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  • Trump Deports JD Vance and His Wife

    Tuesday, April 29, 2025
    According to aides who were present when Trump discussed the issue, but who choose to remain anonymous for fear of retribution, Trump said he was sick of Vance and wanted to fire him. “I wanted him to be my attack dog,” said Trump, “but he appears foolish on television. He dropped the college football trophy. He met with Pope Francis and the next day the pope died. Vance is toxic, and I don’t want him to come near me. He just doesn’t look as good on television as I thought he would.”   read more
  • Court Denies Immunity to Police Officer Accused to Siccing Dog on Suspect

    Thursday, March 03, 2016
    The Seventh Circuit denied immunity to a police officer accused of siccing his dog on a burglary suspect trapped in an empty pool, yelling, “You like to rob houses, punk?” The officer yelling “you like to rob houses, punk?” before commanding his dog to attack casts doubt on his assertion that he made a split-second safety calculation,” the judge ruled.   read more
  • State of Michigan Wouldn’t Let Flint Switch to Safe Water

    Thursday, March 03, 2016
    The state of Michigan restricted Flint from switching water sources last April unless it got approval from Gov. Rick Snyder’s administration under the terms of a $7 million loan needed to help the city emerge from state management, according to a document released Wednesday. By the time the loan agreement was in place, complaints about Flint’s water quality were growing louder, but officials had not yet discovered that improperly treated Flint River water had caused lead to leach from pipes.   read more
  • Judge Rules Indiana Can’t Withhold Funds From Group Resettling Syrian Refugees

    Thursday, March 03, 2016
    Indiana cannot withhold federal funds from relief organizations that help refugee families from Syria settle in the state, a federal judge ruled. Gov. Mike Pence (R) was among 31 governors who vowed not to let any of the millions of refugees fleeing slaughter in Syria resettle in their states. Marion County-based Exodus Refugee Immigration sued the governor, claiming that Pence’s decision hampers its efforts to place about 19 Syrians who had already received federal refugee status.   read more
  • Computer Hackers Wanted…by the Pentagon

    Thursday, March 03, 2016
    Screened high-tech specialists will be brought in to try to breach the Defense Department’s public Internet pages in a pilot program aimed at finding and fixing cybersecurity vulnerabilities. Defense officials laid out the broad outlines of the plan Wednesday, but had few details on how it will work, what Pentagon systems would be tested and how the hackers would be compensated. Called “Hack the Pentagon,” the program will begin next month.   read more
  • Senate Rejects Funding to Fight Heroin and Opioid Abuse

    Thursday, March 03, 2016
    The Senate on Wednesday rejected a Democratic effort to add $600 million to a bipartisan bill targeting heroin and opioid abuse. Supporters of the immediate funding won a majority of the Senate votes. But the 48-47 tally fell short of the 60 votes required for an attempt by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., to add the money. Shaheen said “the reality is unless we provide the resources to make these programs work it’s like giving a drowning person a life preserver that has no air in it.”   read more
  • Utah Senate Votes to Abolish Death Penalty

    Thursday, March 03, 2016
    Utah senators on Wednesday voted to abolish the death penalty, advancing what had been considered a longshot proposal in the conservative state. The measure marks a stunning turn in Utah, where a year ago lawmakers voted to reinstate the use of the firing squad as a backup execution method. Lawmakers argued that if the state has a shortage of lethal injection drugs, it must still find a way to kill death row inmates.   read more
  • Republican House Members Added Paragraph to Chemical Safety Bill that Could Shield Monsanto from Toxic Chemical Liability

    Wednesday, March 02, 2016
    The House provision is drawing protests from officials suing Monsanto to try to recover costs associated with PCB cleanups, and from lawyers trying to collect damages for individuals with health problems linked to PCB exposure. “Call me a dreamer, but I wish for a Congress that would help cities with their homeless crises instead of protecting multinational corporations that poison our environment,” said attorney Pete Holmes, suing Monsanto to cover costs of reducing PCB from Seattle sewers.   read more
  • Doctors, Hospitals and Big Pharma Benefit from $3 Billion Worth of Wasted Cancer Medicine per Year

    Wednesday, March 02, 2016
    High prices for cancer medicines aren't the only reason they cost insurers and patients so much. Waste pads the bill, a study finds, because cancer drugs are distributed in the U.S. in vials that usually contain more medicine than most patients need. Most of the time that excess is thrown out, even though it's perfectly good — and worth hundreds or thousands of dollars. Researchers estimate that wasted cancer medicine in the U.S. this year will add up to nearly $3 billion in excess costs.   read more
  • Rise of Trump Elicits Shock, Outrage and Panic across Europe

    Wednesday, March 02, 2016
    He has been depicted as a snarling demagogue in France, equated with Donald Duck in Spain, and described as worse than Lord Voldemort in Britain. In Europe, Trump has been treated variously as a disturbing curiosity or an entertaining political show barker. Commentators on both left and right have dismissed the notion of U.S. President Donald Trump as the stuff of fantasy, or, at worst, a momentary lapse of reason. The reaction is a mix of befuddlement, outrage and panic.   read more
  • Privacy Advocates Raise Alarm Over Apps, Billboards and Cell Phones that Track the Public

    Wednesday, March 02, 2016
    Some billboards have been equipped with small cameras that collect information about the people walking by. Privacy advocates, however, have long raised questions about mobile device tracking, particularly as companies have melded this location information with consumers’ online behavior to form detailed audience profiles. “People have no idea that they’re being tracked and targeted,” said CDD's Jeffrey Chester. “It is incredibly creepy, and it’s the most recent intrusion into our privacy.”   read more
  • Interior Dept. Sued for Withholding Data on Solar Project that Incinerated Birds in Flight

    Wednesday, March 02, 2016
    Basin & Range Watch posted a video that it says shows birds flying into the solar beams and "incinerating in the intense reflected heat." About 115 birds were set aflame that way, the group says. The video shows them "being burned and literally turning to smoke as they fly through the concentrated solar rays," says the complaint. Biologists calls these bird deaths "streamers," due to the smoke they give off as their feathers catch fire and the birds fall to the ground in the 900-degree beam.   read more
  • FBI Admits it Mistakenly Locked Itself out of San Bernardino Killer’s iPhone

    Wednesday, March 02, 2016
    The FBI did not help its case with lawmakers when Comey acknowledged the mistake of changing the iCloud password. “There was a mistake made in that 24 hours after the attack,” Comey told lawmakers at a hearing on the government’s attempt to force Apple to help “unlock” the iPhone. “If the FBI hadn’t instructed San Bernardino County to change the password to the iCloud account, all this would have been unnecessary, and you would have had that information,” said Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y.   read more
  • Justice Clarence Thomas Asks Questions in Court for First Time in 10 Years

    Tuesday, March 01, 2016
    It wasn't just one question; it was a string of them in an exchange that lasted several minutes. Thomas' gravelly voice unexpectedly filled the courtroom and enlivened an otherwise sleepy argument about gun rights. He peppered Justice Department lawyer Ilana Eisenstein with 10 or so questions that seemed to be a vigorous defense of the constitutional right to own a gun. It provoked gasps from the audience, but none of the other justices visibly reacted to Thomas' remarks.   read more
  • New Mexico Man Given 5-Year Prison Sentence for Illegally Entering a Home…With Only His Fingertips

    Tuesday, March 01, 2016
    The New Mexico Supreme Court ruled that home begins at the window screen - even if only the fingertips have succeeded in breaking and entering. Anthony Holt was convicted of breaking and entering a home in Las Cruces and was sentenced to five years and five months in prison. He appealed, claiming that only his fingertips had entered the home, as the homeowner heard him, and when she caught him in the act, he said, "Oh, I'm sorry," and vamoosed.   read more
  • Lawsuit Claims New York State Prisons’ “Zero Tolerance” of Female Inmate Sex Abuse is a Sham

    Monday, February 29, 2016
    The lawsuit asks a judge to force the state to prevent women from being sexually abused by male guards. The prison culture permits supposed "willing" or "consensual" sexual contact between prisoners and guards even though "state law, prison policy, and common sense make clear that women in custody are unable to consent in the coercive prison environment," the lawsuit said. Guards are so unlikely to be punished for misbehavior that they freely disregard policies that would stop them, it said.   read more
  • Consumer Privacy Advocates not Impressed by Obama’s Efforts

    Monday, February 29, 2016
    The story of how some of the country’s leading civil society advocates came to lose faith in the White House’s privacy initiative does not follow the typical plot of Washington gridlock. It is a tale of clashing visions for U.S. society and commerce. And it provides an instructive preview of looming battles among government agencies for control over industries like drones, smartphones and gadgets yet to come.   read more
2033 to 2048 of about 15028 News
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