Sunday, November 20, 2022

Herschel Walker says in rambling speech he wants to be ‘werewolf, not vampire’


























Martin Pengelly in New York
Thu, November 17, 2022 

In a campaign speech on Wednesday, the Republican candidate for US Senate in Georgia, Herschel Walker, told supporters: “I don’t want to be a vampire any more. I want to be a werewolf.”

Related: Is Herschel Walker the worst candidate the Republicans have ever run? | Jill Filipovic

The remark was the latest controversial or outright bizarre intervention from the former football star who like other candidates endorsed by Donald Trump struggled to overcome his Democratic opponent in the midterm elections.

Raphael Warnock, the incumbent Georgia senator, outpolled Walker last week but did not pass 50% of the vote, meaning that under state law a runoff will be held on 6 December. Control of the Senate has been decided, after Democrats won in Arizona and Nevada, but the Georgia race will still be keenly watched.

On Wednesday, Walker spoke in McDonough.

Choosing to rehash the plot of a film he said he recently watched late at night, whose title he remembered as “Fright Night, Freak Night, or some type of night”, he said in rambling remarks: “I don’t know if you know, but vampires are some cool people, are they not? But let me tell you something that I found out: a werewolf can kill a vampire. Did you know that? I never knew that.

“So, I don’t want to be a vampire any more. I want to be a werewolf.”

Footage of the remarks swiftly went viral, as has footage of other rambling speeches, a decision during a debate to brandish what Walker claimed was a police badge, and discussion of a succession of campaign controversies.

Walker has made questionable claims about climate science and has been revealed to have made questionable claims about his business record.

He has been shown to have fathered previously unacknowledged children – and has seen his own son denounce him – and though he is campaigning on an anti-abortion platform, he is alleged to have pressured two women to have abortions.

In McDonough, Walker’s discussion of the unnamed vampire film led him to a character he said deployed a cross and holy water against a vampire without the expected effect. This, Walker said, showed that life “don’t even work unless you’ve got faith. We gotta have faith.

“It is time for us to have faith,” he continued. “We gotta have faith in our fellow brothers. Gotta have faith in this country. We gotta have faith in elected officials. And right now that’s the reason I’m here.”

Walker’s opponent is a man of faith. Before winning election as the first Black senator from Georgia (and only the 11th Black senator ever), Warnock was pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, formerly home to the great civil rights leader Martin Luther King.

Walker also said the vampire in the film he watched was “looking real good in his black suit. Whoa, that sounds like Senator Warnock, doesn’t it?”



Rose Prophete thought the second mortgage loan on her Brooklyn home was resolved about a decade ago — until she received paperwork claiming she owed more than $130,000.

“I was shocked,” said Prophete, who refinanced her two-family home in 2006, six years after arriving from Haiti. "I don’t even know these people because they never contacted me. They never called me.”

Prophete is part of a wave of homeowners who say they were blindsided by the start of foreclosure actions on their homes over second loans that were taken out more than a decade ago. The trusts and mortgage loan servicers behind the actions say the loans were defaulted on years ago.

Some of these homeowners say they weren't even aware they had a second mortgage because of confusing loan structures. Others believed their second loans were rolled in with their first mortgage payments or forgiven. Typically, they say they had not received statements on their second loans for years as they paid down their first mortgages.

Now they're being told the loans weren't dead after all. Instead, they're what critics call “zombie debt” — old loans with new collection actions.

While no federal government agency tracks the number of foreclosure actions on second mortgages, attorneys aiding homeowners say they have surged in recent years. The attorneys say many of the loans are owned by purchasers of troubled mortgages and are being pursued now because home values have increased and there’s more equity in them.

“They’ve been holding them, having no communication with the borrowers," said Andrea Bopp Stark, an attorney with the Boston-based National Consumer Law Center. "And then all of a sudden they’re coming out of the woodwork and are threatening to foreclose because now there is value in the property. They can foreclose on the property and actually get something after the first mortgages are paid off.”

Attorneys for owners of the loans and the companies that service them argue that they are pursuing legitimately owed debt, no matter what the borrower believed. And they say they are acting legally to claim it.

How did this happen?

Court actions now can be traced to the tail end of the housing boom earlier this century. Some involve home equity lines of credit. Others stem from “80/20” loans, in which homebuyers could take out a first loan covering about 80% of the purchase price, and a second loan covering the remaining 20%.

Splitting loans allowed borrowers to avoid large down payments. But the second loans could carry interest rates of 9% or more and balloon payments. Consumer advocates say the loans — many originating with since-discredited lenders — included predatory terms and were marketed in communities of color and lower-income neighborhoods.

The surge in people falling behind on mortgage payments after the Great Recession began included homeowners with second loans. They were among the people who took advantage of federal loan modification programs, refinanced or declared bankruptcy to help keep their homes.

In some cases, the first loans were modified but the second ones weren't.

Some second mortgages at that time were “charged off,” meaning the creditor had stopped seeking payment. That doesn’t mean the loan was forgiven. But that was the impression of many homeowners, some of whom apparently misunderstood the 80/20 loan structure.

Other borrowers say they had difficulty getting answers about their second loans.

In the Miami area, Pastor Carlos Mendez and his wife, Lisset Garcia, signed a modification on their first mortgage in 2012, after financial hardships resulted in missed payments and a bankruptcy filing. The couple had bought the home in Hialeah in 2006, two years after arriving from Cuba, and raised their two daughters there.

Mendez said they were unable to get answers about the status of their second mortgage from the bank and were eventually told that the debt was canceled, or would be canceled.

Then in 2020, they received foreclosure paperwork from a different debt owner.

Their attorney, Ricardo M. Corona, said they are being told they owe $70,000 in past due payments plus $47,000 in principal. But he said records show the loan was charged off in 2013 and that the loan holders are not entitled to interest payments stemming from the years when the couple did not receive periodic statements. The case is pending.

“Despite everything, we are fighting and trusting justice, keeping our faith in God, so we can solve this and keep the house,” Mendez said in Spanish.

Second loans were packaged and sold, some multiple times. The parties behind the court actions that have been launched to collect the money now are often investors who buy so-called distressed mortgage loans at deep discounts, advocates say. Many of the debt buyers are limited liability companies that are not regulated in the way that big banks are.

The plaintiff in the action on the Mendez and Garcia home is listed as Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB, “not in its individual capacity but solely as a Trustee for BCMB1 Trust.”

A spokeswoman for Wilmington said it acts as a trustee on behalf of many trusts and has “no authority with respect to the management of the real estate in the portfolio.” Efforts to find someone associated with BCMB1 Trust to respond to questions were not successful.

Some people facing foreclosure have filed their own lawsuits citing federal requirements related to periodic statements or other consumer protection laws. In Georgia, a woman facing foreclosure claimed in federal court that she never received periodic notices about her second mortgage or notices when it was transferred to new owners, as required by federal law. The case was settled in June under confidential terms, according to court filings.

In New York, Prophete is one of 13 plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit claiming that mortgage debt is being sought beyond New York’s six-year statute of limitations, resulting in violations of federal and state law.

“I think what makes it so pernicious is these are homeowners who worked very hard to become current on their loans,” said Rachel Geballe, a deputy director at Brooklyn Legal Services, which is litigating the case with The Legal Aid Society. “They thought they were taking care of their debt.”

The defendants in that case are the loan servicer SN Servicing and the law firm Richland and Falkowski, which represented mortgage trusts involved in the court actions, including BCMB1 Trust, according to the complaint. In court filings, the defendants dispute the plaintiff's interpretation of the statute of limitations, say they acted properly and are seeking to dismiss the lawsuit.

“The allegations in the various mortgage foreclosure actions are truthful and not misleading or deceptive," Attorney Daniel Richland wrote in a letter to the judge. "Plaintiff’s allegations, by contrast, are implausible and thus warrant dismissal.”

___

Associated Press writer Claudia Torrens and researcher Jennifer Farrar in New York contributed to this report.

Surprise! Fox News’ Violent Crime Coverage Plummets After Midterms

Justin Baragona
Thu, November 17, 2022 

SOPA Images

Fox News devoted much of its airtime prior to last week’s midterm elections to violent crime, usually by tying criminal violence to “Democratic cities” and progressive policies.

The conservative cable giant, however, has pulled back on much of that coverage in the immediate aftermath of the GOP’s lackluster election performance, which did not result in the “red tsunami” many on the network had promised.

According to a study by liberal watchdog Media Matters, the network has devoted roughly half of its on-air segments to violent crime compared to the pre-election period.

Between Labor Day and the week before the midterms, Fox News averaged 141 weekday violent crime segments per week, per Media Matters’ research. The week of the election, though, the number of segments on criminal violence plummeted to 71—a decrease of 50 percent compared to post-Labor Day period.

In a week-to-week comparison, the drop is even more stark. The midterm week was down 63 percent from the week prior, which featured 193 violent crime segments on the network.

Fox News’ violent crime coverage has ticked up slightly this week, largely due to stories on the stabbing deaths at the University of Idaho and the deadly shootings at the University of Virginia. At the same time, however, Fox has notably not framed these tragedies around liberal policies in crime-ridden Democratic cities.

After a summer that featured Democratic legislative victories and restrictive abortion laws energizing progressive voters, Fox News star Tucker Carlson seemingly kicked off the network’s strategy of using violent crime to bludgeon Democrats during the midterms.

“If every Republican office-seeker, every Republican candidate in the United States focused on law and order and equality under the law, there would be a red wave,” Carlson declared on the Aug. 19 broadcast of his top-rated primetime show.

In the weeks that followed, GOP campaigns appeared to heed Carlson’s advice—devoting much of their advertising spending on crime and making it the Republicans’ central message in the closing months. And the network ramped up its violent crime coverage as the elections approached, airing a total of 380 weekday segments in the two weeks before the midterms.

This synergistic approach is nothing new, of course. Back in 2014, Fox News and the GOP fearmongered that Democrats were putting the nation at risk over the Ebola virus, only to drop the issue after the midterms. The same thing occurred again in 2018 when the network went all-in on stoking fears about the Central American migrants planning “to storm our border,” and then lost interest following the November elections.

Rising homicides, kidnappings in Haiti show crisis is not over even as fuel flow resumes

Story by Jacqueline Charles, Miami Herald • Thursday, Nov 17,2022

A rise in gang violence and kidnappings in Haiti continues to worry the United Nations, whose top humanitarian official in Port-au-Prince has appealed to the international community to provide support for the country and its people.


A police officer secures Terminal Varreux in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, 
on Nov. 8, 2022.© RICHARD PIERRIN/GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/TNS

Ulrika Richardson, the U.N. resident and humanitarian coordinator in Haiti, said the global organization is beginning to see a timid resumption of fuel distribution in Port-au-Prince after a powerful gang alliance released its hold on the country’s key oil terminal earlier this month. But the daily reality of life in Haiti, she said, remains worrying.

Cholera is rapidly spreading and there is a severe food crisis. And gang violence and kidnappings continue to rise, said Richardson, speaking to journalists Wednesday, a day after the U.N. launched a $145.6 million humanitarian appeal, along with the government of Haiti, to help respond to the cholera and hunger crisis.

The violence, she said, “continues to show very concerning upward trends.... Armed gangs continue to hold more or less 60 percent of the capital in its grip.”

In October, the U.N. said there had been 195 homicides and 102 kidnappings.

Killings and kidnappings by gangs continue despite efforts by the Haiti National Police to clamp down. In recent weeks, police have killed a number of gang members and made numerous arrests.

One high-profile arrest involved a divisional police inspector, Pierre Wakin, who is assigned to the palace’s security detail. Waking was arrested Friday while aboard a Toyota Land Cruiser coming from Belladère, which borders the Dominican Republic, when he was stopped by police just east of the capital.

He was found with 4,000, 5.56 caliber cartridges; 41 9mm caliber cartridges, three Glock 9mm pistol magazines; a 9mm caliber pistol and $186,900 in U.S. dollars. He’s being accused of trafficking in ammunition and criminal association. In a video police put out touting the arrest, Wakin says he was delivering the illegal arms for the owner of a hotel to someone in Delmas 31. He acknowledged on video that he was aware of what he was transporting.

Wakin’s arrest came mere days after the Dominican newspaper Listín Diario reported that Dominican border guards had arrested Midrene Manessa Millien, the wife of the vice-delegate of Belladère, in Elias Pinas, with 22,160 cartridges — 12,000 of them 7.62 millimeter caliber and 10,160 of them 5.56 millimeter caliber— in a Lexus jeep headed for Haiti. Millien was traveling aboard a white Lexus jeep along with another woman, Fara Josef, and a minor child.

Despite such efforts to crack down on the illegal trafficking of weapons, Haiti police continue to face challenges in providing security as Haitians continually find themselves trying to stay safe from abductions.

Human rights groups have confirmed several gang-orchestrated killings since Nov. 1.

There was also a report of the killing of 17 street merchants on Nov. 6 in the hills above Port-au-Prince in the area controlled by the gang Ti Makak. The disturbing images of the victims’ bloodied corpses, which included four women, were shared widely on social media. The next day, another 10 people were reportedly killed in a community between Carrefour and Petionville.

“The reality of the country has not changed,” said Gédéon Jean, a lawyer who runs the Center for Analysis and Research in Human Rights in Port-au-Prince, which monitors kidnappings.

Jean said while the resumption of fuel in many places is welcome, the gang blockade of the Varreux fuel terminal and the country’s seaports, which left Haitians without food, fuel or drinking water, was part of a larger, deepening crisis.

“The gangs are still here,” he said. “While we saw Varreux get unblocked, there was a massacre in Carerfour Feuilles and the gangs are still showing force. There is a still a necessity for an outside force to come to support the police.”

Haiti’s interim government recently asked for the rapid deployment of an armed force to help police create a humanitarian corridor to get aid to those who need it. The United States and Mexico have introduced a resolution in the U.N. Security Council supporting the deployment of a multinational force consisting of foreign police and military personnel. But the request has been met with resistance from China and Russia, which sit on the council and do not want Haiti placed back under U.N. Security Council oversight, and from reluctant nations not willing to field a force.

U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price said last week that conversations are ongoing with partners from around the world about the potential for a mission endorsed by the U.N. Security Council.

“We believe that such a mission would be important to be as an enabling element to what the Haitian national police and Haitian authorities are already doing,” he said. “There is still urgency. The status quo remains untenable. It remains untenable for the Haitian people. We hope to see continued improvement in the humanitarian situation. The actions of the Haitian national police may lead to further improvements. But there continue to be longer-term challenges that an enabling force authorized by the UN Security Council would be able to help address.”

Earlier this week, the U.S. led discussions in Jamaica with Caribbean Community representatives and Canada about the situation in Haiti and a potential mission to the country. The U.S. would like for Canada to take the lead, but the country has yet to say if it will.

In the meantime, the U.S. and Canada are relying on visa cancellations and sanctions. Among those who recently had their visas canceled were the ministers of justice and interior in the current interim government. The current president and former president of the Senate were sanctioned.

The State Department and the FBI are hoping that the recent indictment of several gang leaders, and a reward of $1 million per person for information leading to the arrest of the indicted gang chiefs, will help stem the flow of violence and send a message.

“It is a joint effort,” said a federal official. “We are looking to make sure that these individuals are brought to justice.”

The official said this is not the first time the U.S. has offered a reward to capture someone in a foreign territory responsible for the kidnapping of an American citizen or resident. The official said authorities are looking for concrete information leading to arrests.

“We always operate in full confidentiality; so we do take any information, but we don’t provide any information outside of that,” the official said.

The official acknowledged that kidnappings in Haiti have kept federal agencies busy, and today they are looking to “have an impact on the safety and security of American citizens traveling back and forth to Haiti.

“We want to make sure that the the Haitian population understands that we are indeed involved, although not a lot of the work that we do make the papers or make the social media networks. We are always working in the background.”

____

©2022 Miami Herald. Visit at miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Remote employee says she's 'just pretending' to work full 8-hour day: 'It's so much better'

A Gen Z remote worker said an eight-hour “work day in the office does NOT equal” one at home.

Remote work is on the rise and here to stay, according to ForbesTikToker @innergrump shared her thoughts on how work-from-home culture differed from in-office. She even suggested that “we’re all just pretending” to work a full eight hours.

“Like we’re taking away office conversations, long lunches, constantly being pulled away, less sleep, being drained from the commute, etc.” she wrote in the video text.

The content creator said she can get her eight-hour office day done in four “focused hours at home.” She didn’t understand why employers were still asking us to work eight.

“And no, I can’t work a full 8 hours in deep focus 5 days a week, I would literally pass away,” she added in the comments.

The video racked up 2.9 million comments on TikTok. Many people felt similarly about how work life has changed since 2020.

“No the actual worst is being done early at the office and having to be tied to a chair,” a user said.









“It’s ridiculous. Why is America afraid of change?? Think how much it would benefit working moms,” a person added.

“And I’m multitasking like flipping laundry between meetings. It’s so much better,” another wrote.

“The 40-hour work week was invented like a 100 years ago…why haven’t we changed it?!” someone commented.

“A day at the office completely drains me. After a workday at home, I continue my day with actual quality time and my hobbies,” a TikToker replied.

The post Remote employee says she’s ‘just pretending’ to work full 8-hour day appeared first on In The Know.






US House eyes prospect of seating Cherokee Nation delegate


Cherokee Nation Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr., speaks during a House Rules Committee hearing on legal and procedural factors related to seating a Cherokee Nation delegate in the U.S. House of Representatives, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2022
.
 (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)


SEAN MURPHY
Wed, November 16, 2022 

The Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma moved a step closer on Wednesday to having a promise fulfilled from nearly 200 years ago that a delegate from the tribe be seated in Congress.

Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin was among those who testified before the U.S. House Rules Committee, which is the first to examine the prospect of seating a Cherokee delegate in the U.S. House. Hoskin, the elected leader of the 440,000-member tribe, put the effort in motion in 2019 when he nominated Kimberly Teehee, a former adviser to President Barack Obama, to the position. The tribe's governing council then unanimously approved her.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi described Thursday's hearing as a “key first step toward identifying what actions must be taken to honor this long-standing promise."

“The House Democratic Caucus will continue to explore a path toward welcoming a delegate from the Cherokee Nation into the people’s House,” Pelosi said in a statement.


The tribe’s right to a delegate is detailed in the Treaty of New Echota signed in 1835, which provided the legal basis for the forced removal of the Cherokee Nation from its ancestral homelands east of the Mississippi River and led to the Trail of Tears, but it has never been exercised. A separate treaty in 1866 affirmed this right, Hoskin said.

“The Cherokee Nation has in fact adhered to our obligations under these treaties. I’m here to ask the United States to do the same," Hoskin told the panel.

Hoskin suggested to the committee that Teehee could be seated as early as this year by way of either a resolution or change in statute, and the committee's chairman, Massachusetts Democratic Rep. James McGovern, and other members supported the idea that it could be accomplished quickly.

“This can and should be done as quickly as possible," McGovern said. “The history of this country is a history of broken promise after broken promise to Native American communities. This cannot be another broken promise."

But McGovern and other committee members, including ranking member Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation, acknowledged there are some questions that need to be resolved, including whether other Native American tribes are afforded similar rights and whether the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma is the proper successor to the tribe that entered into the treaty with the U.S. government.

McGovern said he has been contacted by officials with the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma and the Delaware Nation, both of which have separate treaties with the U.S. government that call for some form of representation in Congress. McGovern also noted there also are two other federally recognized bands of Cherokee Indians that argue they should be considered successors to the 1835 treaty: the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians in Oklahoma and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians based in North Carolina, both of which reached out to his office.

The UKB selected its own congressional delegate, Oklahoma attorney Victoria Holland, in 2021. Holland said in an interview with The Associated Press that her tribe is a successor to the Cherokee Nation that signed the 1835 treaty, just like the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma.

“As such, we have equal rights under all the treaties with the Cherokee people and we should be treated as siblings," Holland said.

Only a few Native Americans serve in Congress, including Cole and U.S. Rep. Markwayne Mullin, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation who was elected earlier this month to the U.S. Senate, where he will become the first Native American in that body in nearly 20 years.

“As a member of the Cherokee Nation, I firmly believe the federal government must honor its trust and treaty responsibilities to Indian Nations," Mullin said in a statement. "We are only as good as our word.”

Members of the committee seemed to be in agreement that any delegate from the Cherokee Nation would be similar to five other delegates from the District of Columbia, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa and the Virgin Islands. These delegates are assigned to committees and can submit amendments to bills, but cannot vote on the floor for final passage of bills. Puerto Rico is represented by a non-voting resident commissioner who is elected every four years.
CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M

Former tribal leader gets 3 years in casino bribery case


Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe Chairman Cedric Cromwell sits behind his desk at the government center in Mashpee, Mass., May 29, 2014. On Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022, Cromwell, the former leader of the Massachusetts Indigenous tribe convicted of accepting bribes including exercise equipment and a weekend stay at a luxury hotel from an architectural firm working with the tribe to build a casino, was sentenced to three years in prison.
 (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia, File) 


Wed, November 16, 2022 

BOSTON (AP) — The former leader of a Massachusetts Native American tribe convicted of accepting bribes including exercise equipment and a weekend stay at a luxury hotel from an architectural firm working with the tribe to build a casino has been sentenced to three years in prison.

Cedric Cromwell, former chair of the Mashpee Wampanoags, was also sentenced in U.S. District Court in Boston on Tuesday to a year of probation and was fined $25,000, according to prosecutors.

David DeQuattro, 56, the owner of the Rhode Island architecture and design firm, was sentenced to a year of probation under home confinement and fined $50,000.

The Cape Cod-based tribe, which currently has about 2,600 enrolled citizens, in an impact statement signed by current Chair Brian Weeden said it has been “irreparably harmed” by Cromwell's conduct.


“For over 400 years, the Tribe has fought to preserve its culture, lands and protect its people from constant exploitation and oppression,” Weeden wrote. “And yet, we are now facing the ultimate betrayal by one elected and entrusted to lead and act in the best interests of our Tribal Nation and future seven generations.”

He noted that while Cromwell was enriching himself, tribal members “struggled under the pressures of increased homelessness, unemployment, alcohol and opioid addiction, and other traumas.”

Cromwell, 57, apologized in court.

“I will spend the rest of my life seeking redemption,” he said, The Boston Globe reported.

DeQuatto's attorney called his client's actions an “aberration.”

Cromwell, who also was the president of the tribe’s five-member gaming authority, received $10,000 from DeQuattro in November 2015 that was deposited into an account for a company called One Nation Development LLC, which Cromwell founded to help Native tribes with economic development, prosecutors said.

But One Nation Development had no employees and Cromwell spent the money on personal expenses, prosecutors said.

He asked for, and received from DeQuattro and his business partner, a $1,700 home gym in August 2016, prosecutors said.

Cromwell also asked DeQuattro to pay for a three-night stay at a luxury Boston hotel in May 2017 so he could celebrate his birthday with someone he described as a “special guest.” The stay cost $1,800, prosecutors said.

Cromwell was convicted in May of bribery and extortion charges. DeQuattro was convicted of a bribery charge. Cromwell still faces multiple counts of filing a false tax return.

Meanhwile, plans for the proposed $1 billion casino in Taunton remain on hold.

Feds look into treatment of mentally ill adults in Oklahoma


KEN MILLER
Thu, November 17, 2022 

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A civil rights investigation into the treatment of people with mental illnesses by the state of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City and Oklahoma City police was announced Thursday by the U.S. Justice Department.

“We will determine whether the state discriminates against mentally ill adults in Oklahoma County,” where Oklahoma City is located, in violation of federal law “by relying on institutional settings to serve adults when they could be served in the community,” assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke said.

Clarke, with the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, said the investigation in Oklahoma comes amid similar investigations that include Minneapolis; Phoenix; Louisville, Kentucky; and the states of Kentucky, Missouri and South Carolina.

The investigations are part of efforts by the Civil Rights Division to more aggressively enforce a 1999 U.S. Supreme Court ruling aimed at ensuring people with disabilities are not needlessly isolated while receiving government help.

The agency launched the initiative under the Obama administration and the Justice Department, under Attorney General Merrick Garland, has vowed to prioritize civil rights cases to ensure there is equal access and justice under the law.

In addition to the sweeping investigations of police practices in several major cities, the department is examining jail conditions in several states and has been looking at conditions at mental health facilities.

Oklahoma “will fully cooperate with the Department of Justice’s investigation,” according to a statement from Kate Vesper, spokesperson for Gov. Kevin Stitt.

Oklahoma City Police Chief Wade Gourley, in a statement, said the department learned Thursday morning of the investigation into the department's response to calls involving people with mental illness or behavioral issues.

“We intend to cooperate with the USDOJ and look forward to working with them toward the goal of providing the safest and most effective ways of responding to these types of calls,” Gourley said.

A spokesperson for the city of Oklahoma City said a statement would be issued later Thursday.

A senior Justice Department official, who is not authorized to comment publicly, said the investigation was prompted by complaints from a mental health advocacy organization but did not identify the organization.

Two of the largest mental health advocacy organizations in the state, the National Alliance on Mental Illness-Oklahoma and the Alliance of Mental Health Providers of Oklahoma, did not immediately return phone calls for comment.

The official said that the investigation does not target the troubled Oklahoma County jail or fatal police shootings in the city, but both could be involved if violations of the rights of people with mental illnesses are found.

"We will be looking at police encounters with people with mental health issues, if fatal police shootings are among those encounters, they will be investigated,” as will treatment of jail inmates with mental illnesses, the official said.

"The investigation will examine whether Oklahoma fails to provide community-based mental health services" that include treatment, housing and employment, Clarke said.

Investigators also will look into the city's response to 911 calls regarding adults with mental disabilities and whether police comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act, according to Clarke.

Guatemala finds over 1,000 artifacts at Americans' home

GUATEMALA CITY (AP) — Prosecutors in Guatemala said Thursday they have found 1,222 possible archeological artefacts at the home of an American couple accused of smuggling historical relics.

The apparently pre-Hispanic pieces found in a 12-hour inspection of the house in the tourist town of Antigua range from large stone carvings to small pottery pieces.

The prosecutors office said in a statement that the raid on the home “represents a tough blow to a presumed ring dedicated to illegally trafficking cultural goods.”

The special prosecutors office for cultural legacy said the pieces found include stone items made of jade and basalt, and said the pieces had been turned over to an office of the Culture Ministry for examination.

The authenticity of the artefacts may be a key part of the case.

Photographer and designer Stephanie Allison Jolluck — who was detained last week after trying to fly out of Guatemala with two stone carvings were made between 600 and 900 A.D. — has said she bought those items at a market, believing they were souvenirs.

Jolluck and her American companion, Giorgio Salvador Rossilli, live in the tourist town of Antigua, just outside Guatemala City.

Jolluck was released on her own recognizance after her arrest at the airport because she was a long-term resident of Guatemala. But she and Rossilli were detained again Sunday when they were found with 166 Mayan artifacts in their vehicle.

After police pulled them over, Rossilli apparently argued ignorance. Prosecutor Jorge Alberto de León said the couple told a judge they thought the artifacts were cheap reproductions.

“They argued that, because they are foreigners, they cannot tell one piece from another,” de León said. “They told the judge that because they were pieces of stone they had seen sold at the markets, they never imagined that they were ancient archeological pieces.”

Rossilli is listed as an author of a two-volume work on the “Masks of Guatemalan Traditional Dances” and was credited as one of the curators of Los Angeles art exhibitions of pre-Hispanic artifacts several years ago.

Guatemala’s Culture Ministry says that 90% of the 166 artifacts — mostly stone carvings — found in the couple’s vehicle are authentic. People smuggling relics and archaeological artifacts face between 5 and 10 years in jail if convicted in Guatemala.

De León said Rossilli also argued the pieces weren’t his, and that he had been given them by someone else to restore, and that he was returning them when he was detained.

On Monday, Judge Sherly Figueroa released both Jolluck and Rossilli on bail of about $6,400 apiece and allowed them to keep their passports but prohibited them from leaving the country. They will be required to show up at prosecutors’ offices every two weeks as their case continues.

Jolluck’s lawyer, Juan Carlos Velasquez, refused to discuss the case with journalists, saying “I am not authorized to talk about this case, which is quite sensitive.”

New York Daily News Rips Donald Trump With Scathing Reminder Of His Scandals

The New York Daily News responded to Donald Trump’s 2024 campaign announcement in typical fiery style, with a damning front page reprising just some of his past scandals.

The tabloid’s cover featured reproductions of seven previous front pages reporting Trump’s two impeachments, the Capitol riot, his election lies, his bragging about sexual assault and other wrongdoing.

“Here We Go Again,” read the headline.

The Daily News, Trump’s former hometown paper, frequently criticized and mocked him during his presidency. Its brash front pages often went viral on social media.

Sorry, New York Post. You Can’t Memory Hole Your Own Trump Propaganda.
\

Matt Lewis
Thu, November 17, 2022 

Photo Illustration by Luis G. Rendon/The Daily Beast/Getty

The New York Post’s intentionally buried headline this week—“Florida Man Makes Announcement”—is receiving a lot of praise for its skillful trolling of former President Donald Trump. In case you missed it, the very brief blurb that didn’t even take up an entire column of a newspaper page included lines such as: “With just 720 days to go before the next election, a Florida retiree made the surprise announcement that he was running for president.”

I’m a fan of this genre (hats off to the Queens Daily Eagle, who started with the “Queens Man Does X” headline trend). Since there’s no danger of goading him into another run for president (that horse is out of the barn), and since only an idiot would actually underestimate his chances of winning again, mockery and dismissiveness of this serial loser don’t have much of a downside. The famously dour Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is even getting in on the act—dismissing Trump’s childish taunts the way an important businessman might shoo away a naughty child. I’m loving it.

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But here’s what bothers me: The New York Post is doing all of this without any self-awareness, any “my bad” acknowledgements, or any reckoning with its change of mind or past complicity. There’s no acknowledgement that Never Trumpers were right all along about Orange Julius. Instead, the Post seems to be memory-holing the last seven years.

Keep in mind, The Post endorsed Trump in the 2016 New York Republican primary, writing that he was “A plain-talking entrepreneur with outer-borough, common-sense sensibilities…who reflects the best of ‘New York values’—and offers the best hope for all Americans who rightly feel betrayed by the political class.”

One impeachment (and lots of craziness) later, the Post endorsed Trump again in 2020, writing: “The media are enormously fixated on Trump’s tweets and extemporaneous remarks, never learning the lesson that most of the time, he is just riffing. In endorsing him, we’re choosing to focus on President Trump’s actions and accomplishments. He has kept his promises.”

Then, just before the election, the Post published an opinion column saying Trump “will be an invincible hero, who not only survived every dirty trick the Democrats threw at him, but the Chinese virus as well.”

And for decades before Trump entered politics, no media outlet was more instrumental in creating the myth of Trump as a fascinating business savant than the Post, which used him as an anonymous source in countless gossip stories and covered his every “scandal” on the front page (which he absolutely loved).

In fairness, the Post turned on Trump after he lost in 2020 (and nearly tore this country in half rather than accepting his defeat), telling him to “give it up.” That deserves an asterisk, but condemning an attempted coup is a low bar for a media outlet founded by Alexander Hamilton.

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But the Post has turned up the heat in recent days, and they are merely one of Rupert Murdoch’s outlets to have moved in a similar trajectory since the 2022 midterms, which suggests that these are not spontaneous, local, or organic decisions.

Just as The Wall Street Journal and Fox News (both owned by Murdoch and both exhibited strong early resistance to Trump’s takeover of the GOP) all seemed to get the memo that you had to be on Team Trump if you wanted to keep your gig after he won the Republican nomination in 2016, it seems that these outlets (and many of their employees) are now slowly moving away from Trump and embracing DeSantis. Can we trust individuals and organizations who vacillate like this? You have to wonder whether people who embraced Trump under duress, only to then kick him when he’s down, won’t fall back in line if his nomination seems inevitable.

This phenomenon is happening outside the Murdoch empire, too. The Club for Growth, a fiscal conservative organization, was vehemently anti-Trump (I used to speak at their conferences during this era), only to change course and completely bow to him. Now they have released a poll showing that DeSantis is beating Trump.

Likewise, National Review famously published its “Against Trump” cover in 2016, only to have many of the writers featured in that edition subsequently embrace Trump. The latest NR editorial, simply titled, “No.” begins with this sentence: “To paraphrase Voltaire after he attended an orgy, once was an experiment, twice would be perverse.”

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Nominating Trump again would be perverse. But outside of NR and a select few other conservative outlets, perversity is the business model for a lot of right-wing media these days.

Still, I don’t want to discourage potential allies. If we are ever going to take back the conservative movement and the Republican Party from the forces of MAGA, the first step must be stopping Trump. And this experiment—as Voltaire might appreciate—is bound to require some flexible positions and strange bedfellows.

My message to the New York Post and other potential conservative allies is this: It would help the cause if you admitted that you were wrong and that non-MAGA Never Trumpers were right.

Regardless of your decision, I’m glad you’re here. You can quote me on this: “New York Tabloid Is Better Late Than Never.”