia to prepare for the second blast powered by the remnants of a Pacific typhoon. What could be one of the top 10 strongest windstorms
ever recorded in the region was set to bring blinding rain, floods and huge waves.
The National Weather Service issued a high wind warning for the Greater Portland area from Saturday at 11 a.m. Saturday until 12 a.m. Sunday (2 p.m. Saturday to 3 a.m. Sunday ET).
The National Weather Service in Portland, Oregon, urged people to stay off roads as multiple streets in the city were flooded and impassable after heavy rains hit the area.
In the middle of the storm, the Coast Guard rescued 40 children and 6 adults by boat after they became stranded at a camp after trees fell and blocked a road, authorities said.

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Department of Justice to Collect Data on Police Shootings, In-Custody Deaths

The Department of Justice announced several steps Thursday tostart collecting nationwide data on interactions between law enforcement and civilians, including police shootings and in-custody deaths.
The move follows demands born out of protests surrounding the deaths of unarmed black people in places like Ferguson, Missouri, and Baltimore, Maryland.

So far, the task of aggregating information on police shootings has largely fallen to news media — most notably The Washington Post and The Guardian.
In a statement announcing the new initiatives, Attorney General Loretta Lynch called them "vital efforts toward increasing transparency and building trust between law enforcement and the communities we serve." The pilot data collection program is set to begin early next year.

Image: Loretta Lynch

Attorney General Loretta Lynch Andrew Harnik / AP

"Accurate and comprehensive data on the use of force by law enforcement is essential to an informed and productive discussion about community-police relations," Lynch said. "In the days ahead, the Department of Justice will continue to work alongside our local, state, tribal and federal partners to ensure that we put in place a system to collect data that is comprehensive, useful and responsive to the needs of the communities we serve."
Under the plan, the Federal Bureau of Investigation will assemble data on use of force by tens of thousands of agents at the largest law enforcement agencies, as well as the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Drug Enforcement Administration and U.S. Marshals Service.
Additionally, the DOJ plans to finalize a proposal for collecting "death-in-custody" data from state and local law enforcement agencies. The first public comment period on the proposal closed last week, according to a press release, and the department plans to issue an updated proposal in the near future

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Friday 14 October 2016

US election 2016: Your daily dig from campaign trail

There are 26 days to go until election day and the news shows no sign of letting up. Here's our latest daily election dig, including Donald Trump's many accusers,

The latest

Donald Trump was assailed by multiple accusations of groping from women who have come forward to US media. One woman told the New York Times that Trump groped her on a flight two decades ago, while another who was a receptionist in Trump Tower said he kissed her on the lips back in 2005. The Palm Beach Post also reported on a woman who says Trump grabbed her bottom at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida back in 2003 - while he was standing next to his then-fiancee Melania Knauss. Trump angrily denied the allegations and his campaign released a letter it sent to the NYT saying the newspaper was providing a platform to "anyone wishing to smear Mr Trump's name and reputation".
"Going to war" was how sources in the Trump campaign described the mood in Trump Tower to a Washington Post reporter. For now, however, it seems Trump is in retreat after several sources told NBC Newsthat his campaign was pulling out of Virginia. The latest polling averages on Real Clear Politics have Clinton up by 7.5 percentage points in Virginia.

Tweet by the BBC's Anthony Zurcher on Donald Trump's campaign team reportedly giving up on Virginia

But it's not all good news for Clinton. WikiLeaks released another batch of emails on Wednesday detailing conversations between her campaign staff and one in particular has caught the attention of Trump and his supporters - an alleged exchange between communications director Jennifer Palmieri and a think tank fellow, in which Palmieri makes disparaging comments about conservative Catholics.

US election: Could Republicans still dump Donald Trump?

For all Republicans out there longing to boot Donald Trump off the presidential ticket even at this late stage, there are four key words.
Death, declination, or otherwise.
The Republican National Committee (RNC) sets out in its Rule 9 the terms for "filling vacancies in nominations".
It reads: "The Republican National Committee is hereby authorized and empowered to fill any and all vacancies which may occur by reason of death, declination, or otherwise of the Republican candidate for President of the United States."
Death may be off the agenda, so what about the other scenarios?

Thursday 13 October 2016

US election: Could Republicans still dump Donald Trump?

For all Republicans out there longing to boot Donald Trump off the presidential ticket even at this late stage, there are four key words.
Death, declination, or otherwise.
The Republican National Committee (RNC) sets out in its Rule 9 the terms for "filling vacancies in nominations".
It reads: "The Republican National Committee is hereby authorized and empowered to fill any and all vacancies which may occur by reason of death, declination, or otherwise of the Republican candidate for President of the United States."
Death may be off the agenda, so what about the other scenarios?

Declination...

Mr Trump would voluntarily leave the race.
With "Rule 9" invoked, the RNC could then either reconvene the 2,472-delegate convention to vote again - a virtual impossibility at this stage - or the board of the RNC, with 160 members representing all states and territories, would select a replacement.
Each state and territory would have the same amount of voting power that it had at the convention. Mike Pence, the vice-presidential nominee, would not get an automatic promotion because the board could choose anyone to fill the vacancy.
Many Republican representatives and senators would welcome a new candidate as he or she could help them hold on to their seats.
Unfortunately for Trump opponents, the candidate has shown no intention of exiting the scene. His comments after the latest obscene remarks controversy - "See you at the debate on Sunday."

...or otherwise

The anti-Trumpers might take some comfort in the vagueness of the phrase.
Rule 9 has never actually been used before and so its boundaries have never been tested. The last time a candidate left the ticket late was in 1972. Democratic vice-presidential candidate Thomas Eagleton was forced off after his bouts of depression were made public.

Thomas Eagleton, left, was booted from the campaign of George McGovern in 1972Image copyrightAP
Image captionThomas Eagleton, left, was booted from the campaign of George McGovern in 1972

"Otherwise" is generally taken to cover the gap between death and declination, perhaps a coma or stroke or other illness that leaves the candidate alive but unable to signal withdrawal.
As such, it is about filling vacancies and not creating them.
But some have suggested a broader interpretation, taking "otherwise" into areas such as acts of criminality, treason or even adopting principles "fundamentally at variance with party principles", as commentator Thomas Balch puts it.

US Election 2016: Inside the tortured mind of an anti-Trump Republican

Several of the US Republicans who have distanced themselves from the party's presidential nominee, Donald Trump, face tight re-election contests next month, prompting several to agonise over where they stand.
Some who have condemned Mr Trump - for the lewd remarks captured on video and released last week - have faced a backlash from voters.
And others have been decried by their electorate for not rebuking the businessman.
Kelly Ayotte, a New Hampshire senator, typifies the kind of tortured journey some have gone on as, say critics, they try to second-guess where the public allegiance lies.
Here is how her position has evolved.

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German top court backs EU-Canada trade deal CETA

Germany's Constitutional Court has rejected a legal challenge to the EU-Canada free trade deal (CETA) from campaigners who call it undemocratic.
The campaigners object to the fact that parts of CETA will be implemented before all national parliaments in the EU have voted on it.
EU trade ministers are to vote on CETA next week. It requires unanimous support. If they all approve it, the deal can be signed on 27 October.
CETA would remove many trade barriers.
More than 125,000 people signed a petition organised by three activist groups aimed at blocking CETA, the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement. The groups are Compact,Foodwatch and More Democracy.
Opponents fear that CETA will be used as a model to push through an even more controversial EU-US trade deal called TTIP, much of which remains to be negotiated.
The activists argue that CETA and similar deals put job security and social welfare at risk, in a global "race to the bottom" that serves the interests of a wealthy elite.
German Economy Minister and Vice-Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel has battled to win his Social Democrats (SPD) round to CETA. The SPD is in government with Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU), who strongly support CETA.

Germany urged to reward Syrian refugees who arrested fugitive

There is a growing clamour in Germany to honour three Syrian refugees who overpowered a bomb plot suspect with possible links to the so-called Islamic State.
Calls to reward them for their heroism are coming from politicians along with news and social media.
Suspect Jaber al-Bakr gave elite commandos the slip over the weekend, sparking a two-day manhunt.
Police believe Mr Bakr was planning to bomb a Berlin airport.

'Heroes of Leipzig'

The country's best-selling daily newspaper Bild dubbed the refugee trio the "Syrian heroes of Leipzig".
Politicians from across the spectrum recommended them for the Federal Cross of Merit, a rank in Germany's civilian honours system.
Ansgar Heveling, chairman of the parliamentary committee on interior affairs, went a step further and called on them to be granted asylum.
Fellow Syrian refugees have also taken to social media to praise their compatriots.

A barrier tape and a police vehicle of the criminal technology block the access to an house in the district of Paunsdorf in Leipzig, eastern Germany on October 10, 2016Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionJaber al-Bakr evaded German police for two days

Police had been watching Mr Bakr, 22, for months, but he evaded police surveillance on Saturday in the eastern German city of Chemnitz, just as the authorities were preparing to storm an apartment where he was staying.
Mr Bakr, who is also Syrian, made his way south to Leipzig and asked for help and shelter from the trio, who later recognised Mr Bakr as a suspect after seeing police's appeals for information in Arabic on Facebook.
They quickly overpowered the fugitive, tied him up, and called police.
"I was furious with him, I couldn't accept something like this - especially here in Germany, the country that opened its doors to us," one of the men told RTL Television.
The three have not been identifying over fear of reprisals.
A little more than 200,000 people arrived in Germany to seek asylum in the first nine months of this year - a significant reduction from 2015, the country's interior minister Thomas de Maiziere said.
Last year, 890,000 asylum seekers arrived in the country, less than the one million originally estimated.

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en Garden  on Monday announced the launch of a new peer-to-peer service that allows users to share Internet connections and unused plan da...