2020年8月5日星期三

Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters


Pentagon official reportedly has 'no idea' where Trump's Beirut claims came from

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 01:54 PM PDT

Pentagon official reportedly has 'no idea' where Trump's Beirut claims came fromThe Pentagon is distancing itself from President Trump's claims about the Beirut blast that killed more than 100 people.Trump on Tuesday said his unnamed "great generals" told him they thought the massive explosion was a "terrible attack." In the early aftermath, there was speculation that the catastrophe was intentional, but it the consensus quickly became that it was almost certainly accidental -- albeit brought on by neglect and mismanagement -- and not linked to any foreign power, proxy forces, or terrorist organizations. Defense Secretary Mark Esper and other department officials affirmed they believe it was an accident, as well.The president hasn't repeated his claim from Tuesday, possibly indicating he understands there was no basis for it. But that's what's raised some eyebrows, considering he said he got the information from unnamed high-ranking military officials. A senior Pentagon official, however, told The Associated Press on Wednesday they had "no idea" what Trump was referring to with his comment, leaving some to wonder if it came out of thin air. > So did Trump make it up that US generals told him Beirut was bombed?> > -- Kate Brannen (@K8brannen) August 5, 2020More stories from theweek.com Republicans offer $400/week unemployment benefits, but stimulus bill talks remain divided How the Electoral College made America's pandemic response worse GOP senator questions Trump giving RNC speech from the White House: 'Is that even legal?'


Photos of mask-less students crammed into a Georgia school hallway show how difficult reopenings could be

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 10:00 AM PDT

Photos of mask-less students crammed into a Georgia school hallway show how difficult reopenings could bePhotos posted on social media show crowded hallways at North Paulding High School in Dallas, Georgia, where coronavirus cases have been reported.


Poll: Most Black Americans Want Police to Remain in Their Areas

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 10:04 AM PDT

Poll: Most Black Americans Want Police to Remain in Their AreasMost black Americans say they want police to continue their current presence in local areas, even as protests against racism and police brutality sweep the nation, and calls to reform and even defund police departments persist.Close to two-thirds, 61 percent, of black Americans said they want the police presence in their area to remain the same, while 20 percent said they would like to see police spend more time in their neighborhood, according to a new Gallup poll. Another 19 percent said they would like to see the police presence in their area decrease.Among the general population, 67 percent of Americans say they want the police presence near them to remain the same, with 71 percent of white Americans saying so. A majority of other minority communities also said they do not want to see fewer police officers patrolling their neighborhoods, with 59 percent of Hispanics preferring the current police presence.Black Americans said they observe police in their neighborhoods slightly more than other groups, 32 percent saying they see police officers often or very often in their area, above the national average of 24 percent of all Americans who say the same. About 27 percent said they rarely or never see police in their neighborhoods. Only 22 percent of white Americans said they see police often or very often around where they live.Of black Americans who see police frequently in their areas, only about a third say they think police should curtail their time in the neighborhood, similar to the overall percentage who say so.Despite most black Americans approving of the level of police presence in their neighborhoods, less than one in five say they are very confident that they would be treated with courtesy and respect during an encounter with police. Meanwhile, over half, 56 percent, of white Americans say they are confident in the same.The Gallup poll was taken after weeks of unrest in metropolitan areas around the country over police tactics involving interactions with minority communities, particularly black Americans. Protests and riots broke out in May in many cities following the police custody death of George Floyd, a black man who died after a white Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck as he pleaded for air.Calls to defund police have been particularly prevalent in Portland, Ore. and Seattle, Wash., both of which are predominantly white cities.The survey was conducted online from June 23 to July 6.


2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate was impounded in Beirut's port after it was seized from an abandoned ship in 2014, years before the explosion

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 06:10 AM PDT

2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate was impounded in Beirut's port after it was seized from an abandoned ship in 2014, years before the explosionThe cargo of an abandoned ship, the MV Rhosus, was behind the cataclysmic blast at Beirut's port on Tuesday, state media in Lebanon said.


Fact check: Claim linking Milwaukee police and sex trafficking conspiracy is unfounded

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 11:57 AM PDT

Fact check: Claim linking Milwaukee police and sex trafficking conspiracy is unfoundedConspiracy claims Milwaukee police are connected to sex trafficking, were protecting sex offender. But it's unfounded.


Massive Beirut Explosion Shows Mushroom Clouds Aren't Just for Nukes

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 05:53 AM PDT

Massive Beirut Explosion Shows Mushroom Clouds Aren't Just for NukesPhysics explains why the intense blast produced the menacing mushroom shape.


Senate Democrats propose 'Force to Fight COVID-19' in next relief package

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 06:28 AM PDT

Senate Democrats propose 'Force to Fight COVID-19' in next relief packageThe proposal combines seven existing bills, including ones with bipartisan support, that were drafted in response to the coronavirus pandemic.


One American is dying every 80 seconds from coronavirus as Trump shrugs off death toll: ‘It is what it is’

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 12:19 PM PDT

One American is dying every 80 seconds from coronavirus as Trump shrugs off death toll: 'It is what it is'At least one person in the United States has died every 80 seconds on average over the last seven days, according to new research, as President Donald Trump said the nation's soaring death toll "is what it is" in a recent interview.The grim figures were first reported by NBC News on Wednesday, which noted its own tally revealed 7,486 people died in the last seven days due to Covid-19.


Biden may have narrowed his VP list down to Kamala Harris and Susan Rice

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 05:17 AM PDT

Biden may have narrowed his VP list down to Kamala Harris and Susan RiceFormer Vice President Joe Biden could be down to two contenders in his search for a running mate.A new report from Axios details how Biden confidants believe he has narrowed his list down to Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) and former National Security Adviser Susan Rice. While the report cautions that things could change, it notes that these confidants "would be surprised if he picks anyone else."As far as Harris goes, Axios writes that Biden's brain trust has "deep and trusting relationships" with those who are pushing for the California senator while touting her skills as a prosecutor. But on the other hand, according to the report, Rice is "getting a big bounce" from former President Barack Obama's alumni, who say that picking her would "guarantee the enthusiastic presence" of Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama on the campaign trail.Other possible contenders include Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.), who the report says is in third place behind Harris and Rice, as well as Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.). The Washington Post previously reported that Biden was expected to interview five or six finalists but that there was a sense that he still doesn't have "a clear favorite."Though Biden had previously said he intended to make his running mate pick in the first week of August, the announcement is no longer expected to come until next week, prior to the Democratic National Convention's start on Aug. 17. Read more at Axios. More stories from theweek.com Republicans offer $400/week unemployment benefits, but stimulus bill talks remain divided How the Electoral College made America's pandemic response worse GOP senator questions Trump giving RNC speech from the White House: 'Is that even legal?'


Modi, Muslims to attend temple ceremony on contested India site

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 01:14 AM PDT

Modi, Muslims to attend temple ceremony on contested India siteIndian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and two prominent Muslims who lived through deadly riots following the razing of a mosque in 1992 plan to attend the foundation-laying ceremony for a Hindu temple on Wednesday on the same site. Modi, whose Hindu nationalist party had led demands for a temple there dedicated to the god-king Ram, will unveil a plaque, his office said in a statement. Construction of the temple was made possible by a verdict last year from the Supreme Court awarding the disputed site to the Hindus.


'Delta may be onto something': Experts describe how the company is winning with customers even though rival airlines can fit more passengers

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 07:37 AM PDT

'Delta may be onto something': Experts describe how the company is winning with customers even though rival airlines can fit more passengersA new survey and financial figures indicate travelers are willing to pay higher fares for social distance.


President Trump flips on his longstanding attitude toward mail-in ballots

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 05:45 AM PDT

President Trump flips on his longstanding attitude toward mail-in ballotsPresident Trump has repeatedly denounced mail-in ballots, but he is changing his tune for Florida. Weijia Jiang reports.


This is what it looked like after the US dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima 75 years ago

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 02:57 AM PDT

This is what it looked like after the US dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima 75 years agoOn August 6, 1945, a U.S. bomber famously known as the Enola Gay dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, marking a historic act of nuclear warfare.


Beirut port officials arrested following deadly blasts

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 03:48 PM PDT

Beirut port officials arrested following deadly blastsAt least 137 people were killed and over 5,000 were injured in the explosions.


Parents in a school district in Georgia, are demanding in-person classes. But hundreds of employees have tested positive or been exposed to COVID-19, revealing the biggest blind spot in the fight to reopen schools

Posted: 03 Aug 2020 07:58 PM PDT

Parents in a school district in Georgia, are demanding in-person classes. But hundreds of employees have tested positive or been exposed to COVID-19, revealing the biggest blind spot in the fight to reopen schools"The primary consideration should always be the safety, the health of the welfare of the children, as well as the teachers...," Anthony Fauci said.


Officials: School laptops held up ahead of new academic year

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 11:03 AM PDT

Trump deployed ‘secret police’ to Portland to provoke violence for campaign ads, Oregon senator says

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 09:00 AM PDT

Trump deployed 'secret police' to Portland to provoke violence for campaign ads, Oregon senator saysDonald Trump deployed federal officers into Portland, Oregon to "create images of chaos" on which he relies for campaign ads and in speeches, Oregon senator Ron Wyden has argued.A Senate Judiciary committee hearing on Tuesday discussed the use of federal force against Black Lives Matter protests and indiscriminate use of tear gas and pepper spray that targeted nonviolent demonstrators and journalists.


A Uighur man recorded life inside a high-security Chinese internment camp. Here's what he said it was like.

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 02:45 AM PDT

A Uighur man recorded life inside a high-security Chinese internment camp. Here's what he said it was like.Mergan Ghappar smuggled a cell phone into a detention camp, and was able to talk to his family and film footage inside. He has since disappeared.


Georgia prosecutor asks court to revoke bond for former Atlanta policeman charged with murder

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 08:28 AM PDT

Georgia prosecutor asks court to revoke bond for former Atlanta policeman charged with murderA Georgia prosecutor has asked a judge to revoke the bond for the former Atlanta policeman charged with murder in the shooting of Rayshard Brooks, saying in court papers that he had violated its terms by taking an out-of-state vacation. Brooks, a Black man, was fatally shot in June in the parking lot of a Wendy's restaurant in Atlanta, an incident that was caught on video and set off days of protests over racial inequality and social injustice. District Attorney Paul Howard asked the court late on Tuesday to send former officer Garrett Rolfe, 27, back to jail for violating the terms of his bond, which include a 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew and an order that he stays within the court's jurisdiction.


'Blatant disrespect of Black women': Women leaders criticize treatment of Black women being considered as Biden VP pick

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 09:49 AM PDT

'Blatant disrespect of Black women': Women leaders criticize treatment of Black women being considered as Biden VP pickSen. Kamala Harris, Rep. Karen Bass, Susan Rice, Rep. Val Demings and Stacey Abrams have all been floated as possible running mates for Biden.


'It is what it is': Trump addresses COVID-19 deaths

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 07:00 AM PDT

'It is what it is': Trump addresses COVID-19 deathsPresident Trump discussed the growing number of American deaths caused by COVID-19, the legacy of Rep. John Lewis and the Civil Rights Act during a contentious Axios interview, saying the citation is "under control."


Syrian refugee hailed as hero in Germany after saving woman from rapist

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 07:46 AM PDT

Syrian refugee hailed as hero in Germany after saving woman from rapistA Syrian refugee has been hailed as a hero in Germany after he stopped a man raping a woman. The 30-year-old Syrian, named only as Faner O under German privacy laws, intervened after he saw a woman being attacked by a man in the early hours of Sunday morning. With the help of another passerby, he overpowered the rapist and held him until police could reach the scene. The rape victim, who has not been named, is understood to be a trainee police officer. Faner O, who fled to Germany from his native Syria four years ago, works as a car mechanic in the west German city of Wuppertal. He was driving home in the early hours of Sunday morning when he saw a woman being pursued by a man. "It was around half past three in the morning. I had just dropped a friend off and was driving home to my wife and daughter, when I saw a woman walking along Friedrich-Engels-Allee and a man in a red T-shirt running after her. Then they disappeared into the bushes," he told Bild newspaper. Concerned, Faner O stopped his car and followed them into the bushes, where he found the man pinning the woman to the ground. "He had one hand over her mouth and was choking her with the other. She was resisting, but he was very strong." The would-be rapist fled but Faner O gave chase. A 20-year-old passerby who had heard the sounds of struggle came to his help, and together they were able to overpower the perpetrator. The rapist has not been named but is understood to be a 20-year-old Afghan migrant known to local police in connection with similar incidents. The woman suffered only minor injuries, according to local police. "She fought hard and cried out for help. This alerted witnesses who rushed to her aid and drove off her attacker. They then gave chase and were able to seize him after a short pursuit. They held him until officers arrived," police said in a statement. Faner O said he was not afraid during the encounter. "At that moment I was only thinking of helping the woman," he told Bild. "If something like that happened to my daughter, I'd want some one to help her."


This May Be the Most Absurd, Trumpian Drama Ever

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 01:34 AM PDT

This May Be the Most Absurd, Trumpian Drama EverThe federal agency primarily responsible for the distribution of foreign aid has been roiled in recent days by the most Trumpian of dramas, one involving an anti-LGBT political appointee, blundering conservative operative Jacob Wohl, accusations of stalking, prostitution, and the potential hiring of a young conservative with past racist writings. The chaos seemed set to crest with a slap-dash press conference scheduled for this Thursday. But within a day of the presser's announcement, the main protagonist was apparently recanting her accusations and insinuating that Wohl had stolen her phone and signed into her Twitter account to send the offending messages that set off the fireworks that got her fired. The setting of the entire mess was the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), an agency known largely as a bit of a backwater when it comes to the government's foreign policy apparatus, but one with a $16.8 billion foreign aid budget. On Monday a political appointee and deputy White House liaison there, Merritt Corrigan, took to Twitter to accuse her employer of "anti-Christian" bias. Corrigan's appointment at USAID has been under fire for months over anti-gay tweets she made in 2019 and 2020, including accusing the United States of being a "homo-empire" devoted to a "tyrannical LGBT agenda," tweeting that "female empowerment is a civilizational calamity," and advocating for the creation of a "Christian patriarchy." But on Monday, her targets were both USAID itself and House Foreign Relations Affairs Committee Chair Eliot Engel (D-NY), whom she accused of soliciting prostitutes. As Corrigan's initial tweets went up, she claimed USAID gave her a 3 p.m. deadline to resign or be fired. When the deadline passed, Corrigan said she was fired.On its own, the episode was bizarre. But then it got much weirder. Jacob Wohl Charged With Felony in CaliforniaCorrigan, who is/was apparently dating Wohl, announced that she'd be appearing Thursday in front of Wohl associate Jack Burkman's Northern Virginia house—a site that has previously hosted farcical attempts to smear Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Kamala Harris (D-CA) with lurid sexual allegations. There, she would further denounce USAID, accuse a Politico reporter who covered her resignation of stalking her, and demand that Engel debate her and Burkman. In a press release announcing the press conference, Burkman and Wohl claimed that Wohl, who is currently facing two felony charges related to security sales in California, had "been working behind the scenes with Corrigan for months."Jacob Wohl's Bogus Warren Accuser Exaggerated His Military Service RecordEngel's office did not return a request for comment. And, perhaps, for good reason. The accusations have no proof or merit, and as the story unfolded it became increasingly difficult to get a read on where the truth actually began and the innuendo and smears ended. On Tuesday afternoon, Corrigan deleted her tweets attacking USAID and stopped responding to messages from The Daily Beast. Wohl claimed in an interview Tuesday that a coterie of Trumpworld personalities had convinced Corrigan to backtrack on her claims. And Burkman claimed that Corrigan had "buyer's remorse" after sending her tweets. "Somebody does something and then they regret it," Burkman said. But later in the day, a conduit sent a statement from Corrigan herself that was darker in implication. Corrigan now claimed she'd become the pawn of individuals who had attempted to "ruin" her. "I would like to apologize," it read. "Especially to the people who have been affected or hurt by the messages sent from my Twitter account, and the claims made in my name over the past 24 hours. I did NOT send these messages, and while I vehemently protested about them being sent in my name, my devices were not in my control. I see now that I was part of an abusive scheme and I was used to attack people that have nothing to do with me."I will not be participating in any press conferences as claimed in my name, and will have nothing to do with individuals who forced me to hand over my devices so they could control me and the output in my name. Due to naivete and inexperience, I became involved with people who abused my trust, conned me, and claimed they were working in my interest. I became powerless in a situation, and I deeply regret not reaching out to people who knew better, or could help me."Corrigan is far from the first Wohl associate to bail on one of his press conferences. But she does appear to be the first to have formally held such a high post at a government agency. And her drama illustrates the degree to which the once-staid USAID has become a stomping grounds for a twisted, absurdist circus involving Trumpian figures who despise one another and are notorious for trying to conduct botched operations against their political foes.Prior to the apparent change of course, Corrigan had also made one other noteworthy assertion—that USAID was set to hire yet another controversial political appointment: conservative personality Kyle Kashuv, whose admission to Harvard was revoked last year over racist remarks he made in high school. Kashuv, a survivor of the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida, rose to fame on the right in the aftermath of the shooting as a conservative counterweight to pro-gun control Parkland students. Kashuv's opposition to the gun control measures pushed by his classmates earned him a visit to the White House, and a position at conservative campus group Turning Point USA. Along the way, Kashuv antagonized Wohl and some of his right-wing associates for actions like criticizing anti-Muslim activist Laura Loomer for wearing a Nazi-era Jewish star to protest her Twitter ban. Harvard Pulls Pro-Gun Parkland Survivor Kyle Kashuv's Admission Over Racial SlursBut Kashuv's star on the right imploded in May 2019, when he was exposed by a fellow classmate for writing racist messages and Google Doc notes. In one text message, Kashuv complained that a classmate dated "ni**erjocks." In the aftermath of the reporting on Kashuv's remarks, Harvard revoked Kashuv's admission to its undergraduate class.Corrigan claims Kashuv has been offered a political appointment to be a special assistant to USAID Deputy Administrator Bonnie Glick, after initially being considered for a congressional liaison position. That job offer, she adds, was one point of disagreement with her fellow USAID officials that ultimately led to her speaking out against the agency. "I don't believe that he's a real conservative, and his prior media was going to bring a lot of negativity to USAID," Corrigan told The Daily Beast. The Daily Beast wasn't able to confirm that Kashuv has been offered a position at USAID, but did obtain a document dated July 31 purporting to be an offer letter from USAID, offering Kashuv a position with roughly $50,000 annual salary as an assistant to Glick, pending a security clearance. The purported offer letter to Kashuv listed the phone number of a USAID employee. When a reporter for The Daily Beast called the number, the woman who answered identified herself as a USAID employee but refused to answer questions about the letter."I'm sorry, I can't answer your call," the woman said, before hanging up.USAID declined repeated requests to comment on whether the agency had offered Kashuv a position, but a spokesperson said USAID would investigate "any complaints of anti-Christian bias" made by Corrigan.Kashuv didn't respond to multiple requests for comment. Glick, who called Kashuv a "rockstar" in a May tweet, also didn't respond to requests for comment. Read more at The Daily Beast.Get 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.


Dozens of colleges have abruptly closed — and efforts to protect students have failed

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 04:08 AM PDT

Dozens of colleges have abruptly closed — and efforts to protect students have failedSchools at risk of shutting down are supposed to prepare transition plans. But students are often left scrambling to find new ways to finish their degrees.


Argentina secures deal on 'impossible' debt

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 02:44 PM PDT

Argentina secures deal on 'impossible' debtRecession-hit Argentina announced on Tuesday it has reached an agreement with three major creditors over the restructuring of a $66 billion debt, which the IMF described as a "very significant step" to solving its latest sovereign default crisis. The government of President Alberto Fernandez had set an August 4 deadline to complete a deal but it has now pushed the date to August 24 "to give effect to the agreement," which came after months of wrangling and extensions. "We resolved an impossible debt in the biggest economic crisis in memory and in the midst of the pandemic," said a delighted Fernandez.


A nuclear sea-launched cruise missile will help deter nuclear aggression

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 08:16 AM PDT

A nuclear sea-launched cruise missile will help deter nuclear aggressionA Pentagon official argues a nuclear sea-launched cruise missile is a measured response to a growing threat from America's adversaries.


Meet Zhang Yiming, the secretive Chinese billionaire behind TikTok who made over $12 billion in 2018 and called Trump's demands to sell the app 'unreasonable'

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 11:28 AM PDT

Meet Zhang Yiming, the secretive Chinese billionaire behind TikTok who made over $12 billion in 2018 and called Trump's demands to sell the app 'unreasonable'Zhang Yiming makes his own TikToks — and requires his senior employees to as well. Here's a look at what we know about the secretive billionaire.


Passenger on Alaska cruise tests positive for COVID-19, prompting quarantine, canceled sailings

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 01:52 PM PDT

Passenger on Alaska cruise tests positive for COVID-19, prompting quarantine, canceled sailingsPassengers are quarantining on the ship until Alaska "deems it safe for them to return home" after one passenger tested positive for COVID-19.


Sen. Ron Wyden is introducing a privacy bill that would ban government agencies from buying personal information from data brokers

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 01:15 PM PDT

Sen. Ron Wyden is introducing a privacy bill that would ban government agencies from buying personal information from data brokersThe bill, dubbed "The Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale," is expected to roll out in the coming weeks, per a report from The Verge.


Trump Adm Bails Out Charter Jet Firm That Helps Deport Migrants

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 09:01 AM PDT

Trump Adm Bails Out Charter Jet Firm That Helps Deport MigrantsThe Trump administration's efforts to deport undocumented immigrants en masse just got more expensive. And the agency charged with loading people onto planes and flying them back to their home countries is blaming the coronavirus pandemic for the price hike.In April, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, a division of the Department of Homeland Security, increased its payments under a contract awarded in 2017 to Classic Air Charter, a company that subcontracts chartered deportation flights out of the country, primarily to Mexico and Central and South America, but also, more recently to other regions.ICE attributed the price hike to the novel coronavirus. The increase swells the already high cost that the federal government pays to fly undocumented immigrants out of the country. The two awards to Classic Air under its ICE contract since the pandemic began, each for $50.7 million, were the largest it's received under the contract since it was inked three years ago. The next largest, for $46.6 million, came in May 2019, but prior to the coronavirus pandemic, ICE awards under the contract averaged just $12.7 million.Trump Deportations Helped Spread COVID 'Disaster' to Central AmericaICE would not provide a comment on the record for this story. Classic Air did not respond to inquiries. But in federal procurement notices beginning in April, ICE said the new contract's "guaranteed minimum values have been temporarily adjusted to maintain vendor operability during COVID19 pandemic."Classic Air has brokered deportation flights for ICE for years, primarily by way of two subcontractors that have charged extremely high rates for the service, due largely to the lack of air carriers willing to work with the controversial immigration enforcement agency.According to internal Classic Air records reported by Quartz last year, ICE was paying Classic Air and its subcontractors as much as $33,000 per flight-hour to deport migrants from Arizona to Bangladesh, India, and Vietnam. It's unclear if those same rates apply to other countries. "Many carriers are discouraged by the potential of public backlash or negative media attention," Classic Air wrote. "As a result, our carrier selection pool has been reduced to a single operator," the Oklahoma-based Omni Air International.Under an indefinite delivery vehicle, which is the type of contract that ICE awarded to Classic Air in 2017, the government agency sets a price range for the goods or services it's purchasing, explained Jim Nagle, of counsel at the law firm Oles Morrison and an expert in federal procurement law. "The government decides that it will need a particular product or service but doesn't know exactly how many," he wrote in an email. "So it gives a minimum which is the only amount that is guaranteed to the contractor and a maximum which should be large enough to cover the amount the government might very well have to order."The federal procurement records noting the increase in minimum awards to Classic Air did not provide details on why or how its fee structure has changed. But additional public records indicate that the company has sought federal assistance to maintain its operations as a result of the coronavirus and the resulting economic downturn.According to data released by the Treasury Department last month, Classic Air received a loan through the Paycheck Protection Program worth between $150,000 and $350,000. The loan helped the company retain 18 jobs, according to Treasury records. Omni Air also got a PPP loan worth between $350,000 and $1 million.Nagle said the hike in ICE payments to the company could provide additional financial benefits for Classic Air. "The only amount that the contractor can reliably count on and show its bankers or creditors is the guaranteed minimum," he wrote. "So sometimes the government, to assist its contractor, will raise the guaranteed minimums  to a higher number to reflect the government's increased demand for a particular item or service but also to enable the contractor, especially a needed contractor, to be able to get necessary financing from his bankers."Classic Air has received $322 million from ICE through its deportation contract since 2017, according to federal procurement records. Nearly a third of that, more than than $100 million, has come since March.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get 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.


2nd-grade student tests positive for the coronavirus after 1st day of school

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 08:43 AM PDT

2nd-grade student tests positive for the coronavirus after 1st day of schoolThe child's school is in Georgia's Cherokee County district, which recommends but does not require masks.


US announces 'highest level' visit in decades to Taiwan

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 07:34 PM PDT

US announces 'highest level' visit in decades to TaiwanThe United States on Wednesday announced its "highest level" visit in decades to Taiwan, a move sure to infuriate China at a time when relations between Washington and Beijing are at historic lows. Washington's trade office in Taipei confirmed that health chief Alex Azar would lead an upcoming delegation to the self-ruled island, which China's communist leaders claim and have vowed to one day seize. "This marks... the first Cabinet member to visit in six years, and the highest level visit by a US Cabinet official since 1979," the American Institute in Taiwan said.


Republicans fear Kobach primary win in Kansas could jeopardize Senate GOP control

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 04:38 AM PDT

Republicans fear Kobach primary win in Kansas could jeopardize Senate GOP controlVoters in five states head to the polls on Tuesday, including Arizona where pardoned Joe Arpaio is making another run for sheriff.


Teens with AK-47 arrested after fleeing onto Trump's Mar-a-Lago

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 04:03 PM PDT

Teens with AK-47 arrested after fleeing onto Trump's Mar-a-LagoPalm Beach Police Spokesman Michael Ogrodnick said the three 15-year-old boys jumped a wall at Mar-a-Lago while fleeing a police officer late last Friday. Trump was not at the resort when the incident took place.


Kids less likely to die from coronavirus, but schools could become hot spots for spread

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 08:26 AM PDT

Kids less likely to die from coronavirus, but schools could become hot spots for spreadSome experts say a lack of information about how kids contract and transmit the coronavirus will leave the nation unprepared when schools reopen.


Bill Gates issued a stark warning for the world: 'As awful as this pandemic is, climate change could be worse'

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 07:44 AM PDT

Bill Gates issued a stark warning for the world: 'As awful as this pandemic is, climate change could be worse'Gates said to understand the impact climate change will have, we need to "look at COVID-19 and spread the pain out over a much longer period of time."


Proposal to disband Minneapolis police blocked from ballot

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 08:56 PM PDT

Proposal to disband Minneapolis police blocked from ballotA Minneapolis commission decided Wednesday to take more time to review a City Council amendment to dismantle the Police Department in the wake of George Floyd's death, ending the possibility of voters deciding the issue in November. The Charter Commission had expressed concern that the process to change the city's charter was being rushed after Floyd died following an encounter with a Minneapolis police officer. It would have replaced the Police Department with a "Department of Community Safety and Violence Prevention" that backers said would take a more "holistic" approach.


Gold Coast shooting leaves Chicago rapper FBG Duck dead, friends say; 2 seriously hurt on Oak Street

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 08:32 PM PDT

Gold Coast shooting leaves Chicago rapper FBG Duck dead, friends say; 2 seriously hurt on Oak Street        The shooting happened a short time after 4 p.m. near 70 E. Oak St.


A white woman spent years posing online as a Native American scientist and professor, and was caught after claiming the woman contracted coronavirus and died

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 10:40 AM PDT

A white woman spent years posing online as a Native American scientist and professor, and was caught after claiming the woman contracted coronavirus and diedBethAnn McLaughlin admitted Tuesday that she created the @Sciencing_Bi account on Twitter, which had been active from 2016 until July 31.


Pakistani court sparks outrage by ruling 14-year-old Christian girl must stay married to alleged abductor

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 06:24 AM PDT

Pakistani court sparks outrage by ruling 14-year-old Christian girl must stay married to alleged abductorA Pakistani court has sparked outrage by ruling a 14-year-old Christian girl was legally married to a Muslim man who allegedly abducted her at gunpoint. In a case that has renewed focus on the persecution of Pakistan's Christian minority, the Lahore High Court ruled on Tuesday that Maira Shahbaz had willingly converted to Islam and married Mohamad Nakash. The girl and her family claim that she was kidnapped in April by Mr Nakash and two accomplices from near her home in the city of Faisalabad. If the ruling is not reversed, Ms Shahbaz will have to return to Mr Nakash's home from the shelter she was temporarily placed in. Around 1,000 Christian and Hindu women are abducted each year in Pakistan and typically forced to convert to Islam, according to the Movement for Solidarity and Peace. Mr Nakash, who is already married, tried to claim Ms Shahbaz was 19-years-old but this was discounted by the victim's family who produced birth certificates and school records to show she was a minor. After this evidence was provided last week, a local court ruled Ms Shahbaz should be removed from Mr Nakash's house and placed in a girls' shelter, pending further investigation. However, that decision was reversed on Tuesday by a court with a greater jurisdiction in Pakistan. The victim's lawyer, Khalil Tahir Sandhu, claimed 150 of Mr Nakash's associates arrived at the court. "It is unbelievable. What we have seen today is an Islamic judgement. The arguments we put forwards were very strong and coherent," Mr Sandhu told the Independent Catholic News (ICN). "With this ruling, no Christian girl in Pakistan is safe," echoed Pakistani Christian advocate, Lala Robin Daniel.


Seattle City Council Won’t Slash Police Budget, but OKs Cop Layoffs

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 03:28 PM PDT

Seattle City Council Won't Slash Police Budget, but OKs Cop LayoffsA majority of Seattle's City Council on Wednesday voted down a proposal to slash the police department's remaining 2020 budget by 50 percent. But the council did pass a slew of other defunding efforts, including ones that would cut 100 officers from the agency this year through layoffs and attrition.The vote by the budget committee—which came one day after the city's mayor and police chief held a press conference to criticize the proposal—signaled some progress for Black Lives Matter and anti-police brutality advocates who've pushed to defund departments across the U.S. and reallocate funds to community services, including housing and youth programs.The budget-cut plan, proposed by council member Kshama Sawant, would have cut $54 million from the Seattle PD immediately through layoffs and reallocated it to programs, including $34 million for affordable housing. Sawant was the only member to vote in favor of the proposal, while another council member abstained and the remaining seven voted against it.While the council's budget committee voted on a variety of amendments related to police funding, activists marched from a King County juvenile detention facility to City Hall. One reporter on scene captured demonstrators chanting, "Bad boys. Bad boys. Whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when we defund you?"Shootings Rise in Big Cities Along With Calls to Defund the PoliceSeattle's vote comes on the heels of other local governments, including the Washington D.C. Council, passing legislation to dismantle or cut the budgets of police departments. In late June, the Minneapolis City Council unanimously approved a proposal to disband the city's police department—and replace it with a new Department of Community Safety and Violence Prevention—following the death of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man who was killed May 25 by a Minneapolis cop who kneeled on his neck during an arrest.Minneapolis' charter commission voted 10-5 against the city council's proposal on Wednesday, saying they needed more time to review it. The decision meant voters won't get to decide on the amendment on a November ballot. The Seattle council's budget committee unanimously passed a series of amendments, including adding $4 million to the Human Services Department for a community safety initiative which would be an "alternative to traditional policing." The funding for that effort would come from a loan authorized by separate legislation.They also voted to cut $886,000 from the Seattle PD and reallocate it to a proposal that would add $10 million for community-led organizations "to increase public safety." (The remaining $9.1 million would come from interfund loan to be addressed in separate legislation.) The cuts approved included $36,000 from the police department's remaining 2020 budget for implicit bias training; $50,000 from SPD's 2020 travel budget; and $800,000 from the department's recruitment and retention activities. > Protesters gathering near the youth jail for today's march to City Hall. Saw a handful of bike cops on my way over, though they seem to be around the block now. pic.twitter.com/8vf6r3EW9W> > — Heidi Groover (@heidigroover) August 5, 2020The committee also unanimously approved a "consent package" which includes ordering the police chief to eliminate the mounted unit and public affairs unit, each of which has four officers; lay off five members of the community outreach unit; lay off two members of the 29-officer SWAT team; and let go of 30 officers through attrition. All told, the council approved a reduction of 54 officers from the department.This package also included $50,000 in funding to contract with a community-based organization to create a non-police 911 response system.On Monday, KOMO News revealed the proposal to slash the Seattle Police Department's budget by 50 percent appeared to be "losing steam" among the nine council members. The remainder of the Seattle PD's unspent budget is an estimated $188 million, the outlet reported.Council member Sawant slammed her colleagues in an interview with the TV outlet and on Twitter, where she claimed Democrats on the budget committee "ganged up against our movement's proposals to Defund the police..."> To see Democratic Party politicians in their real role, watch today's Seattle City Council Budget Committe, where they ganged up against our movement's proposals to Defund the police by at least 50%, fund community programs, and increase significant funds for affordable housing.> > — Kshama Sawant (@cmkshama) August 4, 2020"I'm not surprised," Sawant told KOMO News, "but it's quite interesting to see how council members are now displaying how they actually stand and I hope members of the public are watching."Last month, protesters targeted the homes of two council members who supported reducing the police budget but wouldn't commit to slashing it by 50 percent, the Seattle Times reported. The demonstrations allegedly included making noise outside one councilor's home at night and leaving notes on his door warning, "Don't be racist trash."In June, another group visited Mayor Jenny Durkan's residence, which was tagged with spray paint, according to the Times. Durkan asked the council to probe Sawant for taking part in that protest but council president Lorena González declined. Meanwhile, Police Chief Carmen Best said her neighbors had to stop a "large group of aggressive protestors" from trespassing at her home on Saturday. One of the demonstrators, Nicole Gitaka, told King 5, a local news station: "All we were doing was walking and they met us with guns, I don't know who the aggressor is at that point, but I don't think it's us."> Crowd gathers across from the site for the new youth jail for a march and rally pertaining to the city council's vote today on defunding the SPD seattleprotest seattleprotests pic.twitter.com/MuTzTIU74h> > — Elizabeth Turnbull (@LizTurnbull5) August 5, 2020This summer, Seattle police swept through an autonomous protest zone known as the Capitol Hill Organized Protest Area (CHOP) with blast balls and pepper spray, arresting at least two dozen people after Durkan issued an executive order to clear the area.Previously called the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ), the six-block stretch near downtown was occupied by demonstrators in the wake of Floyd's death and Black Lives Matter protests. But the site also brought multiple shootings, including the fatal shooting of a 16-year-old boy, and injuries to both cops and protesters. One Tacoma man was charged with arson for torching the police department's East Precinct building during the CHOP protest.Last week, the head of Seattle's police union warned defunding cops would bring higher crime rates and make CHOP or CHAZ "look like child's play."Was Seattle's Notorious Protest Zone Doomed by Recent Shootings?On Tuesday, Durkan and Best held a press conference to ask council members to hold off on deep cuts to the police budget until 2021.Durkan said the city shouldn't make "hasty decisions" when it comes to defunding the police department. "We should make right decisions," Durkan told reporters. "That doesn't mean slow; it just means thoughtful.""The chief and I, again, we are absolutely committed, committed to reimagining how policing works in the city, to having a better community-based response, to have a public health and harm reduction based response," Durkan added. "But we also know that policing is complicated and that sometimes you do need a police officer to respond."For her part, Best said "there are some good approaches" in the council's proposals and that "some of the ideas SPD already had and has raised before.""But what is problematic is these are approaches without any clarity on how they will become reality. What is the plan? " Best asked. "The push from Council and some of our community is to do these large-scale changes in 2020 with no practical plan for community safety. And I believe wholeheartedly that is completely reckless."Council has directed me to lay off 70 or more officers basically overnight," the chief added. "And I cannot do that in good faith knowing there are no systems in place to bridge the gap."Read more at The Daily Beast.Get 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.


Army to Speed Up Testing of Planned Hypersonic Missile

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 12:02 PM PDT

Army to Speed Up Testing of Planned Hypersonic MissileThe Army has been designing the Common-Hypersonic Glide Body, which will be used by all U.S. services.


Trump banned Jeffrey Epstein from Mar-a-Lago after he hit on teenage girl, book claims

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 07:54 AM PDT

Trump banned Jeffrey Epstein from Mar-a-Lago after he hit on teenage girl, book claimsDonald Trump banned Jeffrey Epstein from Mar-a-Lago after the disgraced financier hit on another member's teenage daughter, a new book has claimed.Epstein was a member of the now-president's Palm Beach, Florida, club until 2007, according to The Grifter's Club, a detail that has contradicted what Mr Trump's company previously said about the president's relationship with the convicted sex predator.


'It's a hard choice': Tennessee parents send kids back to school amid new COVID-19 cases

Posted: 04 Aug 2020 05:04 PM PDT

'It's a hard choice': Tennessee parents send kids back to school amid new COVID-19 casesParents are grappling with difficult decisions as to how to send their children back to school safely as the novel coronavirus pandemic continues.


Uber and Lyft just got hit with another lawsuit in California over claims the companies are skirting the state's gig worker law

Posted: 05 Aug 2020 02:14 PM PDT

Uber and Lyft just got hit with another lawsuit in California over claims the companies are skirting the state's gig worker lawCalifornia's labor commissioner is the latest regulator to take the companies to court over their refusal to classify drivers as employees.


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