Friday, June 30, 2017

The Mormon Church Just Allowed Female Employees To Wear Pants. Here's Why That's A Big Deal.

George Frey / AFP / Getty Images

The Mormon church rolled out a handful of new policies for employees this week, some specifically for women, that observers say are the latest in the religion's subtle but long-running evolution toward greater gender equality.

The new policies are outlined in a memo The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints sent to employees Wednesday and provided to BuzzFeed News. Most significantly, women employed by the church who give birth will now receive six weeks of paid leave. All new parents, including fathers, will also receive a week of paid leave "to bond with their new child(ren) from birth or adoption."

Perhaps more interesting, however, was the announcement that women employed by the church will now be allowed to wear "professional pantsuits and dress slacks" to work — rather than skirts and dresses as had long been required. The new dress code also allows men to wear colored dress shirts, rather than only white, and to remove their suit coats when it is warm.

Church spokesperson Doug Andersen told BuzzFeed News that "thousands of full-time employees will receive these benefits." Those employees are primarily based in the US, though some overseas employees will also be impacted by dress code changes.

"My opinion is, absolutely, this is part of a shift to a moderate stance on women’s issues."

Though at a glance the changes appear relatively small, progressive Mormons are celebrating the new policy as part of a larger and more significant trend of women assuming greater and more equal roles in the church. Libby Boss, a Massachusetts-based Mormon blogger who writes at the female-authored site the Exponent II, told BuzzFeed News that feminist Mormon Facebook groups "kind of blew up about it." She described the church's new leave policy as an acknowledgement that there are more single parent families today than in the past, and said the dress code changes signify to the faithful that "women don’t have to wear dresses all the time to be women."

"It’s such a huge step and I’m so proud of them," Boss said. "Of course I wish it had come 30 years ago."

The policy changes at the church are part of a recent trend that includes the Ordain Women movement, which has lobbied for female ordination to the church's lay ministry, last year's announcement that women serving missions in some parts of the world can wear slacks, and a series of mentions of "heavenly parents" instead of simply "heavenly father" at church-wide meetings.

"We’re seeing some progressive things happen," Boss said.

The new pants policy, she said, is a direct response to a feminist-tinged "wear pants to church day" movement that made headlines several years ago.

Members of Ordain Women try to attend an all-male meeting of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Salt Lake City in 2014.

Jim Urquhart / Reuters

When asked about what led to the new policies, Anderson, the church spokesperson, said they are a "reflection of efforts to reinforce the important teaching that the family is central to our eternal destiny."

"I am sure there have been requests to modify work standards – as there would be in any organization – but I don’t see that as a primary driver here," Anderson said in an email. "It’s really that simple – this provides options for employees."

"The members themselves are kind of more progressive than the church hierarchy."

But Margaret Toscano also sees the policy changes as part of something larger. Toscano, a professor of world cultures and religion at the University of Utah, was the subject of a high-profile excommunication from the LDS church in 2000, though she told BuzzFeed News she still considers herself a member of the broader Mormon movement.

Toscano said the new parental leave and dress code changes fit into a broader story about Mormon women growing their influence. In 2013, for example, a woman offered a prayer for the first time at the church's worldwide conference, and in 2015 women were appointed to previously all-male leadership councils.

"The idea of women praying in general conference was an accommodation by leaders that if they don’t respond to women’s needs they're going to have people leave," Toscano said.

A progressive trend within Mormonism has been taking shape since the 1970s, though it often involves "taking four steps ahead, and then three steps back, and then another five steps ahead," Toscano said. Significantly, much of the evolution over the years has been prompted by grassroots action by faithful members who want change.

"The members themselves are kind of more progressive than the church hierarchy," Toscano said. "I see it as sort of the tension and ongoing negotiation."

Temple Square, in Salt Lake City, where many employees of the LDS church work.

Hoberman Collection / Getty Images

Taylor Petrey, a Mormon and professor of religion at Kalamazoo College who has studied Mormon feminism, saw the new policies as a response to members pushing for change.

"I do think that some of the changes that the church has been undergoing in the last decade have been a response to moderate feminist criticisms," he told BuzzFeed News. "My opinion is, absolutely, this is part of a shift to a moderate stance on women’s issues."

That's a shift that could have surprisingly big repercussions on US culture. Mormonism has been thrust into the spotlight in recent years, thanks to everything from Mitt Romney's presidential aspirations to The Book of Mormon musical and the LDS church's cheeky response to it. For a relatively small religion based in a relatively unpopulated state, Mormons have been conspicuously prominent.

The Mormon Tabernacle Choir in Salt Lake City on Oct. 3, 2015.

Jim Urquhart / Reuters

Of course, Mormonism remains, on the whole, a conservative culture. And many Mormons are certainly not watching for, or anticipating, what Boss described as a series of "progressive things." There have also been periods of backlash in church history against progressivism, such as during the tenure of Ezra Taft Benson, who led the church in the 1980s and early 90s.

Still, given the religion's outsize prominence in the US, even a gradual shift could reverberate far and wide across broader American culture.

In the meantime, however, progressive Mormons are celebrating the fact that they see a trend in the first place. Boss was among them, and referring to the elderly all-male top leadership, described the new policies as a "huge step for a very conservative minded, older group of men to make." And that's something Mormon feminists have been awaiting for years.

"My grandmother worked at [LDS church-owned Brigham Young University] and was paid a fraction of what her colleagues were," Boss said. "She was angry about that until she died. I hope she knows about this."

LINK: The Mormon Church Is Dropping Boy Scout Programs In A Major Cultural Shift

LINK: Mormon Leaders Condemn Bigotry And Vitriol In Apparent Rebuke Of Trumpism




from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2twcxSl

The US Military Has Delayed Enlisting Transgender Recruits By Another Six Months

Cliff Owen / AP

The Department of Defense announced Friday that transgender people may not enlist in the military until at least Jan. 1, 2018.

Branches of service had previously asked for an extension of a year or more to develop plans to integrate transgender recruits. The plans do not apply to transgender people already serving in the military.

Pentagon spokesperson Dana W. White said in a statement Friday that the decision came after a recommendation from the military branches. Guidelines established last year had aimed at allowing transgender troops to enlist starting at the end of June.

"Secretary [Jim] Mattis today approved a recommendation by the services to defer accessing transgender applicants into the military until Jan. 1, 2018," White said. "The services will review their accession plans and provide input on the impact to the readiness and lethality of our forces."

No explanation for the delay was given by the Pentagon. Army and Air Force officials previously told BuzzFeed News they wanted two more years to study how to welcome transgender troops. The Navy had said it would be ready by July 1, but it also asked the Pentagon for a year extension to accommodate a request by the Marine Corps.

In May, two transgender cadets graduated US military academies, USA Today reported. But with the current policy, they have not been allowed to serve as officers.

A 2016 report by the RAND Corporation commissioned by the Department of Defense found integrating transgender people in the military would have "minimal impact" on armed forces' readiness.

In the meantime, restricting people from enlisting based on their gender identity only keeps the military from finding the most talented people for its ranks, Human Rights Campaign spokesman Stephen Peters said in a statement.

“Once this important policy is implemented, it will strengthen our military by allowing qualified and talented transgender people to enlist or commission,” said Peters, Marine veteran who was discharged under Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. “Each day that passes without the policy in place restricts the armed forces’ ability to recruit the best and the brightest, regardless of gender identity. We are disappointed in this needless delay because the thousands of highly trained and qualified transgender service members openly and proudly serving our nation today have proven that what matters is the ability to accomplish the mission, not their gender identity.”

LINK: The US Military Probably Won't Meet Its Deadline To Fully Integrate Transgender Troops

BuzzFeed News reporter Nancy A. Youssef contributed to this report.



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2u8IJcb

The Founder Of The Disastrous Fyre Festival Has Been Arrested And Charged With Fraud

Facebook / Via Facebook: billy.mcfarland.9

The founder of the disastrous Fyre Festival has been arrested on federal wire fraud charges.

Billy McFarland was arrested Friday. Federal prosecutors accused McFarland of promising a "'life changing' music festival," when instead he delivered "a disaster."

"McFarland allegedly presented fake documents to induce investors to put over a million dollars into his company and the fiasco called the Fyre Festival," the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York said in a statement. "Thanks to the investigative efforts of the FBI, McFarland will now have to answer for his crimes."

The Fyre Festival was scheduled to take place in April, but quickly descended into chaos. Attendees, who had paid high ticket prices to attend what was supposed to be a luxurious event, instead up ended in natural disaster-style tents and in some cases were left stranded.

This is a developing story. Check back soon for updates and follow @BuzzFeedNews on Twitter.




from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2taxvUo

A Woman Of Indian Descent Was Called A "Sand N*****" On Tinder

Northwestern University is looking into whether one of its students called a woman of Indian descent a "fucking sand nigger" on Tinder, a university spokesperson told BuzzFeed News.

Northwestern University is looking into whether one of its students called a woman of Indian descent a "fucking sand nigger" on Tinder, a university spokesperson told BuzzFeed News.

Twitter: @dkurtzz

The student was first identified by The Daily Northwestern as Brendan Amos — a sophomore at Northwestern's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences.

Alan Cubbage, the vice president of university relations at Northwestern, confirmed Amos' identity and said they were "looking into" the incident.

He refused to provide further details, and did not say whether the university was considering disciplinary action.

On June 18, Amos matched on Tinder with Anjali, a freshman at Dartmouth College who wanted to be identified only by her first name, as she didn't want to be "permanently tied to this one encounter."

Anjali told BuzzFeed News on Friday that the two matched because they were both in Hanover, New Hampshire, and had some common friends.

She said she did not use Tinder to meet many people, and only used it with her friends when she was bored.

Anjali's Tinder bio reads "Send memes" which is why Amos' first message to her was "I'm not tryna send memes I'm just tryna smash," suggesting that he only wanted to have sex with her.

She replied "yikes," to which Amos responded, "ok but answer me honestly why are you on tinder."

When she replied "mostly because I'm bored," Amos said, "I call bs."

She responded, "Lol why."

After two days, she received a response from Amos that said, "cause you're a fucking sand nigger."

Anjali told BuzzFeed News that at first she just laughed at "the stupidity" of the response.

"My initial reaction was, 'This is just a stupid thing to say to anyone and this guy is an idiot,'" she said. "But the more I thought about it, I started blaming myself for a while and asked myself, 'Did I do anything to provoke this kind of response?' I then realized that this guy's words had a greater impact on me than I originally expected."

Anjali said the Hanover area is "very racially divided."

"Six- and seven-year-olds have called me and my other Indian friends the n-word," she said. "That's the kind of environment we're in. But one would have expected a lot more from a kid who goes to Northwestern. You would expect them to be more educated and tolerant."

Amos refused to talk to BuzzFeed News, but in a statement to the Daily Northwestern, he denied sending the message in question.

"I am not a racist person," he said. "I am sorry for anyone who has been affected by this incident, and I do not condone the language used."

The incident came to light after Anjali's friend, Devon Kurtz, posted the entire exchange on Twitter on June 23, calling it "disgusting."


Anjali told BuzzFeed News that after she deleted Amos from Tinder, he reached out to her on Facebook and apologized. He told her that the racial slur was sent to her by his "extremely inebriated friend."

"I feel awful, I really didn't mean for this to happen and I don't support discrimination in any way. I just wanted to say sorry to you because I know that this hurt you badly," Amos told Anjali in a series of Facebook messages.

He said that people had been "witch hunting" him after Kurtz posted the tweet of their Tinder conversation.

Courtesy Anjali

Anjali told him that the racial slur "was pretty shocking to me and uncalled for."

"I was really confused by it (given the lack of provocation and that I'm not of Middle Eastern origin) and just kind of shaken by it," she told Amos on Facebook. "I have a pretty thick skin and have faced a decent amount of discrimination in Hanover, West Leb & back home, but I did expect more from a NU student."

Anjali said she "appreciated" his apology and told him that she would vouch for him if he got into trouble with the university.

"As of rn it looks like I'll be expelled so that's not ideal," Amos told her, adding that his case was being reviewed by the university. "Like I'm freaking out I worked so hard to get to this point and now I might lost it all because of some dumb tinder line my blacked out friend wrote."

He also asked her to send an email to the university to help his case.

Anjali did send an email to Northwestern, saying that while she did not "completely believe" Amos' explanation for sending the racial slur, she believed his apology to be sincere and requested the university not take "severe actions" against him.

"To say I was not affected by his message would be a lie, but I was not expecting my friend to escalate it to this level," she wrote in the email that was provided to BuzzFeed News.

She added:

Though I do believe these kinds of remarks and attitudes should be exposed, I have since spoken with Brendan, who has apologized to me, and was made aware that his heavily inebriated friend sent the message.

Though personally, I cannot say I completely believe that explanation, I would not be surprised if that was the case. There is no way to confirm he, himself, sent the message, nor that he didn't.

Thus, I ask that no severe actions be taken against him as I believe he (and his friend) have learned from this experience.


Anjali said the university did not respond to her email.

While Anjali did not file anything against Amos, she said many of her friends, both at Dartmouth and Northwestern, filed a discrimination report against him after seeing Kurtz's tweet.

She said she was "skeptical" of Amos' explanation, but wanted to give him the benefit of the doubt.

"I don't want his life ruined by it," she said.



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2u8dz4R

More Than 20 States Are Refusing To Fully Cooperate With Trump's Voter Fraud Investigation

Donald Trump stands with Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach.

Mike Segar / Reuters

More than 20 states as of Friday were refusing to fully cooperate with President Trump's efforts to investigate alleged voter fraud, many of them bristling at lending credence to a debunked allegation, let alone divulging sensitive data of their voters to a federal commission.

In all, the list of states pushing back against the request for data on voters by the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity had grown to 22 by Friday afternoon. And the blowback was coming from both sides of the partisan aisle.

"My reply would be: They can go jump in the Gulf of Mexico, and Mississippi is a great state to launch from," Mississippi Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann, a Republican, said in a statement Friday regarding the request. "Mississippi residents should celebrate Independence Day and our state's right to protect the privacy of our citizens by conducting our own electoral processes."

Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who is vice chairman of the commission, gave states on Wednesday about two weeks to hand over roughly a dozen data points of voters who participated in the 2016 election, including birthdates, the last four digits of Social Security numbers, voting history, military status, and information about felony convictions.

Gerald Herbert / AP

Trump, who lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton, formed the commission months after he claimed, without evidence, that 3 to 5 million people voted illegally in the 2016 election.

Kobach's letter also asks states to share any evidence of fraud or election-related crimes, along with suggestions of how to improve election integrity, so that the commission can "fully analyze vulnerabilities and issues related to voter registration and voting."

But it's been a tough sell, particularly when it comes to sharing sensitive data, such as party affiliation and Social Security information.

The lack of any bonafide evidence to support Trump's premise for the investigation also prompted widespread backlash.

The states that have said they will totally refuse to comply with the request so far include California, Virginia, Kentucky, New York, Massachusetts, New Mexico, and Tennessee.

"NY refuses to perpetuate the myth of voter fraud played a role in the our election," New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo tweeted Friday. "We will not comply with this request."

California Secretary of State Alex Padilla also argued that responding to the request would only legitimize debunked allegations.

"California's participation would only serve to legitimize the false and already debunked claims of massive voter fraud made by the president, the vice president, and Mr. Kobach," he said in a statement.

As of Friday afternoon, the states that saying they would comply, but only as it pertains to publicly available information, included Rhode Island, Arizona, Indiana, Georgia, Connecticut, Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma, Utah, Vermont, and Texas.

Voters in Los Angeles line up on Nov. 8, 2016.

Nick Ut / AP

"I will not release Social Security information or any information that was requested by Secretary Kobach regarding felony status, military status, or overseas citizen information,' Rhode Island Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea said.

Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, meanwhile, said they that while would not turn over the voter data, the commission was welcome to purchase what was publicly available.

Many state officials have also argued that the commission's efforts would be better spent on upgrading aging voting systems and preventing outside hacks and meddling from foreign entities, such as Russia.

Representatives for Kobach's office did not immediately return a request for comment Friday.

LINK: Trump Is Launching A Commission To Investigate Widespread Voter Fraud Even Though There's No Evidence It Exists



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2svyHjt

A Photographer Turned His Pregnant Wife Into A Badass Daredevil

I wouldn’t wrestle a gator at 0 months pregnant.

Disclaimer: Jady was never in any real danger, and she and Robby and are now the proud parents of baby Beckett.

Boxing (31 Weeks)

Boxing (31 Weeks)

Robby Klein

BuzzFeed News: What sparked the idea for this series?

Robby Klein: I knew that I wanted to photograph my wife pregnant, but the cute Pinterest-style maternity photos just aren't my cup of tea. I wanted to do something that reflected the work I'm known for a bit more.

One day, during week 30, I off the cuff mentioned something and said, "Well, you shouldn't do that when you're pregnant," and we laughed about it. I just couldn't get it out of my head though and finally asked her if she would shoot a photo of something she obviously shouldn't do as a pregnant woman: boxing.

Going to War (32 Weeks)

Going to War (32 Weeks)

Robby Klein


View Entire List ›



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2svLEcY

This Teen Started Matching Her Nails With Her Cat And, Apparently, It's A Trend

I’m honestly struggling to keep up at this point.

This is 19-year-old Cristi Hanzel from Littlerock, California. And that's her cat who she's named Wednesday — "after Wednesday Addams since they are both so sassy," she told BuzzFeed News.

This is 19-year-old Cristi Hanzel from Littlerock, California. And that's her cat who she's named Wednesday — "after Wednesday Addams since they are both so sassy," she told BuzzFeed News.

Cristi Hanzel

Last week, after getting her nails done, she went to Target to get nail caps for Wednesday's lil' claws. That's when she found caps that were almost identical to her own nail polish.

Last week, after getting her nails done, she went to Target to get nail caps for Wednesday's lil' claws. That's when she found caps that were almost identical to her own nail polish.

Cristi Hanzel

"I'm obsessed with my cat so I was excited to go home and put them on her," Hanzel said. Look at these two flaunting their matching nails!!!!!

"I'm obsessed with my cat so I was excited to go home and put them on her," Hanzel said. Look at these two flaunting their matching nails!!!!!

Hanzel said she then tweeted the photo out to show her boyfriend and friends.

"They know how much I love her, and especially her paws," she said.

Cristi Hanzel


View Entire List ›



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2usCEGX

Multiple People Have Been Shot At A Hospital In New York City

NBC New York

A man reportedly wearing a white lab coat opened fire at a hospital in New York City Friday afternoon, killing at least one person and injuring others before police later found him dead.

Police told BuzzFeed News that the shooting happened at at Bronx-Lebanon Hospital. Police spokesperson J. Peter Donald tweeted that "one shooter is deceased at the hospital."

The Associated Press and other outlets reported that the shooter killed one person. Police later tweeted that "several others were injured."

Multiple news outlets, citing police, identified the suspected shooter as Henry Bello, whose name appears on a hospital staff list.

The shooting reportedly began shortly before 3 pm. According to the AP, the suspected shooter was wearing a lab coat, which was used to conceal a rifle.

"Everything is on lockdown," a hospital spokeswoman told BuzzFeed News.

Few additional details were immediately available.

Images purportedly taken at the hospital showed what appeared to be people barricaded inside rooms.

Instagram: @herrydrk

Other images from the scene showed officers apparently taking cover behind a truck outside the hospital.

Instagram: @hollywood_kitty

News video from the scene also showed large groups of police officers outside the hospital.

NBC News

Bronx-Lebanon Hospital has operated for more than 120 years and describes itself as the largest voluntary, not-for-profit health care system serving the South and Central Bronx.

BuzzFeed News // Google Maps

BuzzFeed News reporters Jim Dalrymple II and Mary Ann Georgantopoulos contributed to this report.

This is a developing story. Check back later and follow @BuzzFeedNews on Twitter for more information.



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2usX16N

The Gunman Who Killed Three Officers Researched Their Home Addresses Prior To Ambush Attack

YouTube

The gunman who shot and killed three Louisiana police officers in 2016 had searched online for the home addresses and phone numbers of two white officers involved in the fatal shooting of a black man two weeks earlier.

He never acted on the research, but it was just one detail in a chilling investigative report that East Baton Rouge Parish District Attorney Hillar Moore released on Friday regarding the deadly shooting on July 17, when Gavin Long fatally ambushed three police officers less than two weeks after authorities fatally shot Alton Sterling outside a convenience stores in Baton Rouge.

Long stalked police officers, authorities said, moving methodically around buildings to kill as many cops as possible just one mile from Baton Rouge police headquarters.

“There's no doubt whatsoever that these officers were intentionally targeted and assassinated,” Louisiana State Police Col. Mike Edmonson said at the time. “It was a calculated act against those who worked to protect this community every single day.”

In addition to the three officers killed in the attack, three others were injured. Long was shot and killed by responding officers.

At the time of the shooting, Long had methamphetamine and alcohol in his system, Moore said.

As part of the report, the district attorney also released a number of videos, including surveillance camera footage that captured the incident, as well as a visual simulation of the shooting.

youtube.com

In a suicide note found in his vehicle, Long said "the way the current system is set up, it protects all cops whether good or bad, right or wrong, instead of punishing bad cops and holding them accountable for their actions."

According to the investigative report, Long had searched online for the home addresses and phone numbers of the white officers involved in Sterling's shooting just weeks earlier.

“We believe that he was ready to die this day,” Moore said during a news conference Friday, according to the Associated Press. “He believes that protests are worthless and that action needs to be taken, not protests.”

In the suicide note found his white Chevrolet Malibu rental, Long talked about the "destruction" he must inflict upon police officers.

In the suicide note found his white Chevrolet Malibu rental, Long talked about the "destruction" he must inflict upon police officers.

ebrda.org

"I must bring the same destruction that bad cops continue to inflict upon my people, upon bad cops as well as good cops, in the hopes that the good cops (which are the majority) will be able to stand together to enact justice & punishment against bad cops," Long wrote. "My people, and the people in general will continue to strike back against all cops until we see that bad cops are no longer protected and allowed to flourish."

Long also wrote that for those who knew him, his actions would appear "out of character," but that they were "a necessary evil ... in order to create substantial change within America's police force, and judicial system."

BuzzFeed News had previously reported that Long had sent a three-page letter to an Ohio rapper less than an hour before he opened fire in Baton Rouge. The note sent to the rapper appears to match the suicide note the district attorney released Friday.

Long signed his note "Cosmo" — a name he legally took in 2015, and used to record several videos posted to the YouTube channel "Convos with Cosmo."

ebrda.org

In one of the videos, Long said he was in Dallas, Texas, three days after 12 police officers were shot — five of them fatally — during protests over the killings of two black men by police in Minnesota and Louisiana.

According to the investigative report, Long said in the video that "100% of revolutions, of victims fighting their oppressors ... have been successful through fighting back, through bloodshed."

The report states that Long went on to say that he "doesn't believe protests are ever successful because 'revenue and blood' are the only things that get through to oppressors."

Read the full report:




from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2uso5De

"Morning Joe" Host Says He Has Texts Proving Trump Told "Yet Another Lie" And People Want The Receipts

“One lesson Trump is teaching all of us is to keep all of our receipts.”

Photos of Brzezinski from this event show that she was not, in fact, bleeding.

Trump's comments received widespread condemnation across party lines. Still, White House deputy press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders defended him, saying Trump "fights fire with fire."


View Entire List ›



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2ty3f9g

A New York Man's Death Probed As Possible Hate Crime

Twitter: @MarcusSolis7

A 35-year-old New York man died this week after a fight outside a housing complex and authorities are probing his death as a possible hate crime.

Michael Jones, who was known to friends and family as Chris, was reportedly involved a fight on Tuesday night in Mount Vernon, NY, which is a suburb of New York City, when he fell or was pushed to the ground, hitting his head on the curb. Jones later died at a local hospital.

Local media outlets that spoke to sources at the scene after the attack are reporting that Jones may have been targeted because of his sexual orientation.

After the attack, Mount Vernon Mayor Richard Thomas said in a statement: “Those that seek to attack people to instill fear in communities due to race, religion, or sexual orientation are cowards and will face justice. Mount Vernon is a city of inclusion and despicable acts of intimidation will not be tolerated."

Thomas has instructed the Mount Vernon police to work with the FBI and the New York State Police Hate Crimes Task Force to investigate Jones’ death.

Police are yet to have confirm that Jones’ death was the result of an attack motivated by discrimination. "Detectives are investigating and we're looking at all avenues based on any statements that our detectives are receiving,” Acting Police Commissioner Shawn Harris said a press conference on Thursday.

Harris said during the press conference that sources told police that Jones was involved in a different altercation last week. As of Friday morning, police said that no suspects have been taken into custody in connection with Jones’ death.



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2s9OxB1

Morning Joe Hosts Say The President Is "Not Mentally Equipped" To Watch Their Show

Nicholas Hunt / Getty Images

Morning Joe co-hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski have said the president is "not mentally equipped" to watch their show in an op-ed published in the Washington Post Friday.

In the piece the pair talk about the president's "unhealthy obsession" with their morning show and mentioned how they were once threatened by senior White House officials with negative press coverage unless they asked the president to stop it.

"This year, top White House staff members warned that the National Enquirer was planning to publish a negative article about us unless we begged the president to have the story spiked. We ignored their desperate pleas," Scarborough and Brzezinski wrote.

The TV duo, who are also engaged to be married, said Trump's claims that they asked to join him in Mar-a-Lago three nights in a row is "false," as is a claim that Brzezinski was "bleeding badly from a face-lift."

The two were supposed to be on vacation from Morning Joe Friday but will appear at 7 a.m. to respond to the President's tweets on the air.




from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2soL1H1

Thursday, June 29, 2017

Russian Hackers Reportedly Discussed Getting Hillary Clinton's Emails To Michael Flynn

Carolyn Kaster / AP

Russian hackers discussed during the 2016 presidential campaign if they could obtain emails deleted by Hillary Clinton and get them to Michael Flynn, the retired general who was then a member of the Trump campaign, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.

The newspaper attributed the revelation to US officials with knowledge of intelligence about the hackers' communications. That intelligence is being reviewed by US investigators who are examining if the Trump campaign colluded with Russia to influence the election, the Journal reported.

The hackers hoped to get the emails to Flynn via an intermediary, the Journal reported. Around the same time, a Republican with a history of opposition research against the Clintons was working to get the emails from hackers, including some with ties to the Russian government.

Peter W. Smith / Via legacy.com

Peter W. Smith, a Chicago private equity executive who for years worked on Republican causes, told the Journal that he began an effort in September 2016 to obtain the 33,000 emails Clinton deleted from a private server dating to her time as secretary of state. Smith told the newspaper his team interacted with five groups of hackers who claimed to have the emails, two of which were Russian.

The project began two months after WikiLeaks released emails from the Democratic National Committee that US intelligence officials believe were obtained by Russian government-backed hackers. The release was part of a Russian plot to influence the outcome of the US election, intelligence officials have said.

In the aftermath of the WikiLeaks release, then-candidate Donald Trump joked that he hoped the Russians would also release Clinton's deleted emails.

"Russia: If you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing," Trump said at a news conference in July. "I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by our press.”

About two months later, Smith began his project to find the emails, and in several instances, his team said they were allied with Flynn, the Journal reported.

Smith died at age 81 shortly after speaking to the newspaper. None of the emails have been released publicly, and whether anyone obtained copies remains unknown.

Smith told the Journal he knew Flynn, but he did not say he was working with him. A computer security expert told the Journal that Smith said he'd been talking with Flynn. Emails reviewed by the Journal also connected Smith and Flynn.

Flynn, who in the past has had business dealings with Russia, was a top adviser on Trump's campaign. He then served as the president's national security adviser — until Trump fired him for misrepresenting his communications with a Russian ambassador to Vice President Mike Pence.



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2u4EG0D

Video Shows Officers Punching And Kicking A Driver At The End Of A Police Chase

WLKY / Via Facebook: wlkynews

A wild police chase across two states ended Thursday with police officers beating a driver in an open field after he appeared to raise his hands to surrender to authorities.

Video shot by a news helicopter hovering overhead showed at least a dozen officers surrounding the driver at the end of the chase, several of them delivering punches and kicks while the suspect appears to be on the ground.

In the video, one officer is seen holding himself up by putting his hand on the hood of a patrol car as he visibly kicks the driver that led police on a 30-minute chase from Louisville, Kentucky, to an Indiana field.

Indiana State Police identified the suspect as Robert G. Ellis from Louisville. He was suspected of multiple purse thefts.

Sgt. Jerry D. Goodin told BuzzFeed News the Louisville Metro Police Department initiated the chase, but asked Indiana State Police to take over when it entered Indiana.

Video footage of the end of the chase, however, shows that many of the officers that crowded around Ellis were driving patrol cars that appear to belong to the Louisville Metro Police Department.

LMPD officials did not return multiple calls and emails from BuzzFeed News for comment.

In a statement, Indiana Police said LMPD entered the state at about 5 p.m. in pursuit of the red Ford Ranger pickup.

Officers were able to set up a spike strip and deflate the truck's tires just before Ellis drove onto an open field with about a dozen patrol cars behind him. An officer in an unmarked dark-colored car struck and disabled the pickup near a ravine.

Officers approached the truck with their guns drawn, but one officer who exited an LMPD patrol car was seen holstering his handgun before walking to the driver's side of the truck and pulling the driver out by his raised hands.

WLKY / Via Facebook: wlkynews

Ellis is seen being dragged out and thrown to the ground as about a dozen officers surround him. The red truck and a patrol car obscure the view of the helicopter filming the incident overhead, but officers can be seen delivering multiple punches and kicks.

One officer in particular can be seen raising his arm over his head and punching multiple times until another reaches across the patrol car toward the officer, putting his hand on his shoulder.

WLKY / Via Facebook: wlkynews

Indiana State Police did not address BuzzFeed News questions about whether the driver threatened officers or resisted arrest after he was taken out of the truck.

"After a short struggle, the driver was taken into custody," a police statement reads. Ellis was taken to a hospital in Floyd County after "complaining of pain."

News coverage of the incident showed officers picking up Ellis from the ground in handcuffs and placing him into the back of an Indiana State Police patrol car.

Police did not address the extent of injuries Ellis suffered in the exchange.



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2smLWYz

People Can't Stop Laughing Over This Mom Who Apparently Had No Idea What Their Dog Looks Like

“I kind of just made that face Jim from ‘The Office’ makes when Michael Scott does something dumb.”

This is 17-year-old Jeff Squires and his mom Terri Squires, who live in Grafton, Ohio.

This is 17-year-old Jeff Squires and his mom Terri Squires, who live in Grafton, Ohio.

The family has a Jack Russell Terrier named Duey (the odd spelling due to a spelling error on his vet papers, Jeff told BuzzFeed News).

"Our dog tends to run away this time of year, especially around the 4th of July, with people blowing up fireworks all the time," Jeff said. "He gets scared and runs around."

Supplied

On Tuesday, Squires saw a Facebook post saying two dogs had been found wandering town. She texted her son a picture of one of them and asked him to check that it wasn't Duey.

On Tuesday, Squires saw a Facebook post saying two dogs had been found wandering town. She texted her son a picture of one of them and asked him to check that it wasn't Duey.

Supplied

It was...

It was...

Supplied

...not Duey.

...not Duey.

Jeff said he was pretty baffled because "it looked nothing like Duey" and was "pretty much a polar bear."

"I kind of just made that face Jim from 'The Office’ makes when Michael Scott does something dumb," he said.

Squires told BuzzFeed News she was coming out of a meeting when she saw the picture on Facebook and "didn't pay much attention to it, obviously" before sending to her son.

"I just saw white, and thought it kind of looked like a Jack Russell," she said.

Supplied


View Entire List ›



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2smcDfW

Off-Duty Officer Caught On Video Threatening To Kill Black Teen For Allegedly Trespassing

Via Facebook: veronica.a.falls

An off-duty police officer in Illinois held a black 15-year-old down by the throat and threatened to kill him for allegedly trespassing in a confrontation that was caught on a video by the teen's friend.

"You came into my fucking property, I'mma fucking kill you," the officer, who is white, tells the teenager, identified by media outlets as Jordan Brunson.

He told told NBC News that he and his friend had left a basketball game in the town of Lansing when he was jumped by three boys.

Then, when heading home, Jordan said he heard his friend calling for help and hiding in the yard. That's when he said he was grabbed by the officer.

In the video, the teenager repeatedly asks to be let go, and the officer repeats that he trespassed on the property.

"Why are you doing this to me, then?" Jordan asks.

"Because your friend is a fucking idiot," the officer says.

"Why you throw me in the ground?"

"You're trespassing in my fucking yard, you understand that?" the officer responds.

View Video ›

Facebook: video.php

BuzzFeed News reached out to Jordan's attorney and family, but did not immediately hear back.

However, Jordan’s aunt, LaShawnya Brunson, told the New York Times that she was "disgusted" when she saw the footage on Sunday.

"I was upset. I was angry," she said, adding: "But my anger intensified when I realized it was a cop."

The violent incident is now under investigation by the Lansing Police Department, where the unidentified officer is employed, according to a statement released by town officials.

Lansing Police Det. Steve Roberts told BuzzFeed News the department is also investigating the fight that preceded the recorded encounter, as well as the actions of the off-duty officer, which he declined to identify.

In a statement, police said the original fight had been with a 15-year-old white teenager suspected of giving one of them a drink that contained drugs.

The teens, however, dispersed before officers arrived.

According to police, sometime after the fight, the off-duty officer then found a backpack in his backyard and a white 15-year-old walking in his property who said he had been in a fight with black teens. Police say a black 15-year-old with a backpack — presumably Jordan — then approached.

Police do not detail what happened at the point, only that both attempted to leave.

"Both juveniles attempted to leave at that point in time," police said. "The off-duty officer told them to stay until the arrival of police."

Lansing police not make any reference to the officer's claims about trespassing.

According to the statement, the officer then detained the black 15-year-old boy.

A woman standing on the porch of the home is also heard in the video saying, "They're on their way."

"You stay put," she tells the person recording the video. "You came to the wrong house."

Both of the teens were turned over to an on-duty police officer who responded and taken to their parents.

In his interview with NBC News, Jordan said he did nothing to provoke the officer's violent reaction.

"I didn't assault him or do nothing to cause him any harm or anybody around him," he told the station. "He could've at least told me not to go anywhere, like, I would've stayed if he had told me not to go anywhere."

Roberts told the New York Times the officer involved in the incident is still employed by the department and on active duty during the investigation.



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2t6fNRY

A 23-Year-Old Blogger Is Fighting Back After Zillow Threatened Her With A Cease And Desist Letter

Popular architecture blog McMansion Hell disappeared earlier this week after its author, Kate Wagner, received a cease and desist order from real estate heavyweight Zillow. But on Thursday, the blog returned to the web and Wagner's attorney's announced she would not be complying with Zillow's demands.

Popular architecture blog McMansion Hell disappeared earlier this week after its author, Kate Wagner, received a cease and desist order from real estate heavyweight Zillow. But on Thursday, the blog returned to the web and Wagner's attorney's announced she would not be complying with Zillow's demands.

McMansion Hell / Via mcmansionhell.com

Posts on the McMansion Hell blog typically showcase giant homes with funny and sarcastic comments superimposed on real estate listing photos. The blog launched last year and has exploded in popularity in recent months.

Zillow sent its first letter to Wagner on Monday, demanding that she delete all photos obtained from Zillow's website, perhaps the largest and most influential real estate destination on the internet.

Zillow sent its first letter to Wagner on Monday, demanding that she delete all photos obtained from Zillow's website, perhaps the largest and most influential real estate destination on the internet.

McMansion Hell / Via mcmansionhell.com

Lawyers representing Wagner — a 23-year-old grad student — sent Zillow their response Thursday afternoon. The letter states that Wagner "has no obligation to, and thus will not, comply with Zillow's demands."

Lawyers representing Wagner — a 23-year-old grad student — sent Zillow their response Thursday afternoon. The letter states that Wagner "has no obligation to, and thus will not, comply with Zillow's demands."

McMansion Hell

The five-page letter from law firm Electronic Frontier Foundation argues that "McMansion Hell educates the public about architectural concepts, urban planning, environmentalism, and history."

"The site alternates comedy-oriented discussions of individuals houses with weekly informative essays about urbanism, architecture, sociology, and interior design," the letter continues.

The

McMansion Hell had gone offline Monday after Wagner first announced on Twitter that Zillow had sent her a cease and desist order. When it reappeared Thursday, it still featured plenty of photos with Wagner's characteristic burns.

McMansion Hell had gone offline Monday after Wagner first announced on Twitter that Zillow had sent her a cease and desist order. When it reappeared Thursday, it still featured plenty of photos with Wagner's characteristic burns.

McMansion Hell / Via mcmansionhell.com

The letter from Wagner's attorneys said that she would "not be deleting any posts," but that in the future she will not use photos from Zillow "in the interests of compromise."

"Given this, we sincerely hope Zillow will have the good sense not to trouble a court of law with this matter," the letter adds.

Thursday afternoon, after EFF sent its letter, Zillow announced that it would "not to pursue any legal action against Kate Wagner and McMansion Hell."

Thursday afternoon, after EFF sent its letter, Zillow announced that it would "not to pursue any legal action against Kate Wagner and McMansion Hell."

Zillow / Via zillow.com

In a statement to BuzzFeed News, Zillow said that it "was never our intent for McMansion Hell to shut down, or for this to appear as an attack on Kate’s freedom of expression."

"We acted out of an abundance of caution to protect our partners – the agents and brokers who entrust us to display photos of their clients’ homes," the statement continued.

The company ultimately "had a lot of conversations about this," including with Wagner's lawyers, and decided against moving forward with legal action.

The return of the blog

This is a developing story. Check back later and follow @BuzzFeedNews on Twitter for updates.

LINK: A 23-Year-Old Woman Shut Down Her Real Estate Blog After Zillow Threatened Her




from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2uoEclm

President Trump Is On A Twitter Screed About An MSNBC Host's "Face-Lift"

He also called Mika Brzezinski “crazy.”

MSNBC didn't immediately return a request for comment.

This is a developing story.



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2tsYBJt

Wednesday, June 28, 2017

This Small Group Of Immigrants Protected From Deportation By Congress Are Now At Risk

Undocumented Mexican immigrant Arturo Hernandez Garcia, 44, looks from the front door of his home in Thornton, Colorado.

John Moore / Getty Images

In late April, Arturo Hernandez-Garcia sat inside an immigration detention center in Colorado facing deportation and the likelihood of missing his daughter’s high school graduation.

He likely would have been deported if not for the introduction of two private immigration bills in his name by members of Congress that got him out of detention and delayed his deportation for two years, with more than enough time to see his daughter walk across the stage.

“I didn’t think I’d be able to get a private bill, but I got lucky, thanks to God,” Hernandez-Garcia, who garnered national media attention in 2014 when he sought sanctuary inside a Denver church, told BuzzFeed News. “At the same time, it’s sad because so few of us have that privilege and opportunity and there’s a lot of people who could use them.”

Private immigration bills have for years been a rare tactic used to help undocumented immigrants who had exhausted all avenues to legalize their status by temporarily delaying their deportation through a stay of removal.

As of late June, there were 31 of the private bills in Congress delaying deportation for 47 listed individuals. However, that total doesn’t include a House bill for an unspecified number of immigrants who were aboard a boat that crashed on the shores of New York in 1993.

The bills often don't pass, but lawmakers can re-introduce the legislation as a way to continuously delay someone's deportation.

But all of that is set to change under a clamp down by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

Arturo Hernandez Garcia and Jeanette Vizguerra were granted two-year stays of deportation on May 12.

Rj Sangosti / Getty Images

In the past, ICE would grant a stay of removal when it received a written request for an investigative report on a person who had a private immigration bill introduced. The delay in deportation would usually remain in place until Congress took action on the bill or adjourned without taking it up. In some cases, members of Congress would introduce a bill every session to restart the process and stop someone’s deportation.

But in May, ICE issued a letter saying it was changing how it treated the private bills because they could prevent the agency from detaining people who fall under Trump’s new deportation priorities, which effectively includes all of the estimated11 million undocumented immigrants in the US.

ICE will now only delay someone’s deportation if the chair of the House or Senate judiciary committees, or appropriate subcommittee, makes a written request independent of any request for an investigative report, which no longer triggers an automatic delay in deportation.

The agency will also not grant someone more than one stay of removal, and the deportation delay will be limited to six months, with a possible 90-day extension. ICE said it will also deport beneficiaries of the private bills if they discover “derogatory information” about them.

Acting ICE Director Thomas Homan told reporters in May that the change in policy started during the Obama administration in November after the agency noticed many of the private bills were not enacted and yet continued to be introduced.

“The system was being abused at some point and I think when you got zero enactments in several years that says something else about the system,” Homan said. “When a federal judge makes a decision and orders them removed from the country, that decision needs to mean something. Our job is to execute it.”

However, senators Dianne Feinstein and Dick Durbin said the private immigration bills were a essential safety net used by Democrats and Republicans for small and critical cases, and that any change should be in consultation with Congress.

“This administration has already demonstrated a willful disregard for the Constitution’s separation of powers in the name of the president’s deportation agenda," they said in a joint statement. "For [the Department of Homeland Security] to threaten to deport a handful of immigrants before Congress can act to protect them shows just how far this administration will go.”

A police rescue boat is sent upward by a wave as officers attempt to remove undocumented immigrants aboard the freighter Golden Venture after it ran aground off New York in 1993.

Mike Alexander / AP

Tom Jawetz, vice president of immigration policy at the Center for American Progress, said he was surprised to hear that the administration would go after such a small group of people using a tool of last resort.

“This just further evidences the unprecedented and aggressive way in which this administration views the issue of immigration,” Jawetz told BuzzFeed News. “The very fact that the private immigration bill process affects so few people makes their special effort to destroy the process so noteworthy.”

Jawetz pointed to the case of Corina Turcinovic, a French national, who was set to be deported in 2008 had it not been for Democratic Rep. Dan Lipinski of Illinois who introduced a bill for her. Turcinovic entered the US legally in 1990 after her-then fiance Maro Turcinovic was paralyzed after being hit by a car. She married him and cared for him for 14 years until he died.

Lipinski’s office said Maro was pursuing his US citizenship but was unable to visit an immigration office to be fingerprinted because of his paralysis and so it fell through, leaving his wife without a way to apply for permanent legal status.

Jawetz blamed Maro's inability to get fingerprinted on a government error and said the bill was a way for Congress to right a situation that current laws couldn't fix.

“A lot of these cases, like this one, involve government error," he added.

In the case of Maha Dakar, Republican Steven Chabot of Ohio introduced a private House bill in 2007 to keep her from being deported to Jordan without her family, including four US-citizen daughters who would have had to choose between staying in the US with their father or going with their mom. In a statement that year, Chabot said Dakar's husband, Bassam Garadah, was considered a "stateless" Palestinian and immigration officials could not find a country that would accept him. Dakar has a Jordanian passport and can return there, but the nation will not allow her husband to enter with her.

Greg Chen, director of government relations at the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said this policy indicates to him that the Trump administration is fully carrying out its promise to deport any undocumented person without regard to any priorities.

Chen said he’s also concerned that under the new policy most cases are not going to be able to get a full review in the nine months immigrants are able to delay their deportations.

"The real question here is whether ICE will really be deporting these individuals who have such compelling cases?” Chen told BuzzFeed News. “Will ICE really carry out what is an incredibly harsh punitive policy when there’s a member of Congress who has taken the time to ask them to please take another look at the case?”

Enrique Soriano , is shown in his home, in Pasadena, Texas. Soriano, an undocumented immigrant whose US-born son died as a soldier in Iraq.

Nick De La Torre / AP

Even so, ICE's move won't stop Democratic Rep. Gene Green of Texas, who introduced private legislation in 2007 for Enrique Soriano, the undocumented father who faced deportation, and Areli Soriano, a sister of a US-born soldier who was killed in Iraq, according to the Houston Chronicle.

Green said he intends to continue to re-introduce the legislation until lawmakers can figure out a way for Army Pfc. Armando Soriano's father and sister to legalize their status.

"I think our country is a better country than to try to deport the father of someone who died in our military," Green told BuzzFeed News.

Another bill from Republican Rep. Christopher Smith of New Jersey is for a group of undocumented immigrants from China whose vessel, the Golden Venture, ran aground off Queens in 1993. Nearly 300 Chinese immigrants were aboard the boat when it crashed after 120 days at sea into a sandbar several hundred yards from shore, at which point the passengers started jumping into the chilly Atlantic waters because human smugglers told them they could apply for political asylum if they set foot on US land, the New Yorker reported.

Danielle Radovich Piper, chief of staff for Democratic Rep. Ed Perlmutter of Colorado, who introduced one of the bills for Hernandez-Garcia, said it’s just another move by the Trump administration to make a small number of undocumented immigrants deportable.

“It’s unfortunate because many of these cases, like Arturo, are not criminals. They clearly don’t have status but that’s part of the broader comprehensive immigration problem we have,” Piper told BuzzFeed News. “They’re hardworking folks giving back to community and many of them have at least one or two children who are US-citizens.”

Hernandez-Garcia is continuing on with his life, working and looking after his daughters, one of them a US-citizen, but said he feels guilty when he thinks about the people he met in detention in April.

“They’re taking all of the tools we have to be able to defend ourselves,” he said. “Every day we have fewer legal recourses to stay and fight our cases.”

LINK: Immigrants Don't Commit More Crime Than US-Born Citizens, The Top Immigration Enforcer Just Said




from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2snYLNl

FBI Agent Indicted In Fatal Shooting Of Rancher During Oregon Standoff

LaVoy Finicum, a rancher from Arizona.

Rick Bowmer / AP

An FBI agent is facing federal charges for allegedly lying about his role in the deadly shooting of Robert "LaVoy" Finicum in Oregon, an Arizona rancher killed at a wildlife refuge during an armed standoff with authorities in 2016.

Finicum was one of the leaders of the standoff at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, where he and dozens of others demanded the federal government turn the land over to state and local ranchers.

At the end of the month-long standoff, Oregon State Police and the FBI planned an operation to arrest Finicum and other leaders of the standoff on a winding one-lane road. Finicum tried to outrun officials and, after driving off the road to avoid a police blockade, was shot and killed as he appeared to reach into his jacket.

On Wednesday, a federal indictment was unsealed against FBI agent W. Joseph Astarita, in which he is accused of lying about firing his gun twice during the Oregon operation.

Astarita, according to the indictment, told at least three supervisors in the FBI that he had not fired his weapon, which would have prompted the FBI to dispatch its Shooting Incident Response Team to investigate.

The FBI agent, a member of the agency's Hostage Rescue Team, also denied firing his weapon to Oregon State Police on the day of the shooting, and then again a month later when investigators interviewed him to follow up on the case, prosecutors allege.

This Jan. 26, 2016., file photo taken from an FBI video shows Robert "LaVoy" Finicum, center, after he was fatally shot by police near Burns, Oregon.

Uncredited / AP

The Oregonian newspaper reported Astarita's attorney entered a not guilty plea in Portland federal court on Wednesday.

A state trooper is believed to have fired the three fatal shots that killed Finicum on Jan. 26, 2016.

Astarita was not charged in the shooting. And Malheur County District Attorney Dan Norris found the shooting to be justified.

But news about a federal inquiry into the shooting, as well as allegations that an FBI agent had lied about his role, fueled speculation among supporters of the refuge occupiers that Finicum had been unjustly shot during the operation, or that federal authorities had planned to kill leaders of the occupation all along.

Video of the shooting, however, appears to show Finicum reaching multiple times into his side before being shot.

A cattle rancher from Arizona, Finicum had become an active supporter of the Bundy family in Nevada, who also led a tense standoff against the federal government on their family ranch.

Finicum traveled to Oregon with the Bundy family in January 2016 and was one of the leaders of the group that took over the wildlife refuge near Burns, Oregon, to protest federal control of public lands.

The armed standoff attracted local ranchers sympathetic to the cause, as well as anti-government militia members.

In several interviews, Finicum had expressed his willingness to die for his stance on federal control of western lands and at times stood guard with a rifle at the entrance of the refuge.

His death has made him a central figure in the fight over control of western lands, as well as in anti-government and militia circles that adopted the symbol Finicum used on his cattle as a symbol of resistance against the federal government.

Astarita is scheduled to appear in court on Aug. 29, The Oregonian reported.

LINK: How The Shooting Of A Cowboy Created A Martyr For An Anti-Government Movement

LINK: FBI Releases Video Showing Police Shoot Oregon Standoff Spokesman

LINK: buzzfeed.com



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2snRxZT

Vice Has Retracted Two Stories Alleging Trump Drama At Disney's Hall Of Presidents

Joe Penniston/Creative Commons / Via Flickr: expressmonorail

The Vice media group on Wednesday retracted two stories that alleged Disney staffers were plotting to break tradition by not allowing the robotic figure of President Donald Trump to have a speaking role in their "Hall of Presidents" attraction.

The two stories, "Here's the Secret Backstage Trump Drama at Walt Disney World's Hall of Presidents" on Monday and "Behind the Scenes of Disney's Donald Trump 'Hall of Presidents' Installation" on May 19, were published by Vice's tech blog Motherboard.

The articles cited anonymous sources to claim there was internal debate over whether Trump's animatronic figure should remain silent at the Florida park after thousands signed an online petition.

In their May 19 piece, Motherboard claimed to have spoken "via email and phone" to a source close to Walt Disney Imagineering:

"Given how polarizing the president is right now, Disney Parks & Resorts is currently trying to find [a solution] that approaches middle ground," said the source in an interview with Motherboard. "They want to include our 45th commander-in-chief in this 45-year-old theme park attraction, while at the same time, not seem to endorse or support some of Trump's more controversial policies."


However, Disney strongly denied the stories and insisted work was underway to grant Trump a speaking role.

"Despite some media reports to the contrary, President Trump will have a speaking role in The Hall of Presidents, like every president since 1993," the company said in a statement on Tuesday. "We have been working closely with the current White House — just as we have with previous administrations — and the president’s recording session has been scheduled. The attraction will re-open in late 2017."

On Wednesday, Motherboard formally retracted the stories and removed them from their website "after a thorough investigation into the sourcing...and the identification of several factual errors."

"We are conducting a full editorial review to pinpoint how this source was vetted, and how these stories were approved and published in violation of our usual editorial workflow," Motheboard's editors said in a statement. "We fell short of our standards, and regret the error."

Trump detractors, meanwhile, criticized Disney for their decision to include the president.

While others defended the company's decision — or mocked Trump's critics.

Disney CEO Bob Iger resigned from the president's advisory council earlier this month after Trump withdrew from the Paris climate accord.

Iger tweeted that he had chosen to resign "as a matter of principle."



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2so983K

Immigrants Don't Commit More Crime Than US-Born Citizens, The Top Immigration Enforcer Just Said

Thomas Homan, acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

The acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Wednesday appeared to undercut his boss, President Trump, on the same day he was touting two immigration bills that are meant to close "dangerous loopholes exploited by criminals."

During an off-camera briefing, Thomas Homan appeared to disagree with the belief that immigrants commit more crimes than those born in the US, according to reporters at the scene.


While it's unclear if Homan ever specifically said immigrants commit more crimes, he raised the ire of immigrant rights groups earlier this year when he told a congressional committee that all undocumented immigrants in the US "should be uncomfortable" and "looking over (their) shoulder" when it comes to who could be deported.

Trump has maintained since his campaign that undocumented immigrants are a major source of crime, and in executive orders has insisted they "present a significant threat to national security and public safety." At an event with law enforcement officials from across the country in February, Trump also said many of the crime problems in the US were committed by undocumented gang members.

The administration also launched an office dedicated to assisting victims of crimes committed by undocumented immigrants, as well as a weekly list of cities that don’t fully cooperate with federal immigration officials that was later stopped after several jurisdictions questions its accuracy.

A recent analysis of 50 studies published between 1994 and 2014 also found that while some researchers did find a relationship between immigration and higher rates of crime, most found the opposite — a reduction.

President Donald Trump, accompanied by Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, speaks in the White House on June 28, 2017.

Evan Vucci / AP

But surrounded by lawmakers at the White House on Wednesday, Trump framed the immigration bills pending before Congress as a way to liberate towns across the US from undocumented "bad people."

"And we've gotten many of them out already," he said during a brief press gathering. "You know, we're pretty much at the 50% mark. We're getting them out as fast as we can get them out and we're freeing up towns — actually liberating towns if you can believe that we have to do that in the United States of America."

ICE officers arrest suspected undocumented immigrants in February.

Charles Reed / AP

Trump's administration has been ramping up arrests of undocumented immigrants. In May, ICE said more than 41,000 immigrants suspected of living in the US illegally were arrested in the 100 days since Trump signed an executive order expanding the mandate of federal immigration authorities, a 38% increase compared to the same period last year.

Trump and his administration have said they are focusing on deporting immigrants with criminal convictions, but undocumented people with no record have also been arrested in raids. More than half of the 683 immigrants arrested in raids shortly after Trump took office either had no criminal convictions or had traffic violations as their most serious crimes, according to federal data obtained by BuzzFeed News.

The bills touted by Trump on Thursday would increase penalties for deported immigrants who try to re-enter the US and restrict federal grants to so-called sanctuary cities that refuse to fully comply with immigration officials. Both are scheduled for vote in the House on Thursday.


LINK: The Trump Administration Is Halting Its Weekly Report On Sanctuary Cities

LINK: Without Evidence, Trump Blames Chicago Violence On Undocumented Immigrants




from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2snsBSe

A Teen Was Charged With Killing Her Boyfriend During A Failed YouTube Stunt

Monalisa Perez was charged with manslaughter after she accidentally shot Pedro Ruiz in the chest while making a YouTube video for the couple’s vlog.

A 19-year-old woman in Minnesota has been charged with manslaughter for fatally shooting her boyfriend as the couple attempted to record a YouTube stunt, authorities said.

A 19-year-old woman in Minnesota has been charged with manslaughter for fatally shooting her boyfriend as the couple attempted to record a YouTube stunt, authorities said.

Monalisa Perez was arrested Monday night after she fatally shot her 22-year-old boyfriend, Pedro Ruiz, while the couple was recording a YouTube stunt for her vlog, according to a criminal complaint provided to BuzzFeed News.

On Wednesday, she was charged with manslaughter in the second degree, a felony that carries a maximum sentence of 10 years or a fine of $20,000 or both.

She was held in a regional jail in Crookston and was scheduled to be arraigned in court Wednesday afternoon.

Perez called 911 on Monday evening to report that she accidentally shot Ruiz in the chest while they were making a YouTube video at the couple's house in Norman County.

Authorities found Ruiz III with a single gunshot wound to his chest and attempted to save his life, but he died at the scene, the complaint said.

youtube.com

Perez had started a YouTube channel in March which aimed to show "the real life of a young couple who happen to be teen parents."

Perez had uploaded several YouTube videos which featured her and Ruiz, many of which involved doing "pranks," "stunts," and "challenges."

Some of the videos also featured their three-year-old daughter.

The couple's most recent video uploaded on Monday, the day Ruiz died, was titled "Doing scary stunts at the fair."

Perez told authorities that Ruiz had been trying to convince her "for a while" to shoot the book while he held it for a YouTube video.

Ruiz had set up a GoPro camera and another camera on a ladder nearby to record the stunt, according to the complaint. The two cameras — which recorded the shooting — are now secured as evidence for the investigation.

Perez told authorities that Ruiz eventually "convinced" her to shoot the book he was holding.

She said that he had showed her a different book which the bullet did not go through.

Perez told police that she shot from a foot away while Ruiz held the book to his chest.

She used a .50 caliber Desert Eagle firearm which authorities recovered from the grass near the house.

Ruiz's aunt, Claudia Ruiz, told WDAY-TV that Ruiz had told her he wanted to do the stunt "because we want more viewers, we want to get famous."

Ruiz's aunt, Claudia Ruiz, told WDAY-TV that Ruiz had told her he wanted to do the stunt "because we want more viewers, we want to get famous."

"He had told me about that idea and I said, 'Don't do it. Don't do it. Why are you going to use a gun? Why?'" Claudia Ruiz told the TV station.

"They were in love, they loved each other," she said. "It was just a prank gone wrong. It shouldn’t have happened like this. It shouldn’t have happened at all."

YouTube


View Entire List ›



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/2sikFq5