Thursday, August 06, 2020

COVIDIOT 

Canadian pastor jailed in Myanmar for defying Covid-19 ban



Canadian preacher David Lah is escorted for trial in Yangon, Myanmar June 8, 2020. — AFP pic
Canadian preacher David Lah is escorted for trial in Yangon, Myanmar June 8, 2020. — AFP pic
YANGON, Aug 6 — A Canadian preacher who claimed Christians were safe from coronavirus was today jailed for three months in Myanmar after he and dozens of his followers became infected when he held a banned service.
The South-east Asian nation has so far weathered the pandemic well with just 357 confirmed cases and six deaths, although the low numbers tested make many fear the true figures are far higher.
Toronto-based David Lah, 43, was born in Myanmar and often returns to his motherland to preach.
The country imposed a ban on gatherings in mid-March, but footage emerged in early April of Lah holding a service in Yangon.
“If people hold the Bible and Jesus in their hearts, the disease will not come in,” he proclaimed in one video to a roomful of faithful.
“The only person who can cure and give peace in this pandemic is Jesus.”
Lah tested positive for coronavirus shortly afterwards, and dozens of confirmed cases were traced back to his followers.
The preacher was arrested after recovering from the illness in May and faced up to three years in jail for violating the Natural Disaster and Management Law.
Today, however, a Yangon court chose to be lenient.
Lah and his colleague Wai Tun had been sentenced to three months imprisonment, Lah's lawyer Aung Kyi Win told reporters outside the court, adding that time already served would be deducted.
A waiting crowd of the preacher's followers erupted into cheers and celebrations at the news.
The scandal even touched Myanmar's Christian vice-president Henry Van Thio and his family, who had attended an earlier service with Lah in February, although they later tested negative.
About six per cent of Buddhist-majority Myanmar's population identifies as one of the various Christian denominations in the country. — AFP

Related Articles


BREAKING NEWS
China sentences Canadian to death over drug charge, says court


CHINA PLAYS HUAWEI GO



Thursday, 06 Aug 2020

Flags of Canada and China are placed for the first China-Canada economic and financial strategy dialogue in Beijing, China, November 12, 2018. — Reuters pic

BEIJING, Aug 6 — A Chinese court sentenced a Canadian national to death today in a ruling that could further inflame tensions between China and Canada.

The Guangzhou Intermediate Court said in a statement it had handed Xu Weihong the sentence for manufacturing drugs, and all his personal property had been confiscated. — 

TWITTER & FACEBOOK DELETE TRUMP
Facebook deletes post from Donald Trump for 'spreading misinformation about coronavirus'



Barbara Ortutay

August 06 2020

Facebook has deleted a post by US President Donald Trump for the first time, saying it violated its policy against spreading misinformation about coronavirus.

The post in question featured a link to a Fox News video in which Mr Trump says children are “virtually immune” to the virus.

Facebook said the “video includes false claims that a group of people is immune from Covid-19 which is a violation of our policies around harmful Covid misinformation”.

A few hours later, Twitter temporarily blocked the Trump campaign from tweeting from its account until it removed a post with the same video.

The company said in a statement late on Wednesday the tweet violated its rules against Covid misinformation. When a tweet breaks its rules, Twitter asks users to remove the tweet in questions and bans them from posting anything else until they do.

The removal of the post is a change of tack for Facebook, which has previously opted to label – rather than delete – misleading statements.


Several studies suggest, but do not prove, that children are less likely to become infected than adults and more likely to have only mild symptoms.

But this is not the same as being “virtually immune” to the virus

A Centres for Disease Control and Prevention study involving 2,500 children published in April found that about one in five infected children were hospitalised compared to one in three adults.

ASYMPTOMATIC CHILD CARRIERS
The study lacks complete data on all the cases, but it also suggests that many infected children have no symptoms, which could allow them to spread the virus to others.


PA Media

Twitter bans Donald Trump’s presidential campaign over coronavirus fake news
Poppy Wood  
Thursday 6 August 2020 


Twitter last night banned Donald Trump’s presidential campaign from tweeting until it agreed to remove a video spouting fake news about coronavirus.

In the most sweeping action taken by the social media platform in its 14-year history, Twitter last night temporarily froze the President’s Team Trump campaign account after it was found to breach company policy about misinformation.

Read more: Donald Trump questions accuracy of South Korean coronavirus stats

Team Trump posted a video from a TV interview in which the President claimed children are “almost immune” from coronavirus.

In reality, initial research has shown that children spread the virus as easily as adults, while many have died from the disease.

A spokesperson for Twitter said the Team Trump tweet “is in violation of the Twitter Rules on Covid-19 misinformation”.

In the first action of its kind against the President, Facebook also removed the offending video from its platform.

A Facebook spokesperson said: “This video includes false claims that a group of people is immune from Covid-19 which is a violation of our policies around harmful Covid misinformation.”

It comes as both Twitter and Facebook have heavily censored claims about coronavirus that contradict advice from health authorities such as the World Health Organization (WHO) during the pandemic.

Both companies have argued that such posts require significant policing because they pose a clear risk of real-world harm.

However, the moves mark a turning point for the social media platforms, which have historically proven reluctant to censor content on their sites.

Read more: Twitter faces $250m fine after US data probe

Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg, who has repeatedly said he does not want Facebook to be the “arbiter of truth”, has recently had to grapple with wide-scale advertising boycotts over the platform’s content policy.

Twitter, meanwhile, has long been associated with the President, with many claiming Trump’s use of the platform proved vital for his presidential campaign success in 2016.
IG report: Turkey still aiding Islamic State

An Inspector General's report this week said that Turkey remains a hub for Islamic State activity in Syria and Iraq. Pictured, U.S. Army personnel and vehicles participate in Operation Inherent Resolve. Photo courtesy of U.S. Defense Department



Aug. 5 (UPI) -- Turkey, a NATO member, remains a regional transit hub for Islamic State terrorists, a Defense Department Inspector General's report says.
The 136-page quarterly report on the U.S. military's mission in Iraq and Syria cites the U.S. European Command calling Turkey a "major facilitation hub" for IS personnel, funding and weaponry.
EUCOM conceded, though, that Turkey has recently improved its efforts to stop the smuggling of fighters and material across the border Turkey shares with Iraq and Syria.



The territorial control of IS has been reduced in the two countries, but attacks increased in April, coinciding with the holy month of Ramadan. The report mentioned 405 ISIS attacks in Iraq during the quarter, with spikes during Ramadan. IS also took advantage of restrictions placed on U.S. troops due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it said.

It also referred to increasing pressure from Russia and the Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad on the rebel Syrian Democratic Forces to break its affiliation with the United States.



"Since the October 2019 Turkish incursion into northeast Syria, the SDF has turned to Russia and the Syrian regime for protection against Turkish and Turkish-aligned forces," the report states.

A NATO country since 1952, Turkey has dismissed criticism of its recent actions, which include a violation of an arms embargo in Libya, claiming energy resources in the Mediterranean Sea, hostility toward Israel and the purchase of Russian-made air defense systems.
VIDEO
216-year-old sculpture damaged by tourist posing for photo

TOUCHE NON WAS IN ITALIAN

Aug. 5 (UPI) -- An Italian art museum said an Austrian tourist has apologized after damaging a 19th century sculpture while posing for a photo.

The Museo Antonio Canova in Possagno, Italy, shared security camera footage showing the man sitting on Antonio Canova's 216-year-old plaster sculpture of Pauline Borghese Bonaparte, Napoleon's sister, as Venus, the Roman goddess of love.

FOOT FETISHIST

The museum said a guard later discovered three of the sculpture's toes had been broken by the man.

The tourist was initially not identified, but the museum said he has now contacted officials to apologize after hearing about the damage from Austrian media. The man said he had been unaware of the damage he had caused.

"I apologize in every way," the man said in a message to the museum. Officials thanked the man for his apology and said he has offered to make amends for his actions.

Museum officials said they are working on a plan to repair the artwork. It was unclear whether the tourist would be fined.


Native American stone tool technology unearthed in Yemen, Oman

#CRYPTOARCHAEOLOGY  #FORTEAN #ANAMOLY 


Archaeologists recently unearthed 8,000-year-old evidence of fluted point technology in the Arabian Peninsula, a technology developed by Native Americans a few thousand years earlier. Photo by Jérémie Vosges/CNRS

Aug. 5 (UPI) -- Archaeologists recently discovered 8,000-year-old stone fluted points on the Arabian Peninsula, the same technology developed by Native Americans 13,000 years ago, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal PLOS One.

When the stone tools were first unearthed, researchers suspected there was something familiar about them. Scientists took note of the flute-like grooves texturing the sides of the stone points.

The tools examined for the study were found in Manayzah in Yemen and Ad-Dahariz in Oman, researchers said.

"We recognized this technique as ... probably the most famous of the prehistoric techniques used in the American continent," lead researcher Remy Crassard, head of archaeology at the French Center for Archaeology and Social Sciences, told UPI. "It took us little time to recognize it, but it took us more time to understand why fluting was present in Arabia."

For nearly a century, archaeologists have been uncovering evidence of fluted point technology at Native American sites dating between 10,000 and 13,000 years old.

Stone fluted points in the Americas are typically characterized by markings along the bases of spearpoints and blades. In Arabia, the fluting appeared closer to the tips of the ancient stone points.

Native Americans used hafting to more securely fix blades and points to handles and arrows. The people of the Arabian Peninsula used the same technique for a different purpose.

"In Arabia, they were using this same technique to create a flat zone on the back of the points, but as fluting comes from the tip most of the time, the hafting interpretation doesn't work," Crassard said.

"It must have been done for other reasons, and we tried to argue that it was more related to a form of 'bravado' or display of skill," Crassard said.

According to the paper's authors, the technologies are separated by too much time and space to have been the result of cultural exchange. Instead, the latest discovery is an example of cultural convergence.

"There are many examples [of cultural convergence] and from very diverse periods in human history," Crassard said.

"For example, polished stone axes are known from the Western European Neolithic, the Mayan culture of Central America and the 19-20th century tribes of Indonesia," Crassard said. "These three examples were never connected in time and space, but the objects produced and found by archaeologists are very similar."
ONLY WAY TO OPEN SCHOOLS

Chicago Public Schools to begin school year with remote learning

Aug. 5 (UPI) -- Chicago Public Schools announced Wednesday that schools will begin with remote learning when the school year begins in the fall.

CPS CEO Janice Jackson and Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced the plan Wednesday, seeking to assure parents that while learning would take place exclusively online the schools would not be "cobbling things together" as Jackson suggested was the case when schools closed in March.

"There will be more of a traditional infrastructure that you see in a school setting; we're going to stand that up in a remote setting," Jackson said. "Teachers have to be available throughout the entire day to students."

Jackson said a final plan would be released Friday, but outlined that when schools reopen, attendance will be mandatory, the district will revert to normal grading and educators will be able to conduct classes from their classrooms in the schools.

RELATED
U.N. chief: School closures have caused 'generational catastrophe'

The plan also includes a goal to move to a hybrid plan that would return students to school in November.

Officials originally planned to begin the school year using a hybrid plan in which students would attend in-person classes two days a week on a rotating basis, but said they opted to begin with online instruction after feedback from parents and public health guidelines.

CPS also faced pushback from the Chicago Teachers Union after they threatened to strike amid rising COVID-19 cases and its president, Jesse Sharkey, said last week Lightfoot did not "have the guts to close the schools."

RELATED
Testing, tracing needed to prevent COVID-19 spread at schools, study finds

Sharkey on Wednesday praised the move as a "win for teachers, students and parents" while adding CTU members should be equal partners in improving the remote learning experience.

"We have a long way to go and a short time to get there," Sharkey said. "CPS must immediately start planning transparently and in partnership with our union to provide every student the educational, social and emotional supports they need to learn and grow."

IN URBAN COMMUNITIES WITH SUFFICIENT BROADBAND AND ACCESS TO COMPUTERS THIS WORKS

WHERE COMPUTERS ARE NOT AVAILABLE THEN EDUCATIONAL TV AND RADIO WILL HAVE TO BE IMPROVED ON


IN THE USA WITH DAPA YOU COULD MAKE ALL 
COMPUTER PROVIDERS DONATE ALL HARDWARE SOFTWARE TO LOCAL SCHOOLS. TAXPAYERS
FUND ONLY DAILY WAGES BENEFITS FOR WORKERS PRODUCING THE GOODS ALL ELSE IS PROFIT.

BY NOW ALL THOSE RIGHT WING IDEALISTS WHO CLAIM HOMESCHOOLING IS BETTER THAN PUBLIC SCHOOLS ARE NOW FACING REALITY THAT HOMESCHOOLING IS A FAILURE. 
BECAUSE PARENTING IS NOT PEDAGOGY.
Trump makes pitch on Catholic TV: ‘Catholics like their Second Amendment so I saved the Second Amendment’

FOR TRUMP THERE IS BUT ONE AMENDMENT #2

HE HAS CONFUSED PAPISTS
PRO LIFE ANTI DEATH PENALTY ANTI WAR
WITH PROTESTANTS 
PRO LIFE PRO GUN ALL WHITE PRO DEATH PENALTY PRO WAR

 August 5, 2020 By David Edwards

President Donald Trump this week made a pitch to Catholic voters based on his assertion that he “saved the Second Amendment.”

In a Tuesday interview with the Catholic TV network EWTV, correspondent Tracy Sabol asked Trump if he had a message for Catholic voters.

“Well, I think anybody having to do with, frankly, religion, but certainly the Catholic Church, you have to be with President Trump when it comes to pro-life, when it comes to all of the things, these people are going to take all of your rights away, including Second Amendment,” the president said, “because, you know, Catholics like their Second Amendment. So I saved the Second Amendment.”

“If I wasn’t here, you wouldn’t have a Second Amendment,” Trump continued. “And pro-life is your big thing and you won’t be on that side of the issue, I guarantee, if the radical left, because they’re going to take over, they’re going to push [Joe Biden] around like he was nothing.”



The president also repeated the false claim that children are “virtually” immune to COVID-19.

“First of all, children are unbelievably strong, right? Their immune system,” he said. “So children just are, I guess I heard one doctor say, virtually they’re immune from it. They have a strong, they have a very strong something, and they are not affected.”

“And we have to open our schools,” he added. “And they’re also finding it’s wonderful to use computers, but it’s not a great way of learning.”

Watch the video below from EWTN.

There's Been A Major Increase In The Use Of Force Against Immigrants At ICE Detention Centers During The Pandemic

“We are numbers to them. We are not people.”


AMERIKA A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY 
THESE ARE REFUGEES NOT FELON'S
Hamed AleazizBuzzFeed News Reporter
Posted on August 5, 2020

John Moore / Getty Images
A guard escorts an immigrant detainee from his cell back into the general population at the Adelanto Detention Facility on Nov. 15, 2013, in Adelanto, California.

Jail guards pepper-sprayed the unit as immigrants lay down on the ground, screaming and coughing. The officers shot pepper ball rounds that ricocheted off jail tables, broken pieces striking a detainee’s eye. Fumes lingered in the air and made it hard for the detainees to breathe.

Immigrants who spoke with BuzzFeed News described the scene at the Adelanto ICE Processing Facility in Southern California on June 12 when private prison guards contracted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement pepper-sprayed and shot pepper balls against more than 150 detainees following a protest. Four detainees were taken to the hospital afterward.

Alejandro Ramirez said he and fellow immigrants were protesting rolling lockdowns of the jail in advance of a planned demonstration outside the facility by refusing the guards’ orders to return to their cells. In the weeks prior, demonstrators had broken a window and injured an Adelanto employee, according to the Victorville Press.

As a result of their protest, the detainees were pepper-sprayed. Another immigrant who spoke with BuzzFeed News said he saw multiple detainees pass out. A Los Angeles Times report described a detainee having a seizure, and another being hit by rubber bullets “as he told them he had leukemia.”

One of the pepper balls used struck a table, Ramirez said, and a broken piece cut his eye.

Ramirez told BuzzFeed News in July he couldn’t see out of one of his eyes for three days.

“We are numbers to them," he said. "We are not people. They are not going to listen to us. They are going to follow their rules. There is nothing we can do.”

He was later deported to Mexico.



The force used in Adelanto, which ICE said was needed to “preserve order” after multiple unsuccessful attempts to de-escalate, is the latest in a series of similar incidents since the beginning of the pandemic.

ICE officials do not proactively report these cases unless media outlets request the information, and the agency does not compile data from use-of-force incidents within detention centers nationwide. BuzzFeed News, however, reviewed internal government reports and has found that there has been a substantial increase in uses of force during the coronavirus pandemic.


John Moore / Getty Images
A blind detainee walks with a fellow immigrant at the Adelanto Detention Facility on Nov. 15, 2013, in Adelanto, California.

Since the end of March through the beginning of July, guards at detention centers across the country deployed force — pepper spray, pepper balls, pepper spray grenades — in incidents involving more than 10 immigrants at a time on a dozen occasions, according to a review of internal reports.

In total, more than 600 detainees have been subjected to these group uses of force. Other reports obtained by BuzzFeed News do not list how many detainees were affected. In one event, detention guards pepper-sprayed underneath a door after some detainees protested being isolated due to potential COVID-19 exposure, according to an internal report.

The recent figures stand in contrast to the period before the pandemic. In the six months prior to the health emergency — from September to March — there were two use-of-force incidents against more than 10 detainees, according to a review of the documents BuzzFeed News obtained.

ICE officials acknowledged the recent uptick, which they attributed to disruptive detainees.

“During the pandemic, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has seen more incidents where groups of detainees become confrontational with staff, sometimes acting in ways that are unsafe for the general population,” said Danielle Bennett, a spokesperson for the agency. “When such incidents occur, and staff is unable to deescalate the situation through other means, the use of OC spray is permitted and consistent with agency protocols, as described in the detention standards, to preserve order and maintain a safe environment.”

Medical experts, however, said the increased use of pepper spray during the pandemic in a closed space was concerning.

“It’s a bad idea. Pepper spray is an irritant of the respiratory system and often causes people to cough, and we know that cough increases the spread of virus,” said Marc Stern, a public health expert and faculty member at the University of Washington. “It comes with an additional risk that did not exist in pre-COVID times.”

Stern said guards should weigh whether using pepper spray could increase the risk of spreading the disease through the use of pepper spray inside the jails.

The incidents often follow a similar pattern, with force being used after detainees refuse commands from guards. Some incidents have been directly tied to the pandemic: detainees protesting conditions, resisting being quarantined, or being moved within the facility. ICE officials say that detainees involved were disruptive, disregarded orders, and in some cases were violent.

Immigrants and their advocates, however, believe the use of force is unjustified and excessive.

“The lack of transparency into these facilities have allowed guards to use force —including pepper spray, rubber bullets, and physical force — with impunity. Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, this has only grown worse, due in part to the fear of people in detention as the virus continues to spread in facilities, sickening and killing people,” said Eunice Cho, a senior staff attorney at the ACLU.

Laura Rivera, the director of Southern Poverty Law Center’s Southeast Immigrant Freedom Initiative, said that detainees are advocating for “freedom” during the pandemic due to fears they will contract the disease in custody.

“In return, ICE routinely retaliates with ruthless force. Clad in riot gear, guards deploy pepper spray, pepper-ball ammunitions, and physical force,” she said.

Medical experts and immigrant advocates have warned that the highly contagious disease puts everyone in detention at risk. They’ve pointed out that detention centers have a lack of necessary space to accommodate proper social distancing guidelines. ICE has countered that the agency has ramped up testing and released many detainees who are medically vulnerable. As of late July, nearly 1,000 detainees had tested positive for COVID-19 and almost 4,000 had gotten the disease in custody.

In one incident, ICE medical officials held a meeting about COVID-19 at a detention center in Louisiana, according to a government document obtained by BuzzFeed News. During the class, a group of detainees began protesting and ignored the guards’ orders. Pepper spray was soon used to keep a group of detainees from escaping an area of the jail, the report stated.

In March, Mother Jones reported that an attorney representing a woman in the detention center said that she was told that "the women were coughing, crying, and that some fainted throughout the approximately one hour that they were locked in the room with tear gas.”

Later, in May, the Bristol County Sheriff’s Office used pepper spray on 25 detainees after they refused to be tested for COVID-19. Sheriff’s officials said that the immigrants “rushed violently” at correctional officers and broke windows in the facility. Advocate groups have denied the allegations. The ACLU has since sued to get video footage from the incident.

Rev. Annie Gonzalez Milliken, a minister at the First Parish in Bedford, said she got a call from one detainee the night the incident occurred.

He told her that the sheriff’s officials had grabbed him, and that the detainees had been sprayed in the face and in the mouth.

"They want to take us to the other unit to be tested, we don’t want to go on the other unit for cross-contamination, we want to be tested, but not moved,” she said the detainee told her.

The most recent incident came on July 1 at the Immigration Center of America in Farmville, Virginia, where more than 40 detainees were pepper-sprayed after they refused to return to their cells for a day population count. The detention center’s warden said in a federal court filing that the detainees had congregated in the center’s day room instead.

“Several officers and supervisors spoke with them and attempted to persuade them to return to their bunks in Dorm 7 on their own,” he said in the affidavit filed in federal court as part of a lawsuit filed by Capital Area Immigrants' Rights (CAIR) Coalition over the conditions in center. “After about thirty minutes, I authorized the use of pepper spray. Four of the detainees picked up chairs and used them as weapons against the officers. A total of 11 detainees became violent and are now isolated from the rest of Dorm 7 for disciplinary and safety reasons.”

The incident came as the detention center has seen an uptick in COVID-19 cases. As of early July, there were more than 250 detainees with the disease. Advocates have called the situation an “outbreak” and a “human rights crisis.”

In June, the detention center received 74 detainees from Arizona and Florida, 51 of whom tested positive for the disease.

“There's no doubt in my mind this egregious use of force had to do with the erupting COVID-19 outbreak that resulted from the ICE transfers. Our clients described feeling scared and sick, not getting adequate food or medical attention, people passing out in the dorms — they were simply trying to get answers and to be treated with dignity and respect,” said Sirine Shebaya, head of the National Immigration Project. “Instead, the guards attacked them with pepper spray and escalated a disastrous situation of their own making."


MORE ON THIS
The Trump Administration Said It's Not Expelling A Group Of Immigrant Children Held In A Hotel
Adolfo Flores · July 28, 2020
Hamed Aleaziz · July 29, 2020


Hamed Aleaziz is a reporter for BuzzFeed News and is based in San Francisco.
Rep. Ilhan Omar's challenger hit with campaign finance complaint

2020/8/4 ©Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Rep. Ilhan Omar speaks at a town hall meeting at the Colin Powell Center in Minneapolis. - Richard Tsong-Taatarii/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS

MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party officials charged Tuesday that Antone Melton-Meaux, the top challenger to incumbent U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, skirted campaign finance laws by hiding some of his top political consultants in next week’s nationally watched Democratic primary.

A Federal Election Commission complaint obtained by the Minneapolis Star Tribune alleges that Melton-Meaux’s campaign violated federal election law by “conspiring to intentionally obscure” the identity of political consultants listed as limited liability corporations working on his challenge to Omar in a hotly contested race that has already seen each side raise more than $4 million.

“The campaign of Ilhan Omar’s primary opponent has gone against the values of the DFL Party by apparently working with vendors to set up mysterious shell companies to hide millions of dollars in spending,” DFL Chair Ken Martin said in a prepared statement.

Lee Hayes, a spokesman for Melton-Meaux’s campaign, called the FEC filing baseless and an attempt to distract from Omar’s own campaign finance issues, given her campaign has directed more than $1.6 million to a Washington, D.C., firm that employs her husband as a consultant.

That case is also before the FEC. “Her campaign money is coming into her own household and she is benefiting from that,” Hayes said.

The exchange was the latest in an increasingly bitter volley of campaign salvos in a race that has divided Democrats in a traditionally liberal district that includes Minneapolis and several western suburbs.

Melton-Meaux, an attorney-mediator, has sharpened his criticism of Omar’s turbulent first term in Congress, arguing that her national profile as an outspoken progressive has done little for the 5th Congressional District. Omar, running with the party endorsement, has questioned Melton-Meaux’s progressive credentials, citing a past critique of the Black Lives Matter movement and his legal work on behalf of companies in labor disputes.

Attacks between the two campaigns have intensified in recent weeks as the perception grows that Melton-Meaux is within striking distance of unseating Omar, the first Somali American in Congress. The primary is expected to all but decide the general election winner, even though Omar’s national profile as a foil for the political right has fueled fundraising for the top Republican in the race, north Minneapolis businessman Lacy Johnson. He also has raised more than $4 million.

Much of the money for all three candidates has come from out of state.

The new DFL complaint cites three companies that combined have provided nearly $1.7 million in services for what the Melton-Meaux campaign describes as direct mail, television advertising and strategic consulting.

The complaint notes that none of the three vendors provided services to any other federal candidate or political committee in the 2019-20 election cycle. Two of the three companies were registered as new businesses in the state of Delaware at the end of last year, according to a recent report in MinnPost.

The DFL filings quote an email that Melton-Meaux’s campaign sent to supporters Sunday that sought to explain why some of his consultants were listed as “LLCs,” or limited liability corporations. The Melton-Meaux email states that it was necessary because the Washington-based Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, the campaign arm of the House Democrats, has a policy that “blacklists” political firms that work on behalf of campaigns against Democratic incumbents.

The Melton-Meaux campaign says the approach is legal. “The LLCs receiving payments are legitimate entities, and the described purposes for the payments were accurate,” said Scott Thomas, a former FEC chairman and campaign finance counsel for the Melton-Meaux campaign.

But the DFL argues in its complaint that it violates a federal election law provision which requires campaign committees to publicly identify any person that has received a campaign expenditure in excess of $200.

Omar herself was the subject of an FEC complaint by a conservative group last year following allegations in a divorce filing that she was in a romantic relationship with Tim Mynett. He’s a D.C. consultant whose firm, the E Street Group, is contracted to do political work for Omar.

Mynett and Omar revealed in March that they had married. Last Friday, she defended her campaign’s payments to his firm, saying that most of the money has gone directly to TV advertising and campaign literature. Unlike the firms in Melton-Meaux’s employ, the E Street Group is an established D.C. firm with Democratic clients around the country.

The FEC has lacked a quorum of members for much of the last year, making any rapid follow-up on complaints unlikely.

———

©2020 Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Antone Melton-Meaux is challenging Rep. Ilhan Omar for the DFL nomination in the Fifth Congressional District. He does much of his work online since the COVID-19 outbreak. - GLEN STUBBE/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS