2019年7月26日星期五

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Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters


Austrian triathlete Nathalie Birli survives kidnapping after convincing man to free her

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 06:59 AM PDT

Austrian triathlete Nathalie Birli survives kidnapping after convincing man to free herAn Austrian triathlete survived a kidnapping in which she was first hit by a car, tied up with duct tape and then taken to a remote house where she was held for hours before convincing her abductor to release her, police said. A 33-year-old man has been arrested. Nathalie Birli, 27, was training with her bicycle on a road in Kumberg in southern Austria on Tuesday afternoon when she was abducted, Graz police spokesman Fritz Grundnig said. The attacker, whose name wasn't given according to Austrian privacy rules, was arrested on Wednesday. Birli said that she was on her bicycle when a car rammed into her and knocked her over, according to an interview published in local newspaper Krone on Thursday. She said she broke her left arm in the fall and the driver then beat her with a stick and threw her into the back seat. Birli, who has a 14-week-old son, said that she lost consciousness for a while, and when she woke up she was naked and tied to an armchair, Krone reported. "He was full of hatred," she said. "He blindfolded me, forced me to drink wine and schnapps and he always held a knife in his hand." Birli said at some point he held her nose and mouth and she thought he wanted to suffocate her but then stopped and forced her into a bathtub with cold water "to drown me." She said the situation began to change when she saw that there were a lot of orchids in the house and she expressed her admiration for the plants. "All of a sudden the attacker was nice to me," Birli told Krone. He told her that he was a gardener and started talking about his horrible life - "a dead father, a mother addicted to alcohol and girlfriends who betrayed him," Birli said. Birli said that was the moment when she suggested a "deal" to the man. "'Let's pretend it was an accident,' I offered him, 'and you let me go.'" He agreed, took off the duct tape and drove her all the way home, she said. "I went right into the house, locked the door and called my partner," Birli said. Police managed to track down the suspect and he was arrested early Wednesday by Austria's Cobra special forces. Birli, in a Facebook post on Wednesday, said the experience was like a "bad movie" and thanked all who went out looking for her when she was missing. "Thank God I could liberate myself, and other than a fractured arm and a head injury, I'm fine," she said.


Point Break: Is Iran Ready to Retaliate Against America?

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 08:32 AM PDT

Point Break: Is Iran Ready to Retaliate Against America?The United States and Iran remain locked in a tense standoff, punctuated by periodic escalations, that could easily transition into a full-blown conflict. Following the U.S. withdrawal from the JCPOA, Iran has been subjected to crushing sanctions that have contracted its economy and put pressure on its leadership. Rather than concede, Iran has responded with increasingly provocative moves—sabotaging several oil tankers, shooting down a U.S. drone, and openly violating the uranium enrichment and storage thresholds in the JCPOA. Many in Washington want the United States to launch military strikes on Iran because they believe the prospect of a war that it would lose would force Iran into submission. Military action is much more likely to backfire, however, since it would only legitimize Iran's nuclear program and make a nuclear arsenal essential to defend itself from the United States.Iran has clearly telegraphed that it would restart uranium enrichment unless America's European allies—who want to remain in the JCPOA—defy U.S. sanctions and continue to import Iranian oil. Iran's recent moves are a desperate effort to recapture some of the economic benefits of the deal in exchange for its continued compliance. So far, modest European efforts to that end have done little to ease Iran's economic crisis. Iran's recent seizure of a British oil tanker—retaliation for the Royal Navy's seizure of an Iranian vessel—is likely to make the Europeans even less willing to risk angering the United States on Iran's behalf.


Another 'straight pride' parade plans draw critics: 'That’s all hate crime stuff to me'

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 02:54 AM PDT

Another 'straight pride' parade plans draw critics: 'That's all hate crime stuff to me'Modesto, California, officials are weighing whether to approve a "straight pride" parade to "celebrate" heterosexuality and western civilization.


Syrian girls captured in viral photo fight for survival

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 07:41 AM PDT

Syrian girls captured in viral photo fight for survivalThe picture went viral on social media networks: two dust-covered Syrian girls, trapped in rubble, grab their baby sister from her shirt as she dangles from a bombed-out building. The picture was captured on Wednesday by Bashar al-Sheikh, a photographer working with local news website SY24, moments after warplanes pummelled the town of Ariha in Syria's northwestern province of Idlib. Of the three girls shown in the photo, one is dead and two are fighting to stay alive, after regime airstrikes hit their home, said Dr. Ismail, who treated the victims in a nearby hospital but asked that his last name not be revealed.


Reuters photo captures Guatemalan mother begging soldier to let her enter U.S.

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 09:03 AM PDT

Reuters photo captures Guatemalan mother begging soldier to let her enter U.S.Ledy Perez fell to her haunches, a clenched hand covering her face as she wept, an arm clutching her small 6-year-old son, who glared defiantly at the Mexican National Guard soldier blocking them from crossing into the United States. The plight of this mother and son who had traveled some 1,500 miles (2,410 km) from their home country of Guatemala to the border city of Ciudad Juarez, only to be stopped mere feet from the United States, was captured by Reuters photographer Jose Luis Gonzalez as twilight approached on Monday. "The woman begged and pleaded with the National Guard to let them cross ... she wanted to cross to give a better future" to her young son Anthony Diaz, Gonzalez said.


2 North Carolina bomb squad agents injured in explosion

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 10:29 AM PDT

2 North Carolina bomb squad agents injured in explosion


Family speaks out after girl with special needs was brutally attacked by multiple teens in viral video

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 09:35 AM PDT

Family speaks out after girl with special needs was brutally attacked by multiple teens in viral videoThe family of a 15-year-old Chicago girl with special needs said she is doingOK after she was brutally beaten by a group of teenagers in an attack that wascaptured on video, WLS-TV reports


Dr. Leana Wen's departure from Planned Parenthood exposes the organization's true identity

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 03:00 AM PDT

Dr. Leana Wen's departure from Planned Parenthood exposes the organization's true identityLeana Wen's firing captures what pro-life activists have been arguing for years, that Planned Parenthood cares only about maintaining abortion clinics


Loose tire rolls down New Jersey highway until crashing into car

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 07:34 PM PDT

Loose tire rolls down New Jersey highway until crashing into carIt was a wild scene in New Jersey when a wayward tire rolled down the highway until it went flying into a moving vehicle.


Trump speaks in front of fake presidential seal mysteriously manipulated to feature Russian eagles and golf clubs

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 02:11 AM PDT

Trump speaks in front of fake presidential seal mysteriously manipulated to feature Russian eagles and golf clubsDonald Trump appeared at a right-wing rally in front of a fake presidential seal, doctored to make apparently satiric references to Russia and golf.The tweaked image flashed up on a screen behind the president as he spoke to a summit hosted by the conservative group Turning Point USA in Washington earlier this week.The normally solitary bald eagle was seen with two heads, made to resemble the two-headed bird on the official Russian coat of arms in a mocking nod to Mr Trump's woes with investigations into Moscow's election meddling.The symbolic bird also showed up clutching a bag of golf clubs – evidently a joke about the president's fondness for spending so much time on the links.Both the White House and Turning Point USA said they were unaware of why or how the altered image appeared on the screen.A spokesman for Turning Point USA told The Washington Post it was a "last-minute A/V [audio/visual] mistake" after the newspaper first highlighted the doctored seal."I can't figure out who did it yet. I don't know where they got the image from," he added, explaining they organisation was still try to determine who was responsible and where they got the image from.> Seriously?? > How did Russia's national symbol end up on a presidential seal at a trump event? https://t.co/z6omAXnz6q pic.twitter.com/u8Baym73fM> > — Olga Lautman (@olgaNYC1211) > > July 25, 2019Richard Painter, who served as the George W Bush administration's chief White House ethics lawyer, told the Post: "To let someone project something on the screen that isn't controlled by the White House is pretty stupid."He added: "Someone is going to be getting in trouble, but they got one heck of a good laugh out of it."Mr Painter explained that First Amendment freedom of expression rights allowed people to parody the official presidential seal.Kathleen Clark, legal professor at Washington University, said: "Was someone at Turning Point trolling Trump? I just think Putin would probably approve."


Today's Climate Change Is Worse Than Anything Earth Has Experienced in the Past 2,000 Years

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 06:25 AM PDT

Today's Climate Change Is Worse Than Anything Earth Has Experienced in the Past 2,000 YearsThe global climate is changing faster now than it has at any point in the past 2,000 years.That's the conclusion of a trio of papers published July 24 in the journals Nature and Nature Geoscience that examined the global climate over the past two millennia. The researchers showed that none of the past fluctuations -- that is, not the Little Ice Age, the warm period known as the Medieval Climate Anomaly or any other famous shift -- had the global reach that modern climate change is having. Past fluctuations tended to be localized, affecting primarily one region at a time. Modern climate change, by contrast, is messing with the entire world."Temperatures did not rise and fall everywhere in step [in the past]," editors wrote in an accompanying opinion piece in Nature Geoscience. "Specifically, early cool or warm intervals that lasted for centuries peaked at different times in different regions."That's a radical departure from modern climate change, Scott St. George, a climate researcher at the University of Minnesota who wasn't involved in the research, wrote in a news and views article for Nature. [10 Climate Myths Busted]"Although the Little Ice Age was the coldest epoch of the past millennium, the timing of the lowest temperatures varied from place to place," St. George wrote. "Two-fifths of the planet were subjected to the coldest weather during the mid-nineteenth century, but the deepest chill occurred several centuries earlier in other regions. And even at the height of the Medieval Climate Anomaly, only 40% of Earth"s surface reached peak temperatures at the same time. Using the same metrics, global warming today is unparalleled: for 98% of the planet's surface, the warmest period of the Common Era occurred in the late twentieth century."That means that almost every part of the planet had its hottest decades in the past 2,000 years at the same time.And the 21st century, which is outside the scope of these papers, has been much hotter than the 20th century so far. In fact, the world is on track to keep warming as greenhouse gases continue to accumulate in the atmosphere.To develop a rigorous picture of global temperatures over the past 2,000 years, the researchers relied on nearly 700 records from the so-called PAGES 2k proxy temperature database. That database rounds up evidence from ice cores, trees, coral and other substances that change their appearance or chemical composition based on global temperatures. The researchers used those records to build a detailed map of climate fluctuations the world over. And none of them look like the consistent, persistent shifts we're seeing today.Of course, the causes are different, too. Evidence from the previous 2,000 years shows that short-lived volcanic events were the main drivers of climate fluctuations, the authors wrote. Human activities were perhaps a very minor secondary factor over that period. Now, humans are the ones driving the bus. And this time, it's headed toward the edge of a cliff. * Images of Melt: Earth's Vanishing Ice Caps * 50 Interesting Facts About Earth * 9 Real Ways the World Could EndOriginally published on Live Science.


Russia warns of 'consequences' after Ukraine seizes tanker

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 11:55 AM PDT

Russia warns of 'consequences' after Ukraine seizes tankerUkraine on Thursday seized a Russian tanker it said was used in a naval confrontation last November amid sensitive prisoner swap talks between the two countries who have been at loggerheads since 2014. Kiev's SBU security service said it stopped the tanker, the Neyma, as it entered the port of Izmail in the southern Odessa region. Investigators seized documents onboard and questioned crew members, an SBU statement said.


Giant dinosaur bone found in southwestern France

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 12:28 PM PDT

Giant dinosaur bone found in southwestern FranceThe thigh bone of a giant dinosaur was found this week by French paleontologists at an excavation site in southwestern France where remains of some of the largest animals that ever lived on land have been dug up since 2010. The two-meter long femur at the Angeac-Charente site is thought to have belonged to a sauropod, herbivorous dinosaurs with long necks and tails which were widespread in the late Jurassic era, over 140 million years ago. "This is a major discovery," Ronan Allain, a paleontologist at the National History Museum of Paris told Reuters.


View Photos of the 2020 BMW 2-series Gran Coupe Prototype

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 05:02 AM PDT

View Photos of the 2020 BMW 2-series Gran Coupe Prototype


A look at the 5 federal death row inmates facing execution

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 02:35 AM PDT

A look at the 5 federal death row inmates facing executionThe Justice Department announced Thursday that it will resume executing death row prisoners for the first time in nearly two decades. At the direction of Attorney General William Barr, the federal Bureau of Prisons has scheduled the executions of five inmates being held on death row at USP Terre Haute, a high-security penitentiary in Indiana. Danny Lee, of Yukon, Oklahoma, was convicted in the 1996 deaths of an Arkansas family as part of a plot to set up a whites-only nation in the Pacific Northwest.


Photo of mother begging Mexican guard becomes symbol of migrants' struggle

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 10:15 AM PDT

Photo of mother begging Mexican guard becomes symbol of migrants' struggleViral images show Ledy Pérez sobbing as she pleads with an armed guard to let her and her son aged six cross the US-Mexico borderGuatemalan migrant Ledy Pérez embraces her son, Anthony, while praying to ask a member of the Mexican national guard to let them cross into the US, as seen from Ciudad Juárez. Photograph: José Luis González/ReutersLedy Pérez grasped her six-year-old son and sobbed as she begged a Mexican guard to let her bring him across the US-Mexico border and to, hopefully, a better future than the one she faced at home in Guatemala.The image of Pérez embracing her son, Anthony Díaz, as he stares at guards clad in desert fatigues and armed with assault rifles has made headlines in Mexico and gone viral in the US.Through sobs, Pérez repeatedly asks the officers let her pass in a video posted by Mexico's El Universal newspaper. "Don't let them send me back," she says. "I just want to give my son a better life."Ledy Pérez reacts while holding hands with her son, Anthony, while asking to members of the Mexican national guard to let them cross into the US. Photograph: José Luis González/ReutersFamilies arrived at the US border from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador at record rates in the spring, fleeing a toxic mix of violence, poverty, food insecurity, climate change and corruption.Under pressure from the US to stem the flow, Mexico's president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, directed nearly a third of the country's militarized national guard police force to patrol the border. He insists the rights of migrants must be upheld, but the image of Pérez's plight garnered criticism in Mexico.On Tuesday, former Mexican president Felipe Calderón retweeted the photo and wrote: "What a pity! The Mexico government should not have accepted this"The national guard deployment, along with the hot summer weather, saw the number of people apprehended at the border fall in June though the factors driving people out of the region, known as the Northern Triangle, have not been resolved.Pérez embraces her son while facing Mexico's national guard. There was no overt aggression in the nine-minute encounter in Ciudad Juárez, the photographer, José Luis González, told Reuters. Photograph: José Luis González/ReutersThe Reuters photographer José Luis González captured the powerful images and said the soldier centered in the photo did not provide his name, but said he was only following orders. There was no overt aggression in the nine-minute encounter in Ciudad Juárez, González told Reuters.Pérez was undaunted by the soldiers' steely response and lunged for the border with her son when the soldier looked away, Gonález said. Sprinting across the riverbank, the pair made it out of the national guard's jurisdiction into US territory, where they were taken into custody by US Customs and Border Protection (CBP).From there, they could be brought to a US detention facility, freed until their immigration case is heard by a judge or returned to Mexico while their asylum claim is processed.Pérez embraces her son as she pleads with Mexican armed police. Photograph: José Luis González/ReutersThe crossing Pérez and Anthony eventually made is often characterized as an "illegal" entry, despite the Trump administration making legal crossings for asylum seekers nearly impossible. The difficulty of requesting asylum has driven people to attempt entry at other parts of the border, often with the intent of being apprehended by US border patrol.Under an informal policy known as "metering", asylum seekers must wait months before they are allowed to approach US officials and request asylum. Nearly 20,000 people who have managed to request asylum from a US official have since been returned to Mexico to wait for their case to be processed as part of the Trump administration's opaque Remain in Mexico policy. The returned migrants have told journalists, advocates and courts that they were extorted, assaulted and raped in Mexico.Pérez and Anthony sprinted across the riverbank, made it out of national guard jurisdiction and into US territory, where they were taken into custody by US Customs and Border Protection. Photograph: José Luis González/ReutersIt is unclear what comes next for Pérez and her son, but the photographer said her face in the photos was "a small reflection of all migrants' suffering".González said: "A lot of people judge migrants, ask why don't they stay in their country, why do they come here or why are they crossing into the United States … Every migrant has a story."


American Airlines passenger smashes laptop on partner's head in viral clip

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 07:13 AM PDT

American Airlines passenger smashes laptop on partner's head in viral clipAn unruly passenger was removed from an American Airlines plane at Miami International Airport Sunday after she smashed a laptop over her partner's head.


Japan May Soon Gain a Powerful Trade Weapon Against South Korea

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 02:36 AM PDT

Japan May Soon Gain a Powerful Trade Weapon Against South Korea(Bloomberg) -- Terms of Trade is a daily newsletter that untangles a world embroiled in trade wars. Sign up here. Japan could soon gain a powerful new trade weapon against its neighbor South Korea.Tokyo set Wednesday as the deadline for public comments on whether to remove South Korea from a so-called "white list" of trusted export destinations, a bureaucratic process intended to stymie weapons proliferation. Such a move could restrict exports on hundreds of items to South Korea, hamstringing the country's giant tech sector and potentially the production of a swathe of the world's most popular gadgets.A dispute between two of Asia's largest economies escalated this month when Japan slapped curbs on the export to South Korea of three materials vital to semiconductor and display manufacturing. That came after tensions flared over whether Japan has sufficiently compensated Koreans who suffered under Japan's 1910-45 occupation of the peninsula.Stripping South Korea of its white-list designation could deal a further blow to Samsung Electronics Co and SK Hynix Inc. The move could affect 97% of Japanese imports, though any disruption should prove short-lived, economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said this week. Specifically, South Korean firms would need to get individual approvals from the Japanese government for exports of 857 non-sensitive products out of 1,120 Japanese strategic materials.The other 263 products are sensitive materials for which Japan already requires approval, Park So-yeon, an analyst at Korea Investment & Securities, said in a note Wednesday. Although it isn't clear which items will be most affected by white-list removal, promising sectors such as semiconductors as well as new energy vehicles might be impacted once blanket approval for products from chemicals to machinery are removed, analysts say.Chip Firms Face CrunchJapan accounts for about 32% or roughly $3.8 billion of South Korea's chip manufacturing equipment imports. The larger nation yields about 83% or $422 million of its smaller neighbor's display manufacturing gear imports, according to Lee Joo-wan, research fellow at Hana Institute of Finance.Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's government said it's making the moves because it found evidence that South Korea has not offered proper management of sensitive materials -- a charge the government of President Moon Jae-in has denied. Their fight has played well at home for both leaders, with Moon and Abe enjoying climbs in support for their tough stands.U.S. technology companies, however, urged Japan and South Korea to cool tensions, saying too much was at stake globally."Non-transparent and unilateral changes in export control policies can cause supply chain disruptions, delays in shipments, and ultimately long-term harm to the companies that operate within and beyond your borders and the workers they employ," five of America's largest tech industry groups wrote in a joint letter to the trade ministers of Japan and South Korea.Still, economists at Goldman Sachs and Bank of America Merrill Lynch see little chance of tensions developing into a full-fledged trade war."We do not believe that such a de-listing would necessarily lead to large, sustained disruptions in Japan-Korea trade activities, due to mutual trade dependence," Goldman economists wrote in their note.Colonial ClaimsSouth Korea on Wednesday appealed to Japan to keep it on the list. It would hurt economic ties, the trade ministry said in a statement, as Seoul sought to convince the World Trade Organization's general council that Japan is violating its rules -- a charge Tokyo denies.South Korean deputy trade minister Kim Seung-ho told the WTO on Wednesday that Japan's trade restrictions were being deployed as a political tool to prevent forced-labor victims from asking Japanese companies for compensation stemming from forced-labor practices during World War II, according to an official with knowledge of the remarks, who asked not to be identified because the discussions were private.Japanese Ambassador to the WTO, Junichi Ihara, rejected Kim's claim. He said Tokyo's trade restrictions were a national-security matter and were not appropriate for discussion at the WTO.Resolving the export-curbs issue is difficult because it's become entangled with a dispute over South Korean court rulings, ordering the seizure of Japanese corporate assets to compensate Koreans forced to work in colonial-era factories and mines. Tokyo has put pressure on Seoul to accept an arbitration process stipulated in a 1965 treaty that set up basic relations to settle the so-called conscripted labor issue.Japan's decision to remove a country from the white list lies with its cabinet. But before that takes place, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry will assess the public comments received and compile a set of responses. An actual decision is expected in August but in theory, Japan could decide as early as this week.The period for accepting public comments on removing South Korea was 24 days, as opposed to most cases where the window is around 30 days. That suggests the cabinet decision may come sooner rather than later. Once a decision is made, the amendment to the relevant law is publicized and comes into force 21 days after its publication.Japan could arguably end up hurting its own economy. A Japanese government official has said that removing South Korea from the white list would mean domestic exporters lose access to general bulk licenses for exporting goods. They would still be able to access special bulk licenses, instead of applying for individual approvals, that require inspection from Japan's economic ministry, the official said.Tokyo still had questions about South Korea's general weapons export screening system, Economy Minister Hiroshige Seko said, giving no clear indication on when Japan might make its next move after the deadline for comments closed."We will put the public comments received in order, and disclose them at the appropriate time," he told reporters in Tokyo Wednesday.(Corrects wording in 13th paragraph to reflect South Korean official's remarks about forced-labor victims asking Japanese companies for compensation.)(Updates with WTO appeal starting in 13th paragraph.)\--With assistance from Yuko Takeo and Bryce Baschuk.To contact the reporter on this story: Sohee Kim in Seoul at skim847@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Scott at bscott66@bloomberg.net, Jon Herskovitz, Edwin ChanFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P.


US border patrol chief says she didn’t realise racist Facebook group was racist

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 04:22 AM PDT

US border patrol chief says she didn't realise racist Facebook group was racistThe revelations over secret Facebook groups popular with US Border Patrol agents were eye-popping.A constant stream of racist, sexist and violent images persisted for years, reporters revealed. Days later, officials said those responsible for posts were previously investigated, with unclear results.Then, in testimony on Wednesday, Border Patrol Chief Carla Provost acknowledged she herself was a member of one of the groups, and had been active since at least autumn 2018, according to images published by The Intercept.Her reason for involvement in the group was to evaluate "how I am representing my workforce", she told lawmakers in a hearing about oversight within her agency.Ms Provost sighed deeply. "I didn't think anything of it at the time," she told the House appropriations subcommittee, and said she was unaware about the nature of the posts until ProPublica published a report on 1 July.The posts contain caustic remarks about the deaths of migrants, sexually explicit images and xenophobic comments.Her admission raised a question: why did she not use her membership in the group to instead measure cultural sentiment among agents, attitudes about migrants or possible concerns she could address at the top?"She either missed it from failure to effectively do her job or actively avoided thinking about it," Josiah Heyman, director of the Inter-American and Border Studies centre at the University of Texas at El Paso, said on Thursday.Part of Ms Provost's duties is to visit facilities and meet agents, where front-line supervisors may downplay realities of a recruiting and morale crisis.Facebook, then, could provide an unvarnished look at how agents view themselves and their duties – or in this case, watch troubling cultural issues rise to the surface as the agency faces intense scrutiny.Ms Provost looked for candid words about her performance, Mr Heyman noted, "but she manifested no curiosity about candid things being said in other regards".More than 60 active and eight former agents are being investigated for their involvement in the group, Associated Press reported.Some posts questioned the authenticity of a photo of a drowned migrant man and his young daughter.Another showed a crudely doctored photo of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez performing forced oral sex on Donald Trump.Customs and Border Protection, the agency that includes Border Patrol, did not return a request for comment about why Ms Provost did not use the group in a manner that could have prevented the organisation's latest black eye.In her testimony, Ms Provost said she is "as outraged as everyone else".She "condemned" the posts in a message to the agency, launched investigations into agents who posted or responded to posts and turned over her passwords to agency oversight officials, who told her she had logged on to Facebook nine times over a one-year period, mostly to keep up with friends and family.Yet Ms Provost said the posts at the private group page "I'm 10-15," after the law enforcement code for "aliens in custody", were not indicative of cultural rot within the Border Patrol.She called offenders "a few bad apples" among about 20,000 agents. The group for current and former agents included about 9,500 members, though other groups exist.Mr Heyman suggested the posts indicate cultural and attitude problems that he said officials have been reluctant to address.He led a survey of about 1,100 migrants deported to Mexico, and nearly a quarter of respondents said they were verbally abused by US immigration agents, primarily Border Patrol. 11 per cent reported physical abuse."The posts are very consistent with that we found," he said. It's not just 'this person is out of status, and I need to apply law ... but I hate this person, I want to humiliate this person'."Washington Post


India farmers shocked as suspected meteorite crashes into rice field

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 02:29 AM PDT

India farmers shocked as suspected meteorite crashes into rice fieldA suspected meteorite the size of a football plunged into a rice field in eastern India, startling farmers, authorities said Thursday. "The farmers were working in the paddy field when this heavy rock fell from the sky with a very loud noise," Shirsat Kapil Ashok, the magistrate for Madhubani district in Bihar state, told AFP. The find is being analysed by scientists as a possible meteorite.


Are Catholic politicians in Washington doing more harm than good?

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 08:30 AM PDT

Are Catholic politicians in Washington doing more harm than good?Despite Catholic teachings being some of the most outspoken when it comes to defending the unborn and standing against abortion, statistics show that when speaking about Catholic politicians on Capitol Hill, there is a wide disconnect between their faith and their politics. Matthew Schmitz, the editor of First Things magazine, is here to discuss his recent article that claims the unborn would have less to fear, 'if every Catholic were removed from Congress tomorrow.'


27 children removed from Montana treatment facility over allegations of 'egregious' abuse

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 03:22 PM PDT

27 children removed from Montana treatment facility over allegations of 'egregious' abuseThe allegations include physical and psychological abuse and assault at the Ranch for Kids in Rexford, Montana health officials said Tuesday.


SC murder suspect planned escape with fire, attack on guards

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 10:02 AM PDT

SC murder suspect planned escape with fire, attack on guards


Russia warns UK media of consequences after London fines one of its TV channels

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 06:50 AM PDT

Russia warns UK media of consequences after London fines one of its TV channelsRussia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday warned British media operating in Russia that they should be ready to face the consequences after a British regulator fined Russia's RT state-financed TV channel. Moscow was responding after Ofcom, Britain's media regulator, earlier on Friday fined RT 200,000 pounds ($248,740) for breaching broadcasting impartiality rules in its coverage of the poisoning of former spy Sergei Skripal, the policies of Ukraine and the conflict in Syria.


Indonesia's Mount Tangkuban Perahu volcano erupts as tourists flee 600-foot ash cloud

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 08:28 AM PDT

Indonesia's Mount Tangkuban Perahu volcano erupts as tourists flee 600-foot ash cloudAn Indonesian volcano popular with tourists erupted Friday, forcing visitorsto flee the area


US Navy Seals platoon sent home from Iraq for drinking alcohol as sexual assault allegations investigated

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 04:04 AM PDT

US Navy Seals platoon sent home from Iraq for drinking alcohol as sexual assault allegations investigatedThe commander of a US Special Operations task force in Iraq has sent home a platoon of Navy SEALs for drinking while deployed after an alleged sexual assault by one of them, US defence officials said, the latest discipline incident that has emerged for an elite force relied upon heavily by the Pentagon.US Special Operations Command said in a statement on Wednesday night that the platoon was forced out early to San Diego by the commander of the task force, Major General Eric Hill, "due to a perceived deterioration of good order and discipline within the team during non-operational periods" of their deployment."The Commander lost confidence in the team's ability to accomplish the mission," the statement said. "Commanders have worked to mitigate the operational impact as this SEAL platoon follows a deliberate redeployment."The statement did not say what led to the decision, but a defence official with knowledge of the situation said that a female service member working with their platoon reported being sexually assaulted by one of the SEALs during the Fourth of July holiday weekend.The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the situation, said the report triggered scrutiny of the platoon, including drinking while deployed.The SEALs declined to cooperate with investigators, prompting Maj Gen Hill to send them home for both that and the alcohol use, the official said. The reported assault was first reported on Thursday by the New York Times.A second person, a senior US Navy official, said on Thursday that he was aware of alleged sexual misconduct being a part of the case, but was not sure if an assault had been reported.The officials said that the SEALs involved violated General Order No. 1, which bans alcohol use while deployed.The SEALs were members of SEAL Team 7, which has headquarters in San Diego when not deployed, one of the defence officials said.The defence official familiar with the sexual assault report said that the Naval Criminal Investigative Service is overseeing the sexual assault case, while other military officials investigate administratively the culture and actions in the unit.Commander Tamara Lawrence, a spokeswoman for Naval Special Warfare Command, said in a statement on Wednesday night that her unit is "actively reinforcing" with the entire force "basic leadership, readiness, responsibility and ethical principles that must form the foundation of special operations"."Leaders at all levels must lead in a way that sustains and sharpens that foundation," she said. "Discipline is a competitive advantage, and enforcing those standards is critical to our success on the battlefield."The disclosure by the military comes two days after the independent Navy Times reported that six members of SEAL Team 10 in Virginia Beach tested positive last year for cocaine use.Some of them had masked their use of it in previous tests, some of the SEALs told investigators, Navy Times reported.The Iraq incident also comes after Navy SEALs were implicated in the death of Army Staff Sergeant Logan Melgar, a Special Forces soldier who was strangled in Mali in June 2017.Two members of SEAL Team 6 – Chief Special Warfare Operator Adam Matthews and Chief Special Warfare Operator Anthony DeDolph – and two Marine Raiders were charged with murder.Mr Matthews and one of the Marines, Staff Sergeant Kevin Maxwell, have pleaded guilty to lesser charges, and testified that Mr Melgar was accidentally killed in what the military has called a hazing incident involving alcohol.Another SEAL, Chief Special Warfare Operator Edward Gallagher, recently faced court-martial on war-crimes charges that included murder.He was acquitted of the most serious charges but was convicted of posing for an unlawful photo with the remains of an Isis fighter.The government's case against him fell apart after another SEAL who was offered immunity from prosecution to testify said under oath that he, not Mr Gallagher, had been the one who killed a wounded Isis fighter.Washington Post


Basil From Mexico Is Likely Cause of Cyclospora Food Poisoning Outbreak

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 12:04 PM PDT

Basil From Mexico Is Likely Cause of Cyclospora Food Poisoning OutbreakA food poisoning outbreak tied to 132 cyclospora illnesses in 11 states was likely caused by fresh basil imported from Mexico by Siga Logistics de RL de CV, the Food and Drug Administration annou...


Hong Kong protesters rally at airport to 'educate' visitors

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 04:46 AM PDT

Hong Kong protesters rally at airport to 'educate' visitorsThousands of Hong Kongers, including flight attendants, held a rally in the airport's arrivals hall on Friday to "educate" visitors about the demonstrations currently gripping the international finance hub as it braces for another weekend of protests. The rally is the latest bid to keep pressure on Hong Kong's pro-Beijing leaders after seven weeks of largely peaceful mass demonstrations followed by violent clashes, an unprecedented challenge to Beijing's authority since the city's 1997 handover. The protests were triggered by a controversial bill which would have allowed extraditions to mainland China, but they have evolved into a call for wider democratic reforms and a halt to sliding freedoms.


So Much of the Arctic Is on Fire, You Can See It From Space

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 07:09 AM PDT

So Much of the Arctic Is on Fire, You Can See It From SpaceWildfires burning large swaths of Russia are generating so much smoke, they're visible from space, new images from NASA's Earth Observatory reveal.Since June, more than 100 wildfires have raged across the Arctic, which is especially dry and hot this summer. In Russia alone, wildfires are burning in 11 of the country's 49 regions, meaning that even in fire-free areas, people are choking on smoke that is blowing across the country.The largest fires -- blazes likely ignited by lightning -- are located in the regions of Irkutsk, Krasnoyarsk and Buryatia, according to the Earth Observatory. These conflagrations have burned 320 square miles (829 square kilometers), 150 square miles (388 square km) and 41 square miles (106 square km) in these regions, respectively, as of July 22. [In Photos: Fossil Forest Unearthed in the Arctic]The above natural-color image, taken on July 21, shows plumes rising from fires on the right side of the photo. Winds carry the smoke toward the southwest, where it mixes with a storm system. The image was captured with the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on the Suomi NPP, a weather satellite operated by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.The Russian city of Krasnoyarsk is under a layer of haze, the Earth Observatory reported. And while Novosibirsk, Siberia's largest city, doesn't have any fires as of now, smoke carried there by the winds caused the city's air quality to plummet.Wildfires are also burning in Greenland and parts of Alaska, following what was the hottest June in recorded history. It's common for fires to burn during the Arctic's summer months, but the number and extent this year are "unusual and unprecedented," Mark Parrington, a senior scientist at the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS), a part of the European Union's Earth observation program, told CNN.These fires are taking a toll on the atmosphere; they've released about 100 megatons of carbon dioxide from June 1 to July 21, which is roughly equivalent to the amount of carbon dioxide Belgium released in 2017, according to CAMS, CNN reported.The Arctic is heating up faster than other parts of the world, making it easier for fires to thrive there. In Siberia, for example, the average June temperature this year is nearly 10 degrees Fahrenheit (5.5 degrees Celsius) hotter than the long-term average between 1981 and 2010, Claudia Volosciuk, a scientist with the World Meteorological Organization, told CNN.Many of this summer's fires are burning farther north than usual, and some appear to be burning in peat soils, rather than in forests, Thomas Smith, an assistant professor of environmental geography at the London School of Economics, told USA Today. This is a dangerous situation, because whereas forests might typically burn for a few hours, peat soils can blaze for days or even months, Smith said.Moreover, peat soils are known carbon reservoirs. As they burn, they release carbon, "which will further exacerbate greenhouse warming, leading to more fires," Smith said. * In Photos: The Deadly Carr Fire Blazes Across Northern California * In Photos: Devastating Wildfires in Northern California * In Photos: The Vanishing Ice of Baffin IslandOriginally published on Live Science.


Supreme Court allows border wall spending in battle between President Donald Trump and liberal opponents

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 04:44 PM PDT

Supreme Court allows border wall spending in battle between President Donald Trump and liberal opponentsThe Supreme Court approved President Trump's effort to use $2.5 billion in military funding to build a portion of his long-sought border wall.


See the McLaren 600LT Pikes Peak Collection

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 10:10 AM PDT

See the McLaren 600LT Pikes Peak Collection


Gunmen dressed as police steal £24 million of gold destined for New York and Zurich from Sao Paulo airport

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 01:29 AM PDT

Gunmen dressed as police steal £24 million of gold destined for New York and Zurich from Sao Paulo airportEight armed men carried out a sophisticated heist at Sao Paulo's main international airport and managed to escape with some 750 kilos of precious metals, airport authorities said Thursday. GRU Airport, which holds the Guarulhos operation concession, said the thieves hauled away gold destined for Zurich and New York by using two cars that looked like police patrol vehicles. They also dressed as officers, covered their faces and carried long weapons before making their getaway, according to security camera footage shown on Globo TV. The television outlet said the vehicles were later abandoned in Jardim Pantanal, a neighborhood located 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the airport. The operator said there were no shootings or injuries during the assault. But a police officer said an airport official and eight members of his extended family, including four minors, had been kidnapped for 12 hours. They were expected to give testimony in the next few hours, he added. The officer requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press. Sao Paulo police said they had reinforced surveillance around the area and were searching for the stolen cargo. GRU Airport said flights continue to operate normally.


Judge dismisses Kentucky teen's lawsuit from viral encounter

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 03:07 PM PDT

Judge dismisses Kentucky teen's lawsuit from viral encounterA federal judge has thrown out a Kentucky teen's lawsuit accusing the Washington Post of falsely labeling him a racist following an encounter with a Native American man at the Lincoln Memorial. The actions of Sandmann and his classmates were intensely debated after video and photographs emerged of them wearing "Make America Great Again" hats near a Native American man playing a drum. President Donald Trump cheered the lawsuit, posting to Twitter that "Covington student suing WAPO.


North Carolina woman who hurled racial slur at black diners in viral video: 'I would say it again'

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 10:29 AM PDT

North Carolina woman who hurled racial slur at black diners in viral video: 'I would say it again'A woman whose profane, racist rant inside a North Carolina restaurant wascaught on camera says she will not apologize for the incident


Star orbiting massive black hole lends support to Einstein's theory

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 12:26 PM PDT

Star orbiting massive black hole lends support to Einstein's theoryObservations of light coming from a star zipping in orbit around the humongous black hole at the center of our galaxy have provided fresh evidence backing Albert Einstein's 1915 theory of general relativity, astronomers said on Thursday. Researchers studied a star called S0-2, boasting a mass roughly 10 times larger than the sun, as it travels in an elliptical orbit lasting 16 years around the supermassive black hole called Sagittarius A* residing at the center of the Milky Way 26,000 light years from Earth. The famed theoretical physicist proposed the theory, considered one of the pillars of science, to explain the laws of gravity and their relation to other natural forces.


Honduras: Where climate change and mass migration have created a village of women

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 05:04 AM PDT

Honduras: Where climate change and mass migration have created a village of womenThey call it the village of women, but the name is not entirely accurate.There are some young boys and older men, along with a handful in their prime. But officials say women now make up at least 75 per cent of La Cumbre, with dozens of their husbands, brothers and sons having left in search of work in the US. More depart every day, their first stop being the border with Guatemala, marked by the Motagua River, which flashes over the hills like a necklace of jewels.Life amid these coffee plantations has never been easy. But in recent years, a new challenge has beset villagers: climate change. Locals say that for the last decade there has been insufficient rainfall to ensure a decent harvest. This, on top of fungal blight and the low price of beans, has pushed many to the edge. Thousands have borrowed the $5,000 demanded by a coyote, or people smuggler, to mule them to the United States. That fee is said to be good for three attempts.Vincente Madrid Norrriega, deputy mayor of Trascerros, the municipality 60 miles west of San Pedro Sula to which La Cumbre belongs, estimates the area's total population has fallen from 10,000 to 7,000 in the last couple of years. La Cumbre's has been slashed to 450, from 700 in 2012. "The migration always used to happen, but over the last two years it's really increased," he says, sitting in his office in the neat town centre. "We are worried. We can't be without people in this area."The impact of the sudden departure of 30 per cent of the population has been dramatic. Businesses have shut, shops have closed. "This last year, we had 52 school teachers. Now it's down to 22 - this is because there are fewer students."The migration has been felt in other ways. Parents are upset when their children declare they are leaving, fearful about the dangerous, sometimes deadly journey they are about to undertake. People are saddened when they no longer see their friends. Business owners fear they could be next to go under. And a general sense of ill anxiety hangs over town.Of those who left, perhaps 200 have returned to the area around Trascerros, either voluntarily or having been deported. In 2018, the US immigration enforcement agency, known as ICE, deported 28,894 Hondurans – the equivalent of 80 people a day."The government has abandoned the city. For years we have been asking them to build roads, but they don't want to help," says Norrriega.Honduras is at the very nexus of Central America's migration crisis. A series of human caravans that last year made their way towards the southern US border were made up overwhelmingly of citizens of this country of 10m people, along with some from El Salvador and Guatemala.Donald Trump, who has placed a tough anti-immigration policy at the centre of his race-baiting re-election strategy, termed the caravan "an invasion" and warned the people of Honduras via Twitter "our military is waiting for you".Such words have not deterred people who sense they have nothing to lose in leaving a place beset by economic problems, with a dire lack of opportunities for young people, and endemic gang violence. This part of the country has always depended on coffee for its income, but it can no longer do so. Firstly, six years ago, the coffee was struck by fungal blight, then in 2016 the world price for beans plummeted to its lowest since 2006, the result, according to industry experts, of an over production of lower grade coffee, especially by countries such as Brazil.Now, people are also having to confront extreme weather.Norrriega says for nine years the weather pattern has shifted, and there has not been enough rain for the beans to completely grow, and they can remain hard. Farmers now need double the amount of beans they previously required to fill a sack to take to market. "It's climate change. People are talking about it a lot." On a shaded terrace above the town, Jorge Ardon, a 40-year-old coffee farmer, reveals what the beans look like when they do not get enough water – hard, and tough to the point of being shrivelled.Ardon believes one reason for the drop in rainfall was the logging of trees several decades ago. "Another factor is climate change." One unforeseen impact on the industry on which "100 per cent of people depend on", has been an increase in gang activity in a town that previously had none. "There are groups that try to do extortion. This has only been the last couple of years."A 2017 report by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), said the "impacts of climate variability are already significant in Honduras". It said this had triggered "acute food insecurity, malnutrition and mass migration to poorly prepared urban areas". The problem created by climate change and extreme weather is not unique to Trascerros, or indeed, Honduras. In Lempira, a coffee growing area in western Honduras that is part of the "dry corridor" that reaches from southern Mexico to Panama and is the focus of international efforts to counter the lack of rainfall, thousands of farms have reportedly closed. Left with no alternative work, huge numbers have migrated. Last year, a report by the World Bank said the amount of land suitable for growing coffee in Central America could fall by 40 per cent by 2050, and that 1.4m people may be forced to leave their homes. In Honduras, perhaps one million people work in the coffee industry, according to Dutch food security researchers at Wageningen University."Climate migration will not occur in isolation, and the subregion will also see a marked increase in the number of other internal migrants driven by economic, social, or environmental reasons," said the World Bank report.Stephanie Leutert, director of the Mexico Security Initiative at the University of Texas at Austin, has been interviewing migrants who joined the caravans and compiling data on where they come from. She says many spoke of unpredictable weather as the reason they left the land. "They talk about climate change like it's a tax." She says data released by the US Customs and Border Protection agency (CBP) of people apprehended by agents at the US-Mexico border shows that the number of people from Lempira, Honduras' main coffee region, had more than doubled from 2017 to 2018. Others unable to make a living from the land move to cities such as Tegucigalpa.La Cumbre is accessible only by a jarring, rutted track. It feels as hushed as a cathedral. There is little traffic, barely any movement. There is none of the bustle usually associated with a community in this region. Many homes are empty, their doors bolted shut. The small church sees far fewer people at its services than even a few years ago.Since her husband left a year ago, entering the US with the help of a coyote, Marcia Elena Pineta has been taking care of their small shop, and caring for three daughters, aged five, seven and 13. Her husband works in construction and sends money home, but life is not easy. "He left because you can work here and never see the benefits. He said: 'I need to go there and work to help my family'," she says, her youngest daughter Roxanne perched on a knee.She says she speaks to her husband every day using WhatsApp, but it was not the same as having him there. His life in the United States is also difficult."We don't talk about how long he will stay. It's up to God," she says. "It's very hard, but with God's help you carry on. The community feels very different. I don't think people will stop leaving."Another woman, Antonia Reaz, says her husband left two weeks ago with their 14-year-old son. People in the village say they believe having a child with them increases their chances of being permitted to enter the US if they are stopped. The woman's husband and son, Madondo Lopez, were detained almost immediately. She sobs as she holds a photograph of her boy, a bright smile on his face, as he graduated from the school's sixth grade, a couple of years ago. She says she has not heard from them and is gnarled with worry.Somehow, she has to find a way to take care of her three daughters. "Right now, I have all the responsibility because he went away," she says, her eyes locked downwards."At the beginning, I did not want him to go. I said: 'We have no relatives there'. But then some of our relatives reached there, so we took the decision."Asked if she too wishes to go the US, her answer comes back rapid-fire fast. "I don't want to go. That is not my dream."Freddie Vasquez, 56, is among the few men of working age in La Cumbre and he is considering leaving. He is married and has eight children – six sons and two daughters. Some are working in Guatemala."If you go to the US, you can make money to buy land or cattle," he says. "But there are a lot of challenges there; if you lose your focus, you can lose your way."Vasquez and other villagers say La Cumbre has changed dramatically. There are fewer boys in school. Women now in charge of the family's land have to pay men to do work previously carried out by their husbands or relatives.The physical appearance of the village has also changed. It is easy to tell the homes of people whose relatives have made it to the US and send money back. Fresh paint, new doors, even new rooms. These families eat better food.Among the nicest homes is that of Belsis Lopez. Her husband travelled to the US in the summer of 2016 with a brother, and lives in a state where it appears many men from this village ended up. He works building roofs and sends money home regularly – something that has enabled her to improve their house.But she says she had her three children – two daughters aged 12 and 17, and 14-year-old son – would rather their father was back with them."Every day I talk to him. He needs to return," she says quietly, standing outside their brightly painted home."He went because of the economic situation, but I was rather he was here."Additional reporting: Paulo Cerrato in La CumbreRead the first part in the Beyond the Border series, here: Honduras: Inside ground zero of the Central American migrant crisis


US warship sails through Taiwan Strait, China 'concerned'

Posted: 25 Jul 2019 01:13 AM PDT

US warship sails through Taiwan Strait, China 'concerned'An American warship sailed through the Taiwan Strait, the US Navy and Taiwanese authorities said Thursday, triggering concern in Beijing. The transit came as China, which views Taiwan as a renegade province, unveiled a defence white paper Wednesday stressing its willingness to use force to thwart any move towards the self-ruled island's independence, and accusing the United States of undermining global stability. According to the US Navy's Seventh Fleet, the USS Antietam, a guided-missile cruiser, conducted a routine transit through the narrow waterway separating the Chinese mainland and Taiwan during July 24-25.


Warren Fellowship Applicants: Campaign Program Was a ‘Great Scam’

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 01:34 AM PDT

Warren Fellowship Applicants: Campaign Program Was a 'Great Scam'Stephen Lam/ReutersSen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) has built much of her political career as a champion of workers and consumers against the deceptive and exploitative practices of corporations and employers.But as she navigates the latest chapter of that career arc—a run for the Democratic nomination for the presidency—the Massachusetts Democrat faces criticism from several of her own supporters who said the lowest tier of her campaign structure doesn't match the image she projects. Two early converts to Warren described the process for entry into her campaign's volunteer fellowship program as deceptive and at times exploitative in interviews with The Daily Beast. They said they were pushed toward unpaid positions over paid ones, misled over the availability of financial assistance, and asked to sign highly restrictive nondisclosure agreements that worker advocacy groups concede are irregular. Both applicants verified their accounts with emails and text messages from the Warren campaign.  The complaints from those offered unpaid fellowships could raise new questions for Warren as she seeks to put her lengthy history of advocating for consumer and worker rights at the center of her rising campaign. "What was sold to me was very different than it actually was," said Jonathan Nendze, a rising senior at Seton Hall University who was offered a volunteer fellowship position on Warren's campaign. "It was kind of a great scam of getting people to show up and work in the capacity of volunteer, but to function as a paid intern in the amount of work they're doing," he said.Like other Democrats running for the White House, Warren's campaign offers paid internships. But unlike many others, the campaign also offers volunteer fellowships and volunteer fellowships for academic credit. Earlier this month, The Daily Beast reported that some workers' rights groups and activists worried that having an unpaid option could lead to a loophole for campaigns to exploit free labor. In the aftermath of that report, two applicants who were offered positions in Warren's volunteer fellowship program in early-voting states came forward to say that they felt their experiences illustrated those fears. Nendze told The Daily Beast that he drove about five hours from Little Falls, New Jersey, to Manchester, New Hampshire, for what he hoped would be an exciting entryway into the field of political campaigns. Prior to arriving in Manchester, he said, he had multiple communications with Warren campaign workers over the fellowship program. But as those talks continued, it became increasingly unclear what the difference between volunteer fellow and paid intern was."The way they always communicated it was always fellow/intern, like they were synonymous," he said. "Their application kind of took advantage of people who were really eager to get experience."Prior to orientation, Nendze said he was told multiple times that an organizer would get back to him about possible payment. "I was getting super-concerned," Nendzes said. "I had no information about where to go, if I was being paid. If they had told me upfront that I was unpaid, maybe I would have been able to prepare better."Ultimately, Nendze was offered a position as a volunteer fellow. As part of the on-boarding process, he was sent a mandatory non-disclosure agreement—to sign upon accepting the offer and passing the campaign's vetting process—stating that volunteer fellows would "not communicate with any member of the press" or "make any statement that may impair or otherwise adversely affect the goodwill or reputation" of Warren for President, Inc., among other provisions. The Campaign Workers Guild, a group focused on improving working conditions on campaigns, said providing NDAs to unpaid volunteers on campaigns is not a common practice, though it occasionally happens in large-scale races. Former Vice President Joe Biden, one of the only Democratic 2020 campaigns to offer a similar unpaid fellowship program, does not require volunteer fellows to sign NDAs, a campaign official confirmed. Nendze said he did not sign the agreement. The emails sent to Nendze were reviewed by The Daily Beast. Warren's campaign, which brought in $19.1 million in fundraising during the second quarter of 2019, declined to comment specifically on the use of NDAs for volunteer fellowship positions. Additionally, it has defended the use of unpaid volunteer fellowships on grounds that many fellows "receive stipends from educational institutions or other third-parties" and that those in the intern and fellowship programs have "access to cost-free supporter housing while they're working in-state." But according to internal campaign emails obtained by The Daily Beast, the campaign has not always clearly conveyed this to the fellows themselves. In one email to Nendze and other incoming fellows, Eleanor Wood, the campaign's New Hampshire's deputy organizing director, wrote that the team would "do our best" to provide housing, rather than guarantee it."If you are moving to NH, we will do our best to provide summer supporter housing," Wood wrote in an email dated on May 31, describing "a cohort of 50+ volunteer fellows and paid interns" in New Hampshire. The Warren campaign reiterated that all fellows and interns receive free housing. The promise of free housing was the biggest draw for Cole, a political science major who recently graduated from the University of Chicago and initially agreed to a volunteer fellowship position with the Warren campaign in Des Moines, Iowa. Cole, who asked that his last name not be used, recalled telling Grace Smith—a Polk County field organizer with the Warren campaign—that he didn't believe he could cover living expenses without being paid. "She said it's totally understandable," he said, describing their conversation. "There's this great housing program," Cole said Smith stressed.Cole was offered the position by Smith over the phone on May 24. The following night, she sent a text message saying she was "hoping to hear back" from Cole about a decision that day. It was just a few hours before midnight, according to records reviewed by The Daily Beast."She was really, really selling me on it in a way that she just wanted me to say yes to add another person," Cole said. He ultimately texted back that would commit to joining the campaign for the summer.Cole's initial excitement over the post—Warren was his first choice in the Democratic field of nearly two dozen contenders—soon dissipated, as he became increasingly concerned about the demands and benefits of the fellowship program.In one email exchange, Cole asked Smith about the ease of getting around Des Moines without a car, which he made clear he would not have for the program. He was told that it was not necessary but "may require a fair amount of Ubers" and that he could "probably snag a good amount of rides from other fellows and/or staff here and there," according to internal emails. Cole said he immediately became concerned with the potential costs associated with taking frequent Uber rides when he was not being paid. Like Nendze, Cole was also concerned about the availability of housing while he volunteered for the Warren campaign. Those fears were assuaged somewhat when Anna Kucher, the campaign's regional organizing director based in Iowa, sent an email sent to interns and fellows introducing herself on May 26. About two weeks later, she sent a follow-up note. "I know you are all anxious to receive your housing details, and I will be sending out emails on a rolling basis based on when you submitted your request from Today - Thursday," she wrote on June 10. "Don't worry about not having a bed to sleep in, we have enough hosts confirmed and are just putting together the puzzle pieces of folks timeline here in IA, allergies, etc. Once you receive your host contact info, it's very important that you reach out to the immediately within 24 hours to confirm logistics and details of your arrival!"But six days before the fellowship was slated to begin, Cole said he had still not yet heard anything about his free supporter housing assignment. He said he ultimately felt relieved that he was offered a paid position at a firm elsewhere, which he decided to accept, after not hearing about the housing arrangements days before he was expected to relocate."Before you start a campaign you should have these basic processes done," he said. "To be treated the way I was is disheartening." Just under a week after The Daily Beast contacted Warren's campaign to detail multiple specific complaints from applicants offered volunteer fellowship positions, it appears someone decided the campaign's most junior members could use rallying. On July 24, Warren hosted a call featuring campaign manager Roger Lau to thank interns and fellows in her program. After the call, an outpouring of praise surfaced on social media, with about a dozen people tweeting their gratitude for the candidate's outreach. "HI @ewarren CALLED ALL OF THE FELLOWS AND INTERNS ON HER CAMPAIGN TODAY AND I ONLY CRIED A LITTLE!!! FEELING SO SO SO BLESSED TO WORK FOR OUR NEXT PRESIDENT AND FEELING SO LUCKY THAT SHE'S SO WONDERFUL AND SMART AND CARES SO MUCH ABOUT EVERY PERSON ON HER TEAM!!! BRB CRYING AGAIN," one person tweeted. "REAL PIC OF ME LISTENING TO @ewarren AS SHE CALLS EVERY. SINGLE. ONE. OF HER CAMPAIGN FELLOWS AND INTERNS TO THANK US FOR OUR WORK IN THE FIELD!!!!!!!!! ������������������" another tweeted. Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.


House files lawsuit for grand-jury evidence behind Robert Mueller's report on the Russia investigation

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 11:55 AM PDT

House files lawsuit for grand-jury evidence behind Robert Mueller's report on the Russia investigationThe House filed a lawsuit Friday seeking grand-jury evidence behind former special counsel Robert Mueller's report on Russia interference.


Attorney General William Barr announces federal government will resume executions of death row inmates

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 07:33 AM PDT

Attorney General William Barr announces federal government will resume executions of death row inmatesJonathan Morris says it is uncommon for there to be executions at the federal level and that Democrats will try to use this to 'win the moral high ground.'


Georgia election officials accused of destroying evidence

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 08:14 AM PDT

Georgia election officials accused of destroying evidenceIn a federal court filing, lawyers for election integrity advocates accuse Georgia election officials of intentionally destroying evidence that could show unauthorized access to the state election system and potential manipulation of election results. Election integrity advocates and individual Georgia voters sued election officials in 2017 alleging that the touchscreen voting machines Georgia has used since 2002 are unsecure and vulnerable to hacking. In a court filing Thursday, they said state officials began destroying evidence within days of the suit's filing and continued to do so as the case moved forward.


Father of slain Mississippi student Ally Kostial shares heartbreaking photo on day of her vigil

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 12:35 PM PDT

Father of slain Mississippi student Ally Kostial shares heartbreaking photo on day of her vigilThe father of murdered University of Mississippi student Ally Kostial took to Facebook to share a photo of his daughter taken when she was a small child.


US teenager detained at border lost 26 pounds in a month: 'It was inhumane how they treated us'

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 11:38 AM PDT

US teenager detained at border lost 26 pounds in a month: 'It was inhumane how they treated us'A US teenager who was detained by border agents for nearly a month, has detailed bleak conditions during his stay, saying: "They were not treating us humanely."Francisco Galicia, who was born in Texas, was detained at a customs and border agency (CBP) checkpoint in Falfurrias, Texas on June 27 while travelling with his brother Marlon, a 17-year-old who was born in Mexico, who was also detained. After two days of detention, Marlon signed a voluntary deportation form and was released to his grandmother. Francisco, who was finally released this week, said he almost did the same thing. "It was inhumane how they treated us," he told the Dallas Morning News. "It got to the point where I was ready to sign a deportation paper just to not be suffering there anymore. I just needed to get out of there."Francisco, 18, lost 26 pounds during the 23 days he was detained at the CBP facility due to lack of food. He was not allowed to shower for the duration of his stay, but was given a shower once he was moved to an immigration enforcement agency (ICE) facility. "It was to clean up but the dirt, but you couldn't get rid of it because so much time had passed since we showered," he said.He and 60 other men were held in an overcrowded holding area where they slept on the floor; some were forced to sleep on the restroom area's floor. They were given only aluminium foil blankets.Francisco said ticks bit some of the men. Some were also "very sick", he said, but afraid to ask for a doctor, since CBP officers told them their stay would start over if they did."It's one thing to see these conditions on TV and in the news," he said. "It's another to go through them."The horrifying saga began when officers at the Falfurrias checkpoint questioned his citizenship status. The teenager also had a Mexican tourist visa his mother had obtained for him when he was a minor and she feared she would not be able to legally travel across the border with him.But Francisco says the officers sounded the validity of his identification documents even before knowing that. "I told them we had rights and asked to make a phone call. But they told us, 'You don't have rights to anything,'" he told CNN. "They didn't believe me. I kept telling them over and over, and they kept saying my documents were fake, and they were going to deport me.They threatened me with charges – charges about falsifying documents. Felonies. They kept asking how it was possible for me to not know where I was from."Powerless. That's how I felt," he continued. "How with all this proof that I was giving them could they hold me?" Now, he wants to use his experience to shed light on the sordid conditions enacted by the Trump administration in the camps. "Right now, I'm in a place where I can help those who are still in there – so people can see how they're treated, and change the way they're treated," he said. "I am the eyes and ears of what's happening in there. I can talk. They can't do what I'm doing."


View Photos of the 2020 Volkswagen Atlas Cross Sport

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 06:00 AM PDT

View Photos of the 2020 Volkswagen Atlas Cross Sport


U.S. tax collectors urge owners of virtual currencies to pay back taxes, file amended returns

Posted: 26 Jul 2019 11:06 AM PDT

U.S. tax collectors urge owners of virtual currencies to pay back taxes, file amended returns


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