Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Hope Hicks Resigned And Twitter Released The Jokes

News broke Wednesday that White House Communications Director Hope Hicks planned to resign in the coming weeks. What??

News broke Wednesday that White House Communications Director Hope Hicks planned to resign in the coming weeks. What??

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

She's the latest in a line of White House communications directors who resigned after short tenures, but she's also one of Trump's closest aides.

Hicks has been part of Trump's inner circle throughout his campaign and his time as president.

Her resignation comes the day after she testified for special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election, where she reportedly did not answer some questions and confessed to telling "white lies" for the president. Hicks, however, reportedly said she did not lie about anything material to the investigation.


Hope Hicks Is Leaving The White House

Hope Hicks Has Been Able To Spin Every White House Scandal Except Her Own




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A Top US Youth Volleyball Coach Is Accused Of Raping Teenage Girls Hundreds Of Times

Rick Butler in 2014.

Courtesy of Stacie Scott / Lincoln Journal Star

A well-known youth volleyball coach accused of sexually abusing underage girls in the 1980s has been hit with a class-action lawsuit alleging that he raped teenagers under his supervision hundreds of times.

The lawsuit against Rick Butler also details the alleged systemic grooming and abuse of underage girls who were considered rising stars in the sport.

Butler allegedly used his influence as one of the most powerful coaches in youth volleyball to gain the girls' trust and coerce them into sexual relationships. The lawsuit claims he raped girls in his car, his apartment, the weight room of a gym, and in one instance, on a train bathroom during a team trip to Germany.

On more than one occasion, he allegedly made girls watch porn so they could "learn." According to the lawsuit, when one athlete asked Butler why he was kissing and fondling her in a hotel room in Japan, he allegedly responded, "Because I can."

According to the lawsuit, he repeatedly told the young athletes they would not succeed unless they did what he said, and that he was their only hope for getting into elite colleges and playing volleyball professionally.

The 72-page lawsuit filed in federal court Tuesday in Illinois details the sexual abuse five women allegedly endured by Butler when they were teenagers in the 1980s. The accusers and their allegations were first reported by the Chicago Sun-Times in November, resulting in USA Volleyball banning Butler from the organization.

None of the accusers are named as plaintiffs in the lawsuit. Instead, the complaint was filed by Laura Mullen, a parent of an athlete that trained with Butler at Sports Performance Volleyball Club in Illinois in 2012. Mullen says that she was unaware of Butler's history of alleged sexual abuse when she allowed her daughter to train at his facility.

The lawsuit states that had Mullen and other parents known "that a child sexual predator would coach their teenage daughters, they never would have given money to defendants and never would have sent their girls to Sports Performance."

The lawsuit also names Butler's wife, Cheryl, as a defendant, alleging she pressured and threatened the athletes to remain silent.

Christine Tuzi was 16 years old with hopes of joining the Olympic volleyball team when she began training on Butler's team at Sports Performance.

According to the lawsuit, Butler invited her to his apartment under the pretext of talking about the team. Once there, he allegedly laid her down on his waterbed and raped her. Tuzi, paralyzed in fear, cried and "stared at Butler's brown pleather headboard until he was finished," the lawsuit states. He also allegedly made her climb out his window to avoid being seen.

The abuse continued even when Tuzi was not alone with Butler, according to the lawsuit.

"Before practices, he would shove his hands down her pants so he could 'smell her through practice,'" the lawsuit states. "He told her that any time during practice that he had his hand to his nose, he was thinking of her."

Butler allegedly raped Tuzi hundreds of times, resulting in her getting pregnant. Butler at first denied responsibility, but later conceded, telling the girl to "get rid of it," according to the lawsuit.

He allegedly accompanied Tuzi to get an abortion and brought her back to a hotel.

"Once there, with her recovering from a physically and emotionally difficult procedure, he demanded that she masturbate him," the lawsuit states. "In her vulnerable state, she submitted to his request. And if that was not demeaning enough, Butler made her pay for half the hotel room."

Butler allegedly used similar tactics on Sarah Powers-Barnhard when she was 15 years old.

He reportedly told her that he could make her a volleyball star as long as she did everything he said.

During a team trip to Canada, Butler allegedly got the team drunk and later kissed and fondled Powers-Barnhard.

According to the lawsuit, Butler raped Powers-Barnhard multiple times, including in the bathroom of a train car on a team trip to Germany. Following issues with sleep arrangements during the trip, Powers-Barnhard had to sleep on the floor next to Butler and endure him fondling her throughout the night, just feet away from her teammates, the lawsuit states.

The coach also allegedly raped Julie Bremner during an international team trip. According to the lawsuit, he called her to his hotel room in Japan in 1987 to talk about the team. When Bremner arrived, she allegedly found Butler lying on the ground wearing only a bathrobe.

He allegedly asked her to sit down and began kissing and touching her. He shoved his tongue in her mouth, according to the lawsuit, and slid his hands up her shirt. When she asked why, Butler allegedly responded, "Because I can."

When Brenner came forward with her allegations 20 years ago, she said Butler called her and told her he owned a gun and knows how to use it.

USA Volleyball expelled Butler in 1995 after three of the women came forward. Five years later, the organization partially lifted its ban, allowing Butler to return. He was permanently banned in January following the Sun-Times report.

The lawsuit states that after allegations against Butler first became public in 1995, his wife, Cheryl, allegedly called an unnamed victim and threatened her to keep quiet. Cheryl Butler is also accused of helping conceal the abuse and lashing out on one of the accusers on Facebook.

"We've gotten many calls and emails from people offering to provide further evidence in support of our lawsuit," Mullen's lawyer, Jay Edelson, told BuzzFeed News. "We look forward to continuing our investigation and prosecuting this action."

Messages to Butler and his attorney were not immediately returned.

Read the lawsuit here:




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You Can Now Bookmark Tweets Privately To Read Later And People Are Stoked

Twitter introduced a new feature on Wednesday: the "share" button.

Twitter introduced a new feature on Wednesday: the "share" button.

Blake Montgomery

It allows you to:

  • DM tweets to people
  • Share tweets via email and text messages
  • Bookmark tweets for later

Here's how to use it, according to Twitter's blog: From a Tweet, tap the share icon ( on iOS, on Android) and select Add Tweet to Bookmarks.

"Found something historic? Don't want to forget a joke? Article that you want to read later? Save the tweet with Bookmarks, and come back to it whenever you want. Only you can see your bookmarks," Twitter announced.

You'll be able to access your private bookmarks via the profile tab that appears when you swipe left.

But it's only available if you're using Twitter's iOS app, Android app, Twitter Lite, or viewing Twitter from a mobile browser. The desktop version of Twitter won't have the bookmarks feature. Twitter did not immediately respond to request for comment as to why that is.

Part of the share button's function is similar to the envelope icon on the old version of the Twitter mobile app, which has been replaced.

The envelope allowed you to DM tweets to people (including yourself) or share them via email and text. Share appears as on iOS, on Android.

But the private bookmarking function is an entirely new feature for something people have been doing forever.

Now you won't be faving things that you don't actually like or DMing them to yourself in some dual-personality meme chain.

According to Twitter Product Manager Jesar Shah, who wrote Twitter's blog post, a lot of people in Japan have been asking for the feature for quite some time.

Shah created a Twitter Moment giving a glimpse into the process of creating the bookmark feature, which she first called #SaveForLater.

Twitter in Japan and Japanese Twitter users were particularly involved with the creation of the feature — the company's tweets asking for feedback on the feature racked up hundreds of retweets.

Now that it's finally here, people are stoked.





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These Instagram-Famous Sisters Are Secretly The Daughters Of A Prominent Anti-Muslim Activist

Viral meme Instagrammer @girlwithnojob has three sisters, nearly 3 million followers, a family-run social media empire…and a mom who got banned from the UK for her outspoken hatred of Islam.

A group of Instagram-famous sisters are actually the daughters of prominent anti-Islam activist Pamela Geller, the Daily Beast revealed Wednesday.

instagram.com

Claudia, Jackie, Olivia, and Margo Oshry have built a social media empire through multiple Instagram accounts.

Claudia, 23, aka @GirlWithNoJob, is the most successful of the group and boasts nearly 3 million followers. She posts a variety of relatable memes and stolen tweets.

Her sister, Jackie, runs the popular Instagram and Twitter account @JackieOProblems, on which she shares the occasional joke and a large volume of selfies, to more than 100,000 followers.

Margo runs @hungoverandhungry_, a food porn Instagram full of cheese-smothered fries and triple-decker s'mores, also with over 100,000 followers.

Olivia is their self-declared "momager," and executive produces Claudia and Jackie's YouTube talk show, "The Morning Breath."

In an interview with ABC in 2016, Claudia declined to share how much she earns from being a "Girl With No Job."

"It’s a loophole because having no job is my job," she told ABC.

Pamela Geller is an anti-Islam conservative firebrand, hardcore Trump supporter, Breitbart contributor — and the mother of the Oshry sisters. She's no stranger to Instagram.

Pamela Geller is an anti-Islam conservative firebrand, hardcore Trump supporter, Breitbart contributor — and the mother of the Oshry sisters. She's no stranger to Instagram.

David Karp / AP

She is also president of the anti-Islam organization Stop Islamization of America, which the Southern Poverty Law Center has classified as a hate group.

In 2013, Geller was banned from entering the UK after a British government official said her presence "is not conducive to the public good."

In 2015, two gunmen were killed after they opened fire on a "draw the prophet Muhammad" contest, an event which Geller's organization had planned. The event had was decried because depictions of the prophet are often considered offensive in Islam.

Geller was previously married to Michael H. Oshry, and they had the four daughters together. The couple divorced in 2007, and Michael died the following year.

BuzzFeed News has independently confirmed the relation between Geller and the Oshry sisters, none of whom immediately responded to requests for comment by BuzzFeed News.

Despite the Oshry sisters' public-facing lives, they've managed to keep their mother's identity a tight-lipped secret.

Instagram: @claudwithnojob

In September, when Claudia married Ben Soffer — aka fellow Instagram star @boywithnojob, guests were not permitted to use their phones at the ceremony.

According to The Knot, which shared photos of the couple's wedding in September, Claudia's mom walked her down the aisle. Even so, no photos of Geller appear on the site, or in Instagram photos of the event.

Even so, they seem to have posted Instagram photos from the same locations.

In April, Geller posted a photo from a dining room celebrating Passover. The following July, Jackie posted a paid #ad for McDonald's from what seems to be the same dining room.

Daily Beast noted that last Thanksgiving, Jackie posted a photo of the four sisters on a balcony. On Geller's Instagram, she posted a photo of only herself on that same balcony.

Geller's Instagram was reportedly removed after the Daily Beast story was published, and her account is now private.

"I can't help but feel like I'm funding terrorism when I take a cab," Claudia tweeted in 2014.

"Listening to Obama talk about ISIS is like listening to me talk about quantum physics," she later tweeted in 2015.

Jackie retweeted her sister's tweet about Obama, adding that "Listening to Obama talk about ISIS is like listening to me talk about boys. I too don't understand the enemy."

In March, all four sisters posed for a photo with failed conservative candidate for Mayor of New York Bo Dietl and endorsed him.

Instagram: @oliviaoshry

Jackie shared her own photo with Dietl, saying he would "MAKE NEW YORK GREAT AGAIN!"

On Trump's inauguration day, Jackie posted a photo of Melania Trump and said her outfit was "Jackie O Approved!" She also hashtagged "#MAGA."

According to the Daily Beast, Margo attended Trump's inauguration and posted photos to Instagram of herself in a gold MAGA hat. The photos have since been removed.



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Strength, Hugs, And Therapy Dogs: Stoneman Douglas Students Return To Classes For The First Time Since The Shooting

Students and survivors returned to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Wednesday morning as classes resumed for the first time since the Feb. 14 shooting that left 17 of their classmates and faculty members dead.

Students and survivors returned to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Wednesday morning as classes resumed for the first time since the Feb. 14 shooting that left 17 of their classmates and faculty members dead.

Terry Renna / AP

Students wore t-shirts emblazoned with the words "Douglas Strong" and carried flowers as they made their way to school.

Students wore t-shirts emblazoned with the words "Douglas Strong" and carried flowers as they made their way to school.

Terry Renna / AP

The school will hold classes for four hours a day this week — from 7:40 to 11:40 am — as part of a modified schedule giving students time to heal after the tragedy and regain a sense of normalcy even as many survivors continue their organized efforts to end gun violence and mass shootings in schools.


Some officers held signs of love and support as students walked to school.

Some officers held signs of love and support as students walked to school.

Terry Renna / AP






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Tuesday, February 27, 2018

The Florida Teens Started Their Movement In A Parent’s Living Room. Now These Big Progressive Groups Are Helping Organizing Them.

Several large progressive organizations, donors, and a high-powered public relations firm are backing the March For Our Lives movement, which is quickly evolving from a student-run social media effort to end gun violence into a one backed by some of the most influential activists in the country.

In the days after the shooting in Parkland, Florida which killed 17 people, the teenage survivors of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School were impossible to ignore. They blanketed cable news coverage, built a massive following on social media, and began to organize a rally in the county's capital in support of gun reform.

Barely two weeks ago, the student survivors sat in a circle in the living room of one of their parents homes, planning a trip to Tallahassee to meet with lawmakers and handling nitty-gritty matters like which media outlets to talk to.

Since then, major players and organizations — including Everytown, Giffords, Move On, Planned Parenthood and the Women’s March LA — told BuzzFeed News they are helping the students with logistics, strategy, and planning for next month’s March For Our Lives rally and beyond. Much of the specific resources the groups are providing to the Parkland students remains unclear — as is the full list of supporting organizations — but there are broad outlines.

Giffords, an organization started by former US Rep. Gabrielle Giffords that fights gun violence, is working with Everytown and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America to plan the main march on Washington — as well as sister rallies across the country.

With the event scheduled to happen in less than a month, a spokesperson for Giffords told BuzzFeed News the organization "will be lending support in any way the students need, especially helping to operationalize these marches from logistics to programming."

"We applaud these students for demonstrating incredible leadership and demanding that our lawmakers do more to help protect Americans from gun violence," the spokesperson said.

Everytown for Gun Safety — bankrolled mostly by Michael Bloomberg — recently secured a $1 million donation from entrepreneur and philanthropist Eli Broad.

MoveOn said it will encourage its millions of members to follow and promote the March For Our Lives movement on social media and attend the rally next month. The group said it offered support in organizing logistics such as security and portable toilets, but it is unclear if the students have taken them up on their offer.

And a spokesperson for Planned Parenthood said the group is "teaching and hosting trainings” for a new and rejuvenated crop of student activists across the US “to keep momentum going so they don't get burned out." The spokesperson said the students are the ones telling the organizations what type of help they need.

Democratic US Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Broward County resident for nearly 30 years, told BuzzFeed News she has been in touch with students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas since the day after the shooting, helping them connect to state legislators and plan their trip to Tallahassee last week.

Wasserman Shultz said that because this is the first time many of the students have interacted with legislators, she advised them on communication strategy. She also said she been in contact with Mark Kelly — Gabrielle Giffords' husband and one of the founders of the Giffords foundation.

The students also traveled to DC this week — they posted selfies on Tuesday returning on a plane — and met with a handful of Democratic leaders, including Nancy Pelosi, Sen. Bernie Sanders, US Rep. John Lewis and Speaker Paul Ryan.

The American Federation of Teachers, who helped bus students and parents to Tallahassee multiple times last week, are now assisting with the March For Our Lives rally. The federation’s president told BuzzFeed News that they are also helping support next month's march as well as helping to shape the vision and mission for the group once the rally is over.

"There are a lot of people who know how to put on a march in Washington and we are here to help support the teens with that experience in terms of logistics and strategy but it's still early and they have some time to figure that out," AFT President Randi Weingarten told BuzzFeed News. "We will be here for that 'oh shit moment' when they realize they need things like permits."

Weingarten said "this moment is different," and there will be a lot of work to do after next month's march.

AFT, as well as the growing contingent of organizations backing the student-led march, are working to cultivate and build upon the movement after the rally. Weingarten noted that the groups are also behind the “National School Walkout” taking place in April to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Columbine.

After that, she says the goal is to carry that momentum until November — with some of the students already using the hashtag #votethemout.

“We are also marching towards midterms,” she said, adding that the activists intend for gun control and student safety to be a major platform and key issue for voters in the midterm elections.

"With their angst, anger, and authenticity, these students have pierced through the normal polarization of this debate," Weingarten said. "This moment is different."

Many details around the march remain unclear, including the exact location. Last week, a co-director of the Women's March Los Angeles, Deena Katz, filed a permit application with the National Park Service for the "March for Our Lives" rally estimating that 500,000 people will show up.

But a spokesperson for the National Park Service told BuzzFeed News on Monday that the permit has yet to be granted as they are "still waiting for the organizers to settle on a location." Katz has not responded to multiple requests for comment.

The students and their parents have also brought on 42West, a public relations firm in the entertainment industry, to help “the March For Our Lives group manage the flood of media inquires that their campaign has attracted," a spokesperson for the March For Our Lives told BuzzFeed News.

42West is not providing the students legal advice or financial advice, the spokesperson said, and refused to provide details on who is helping manage the millions of dollars in donations they have received.

"We are so busy helping the kids manage the hundreds of media requests they've received to talk about what can be done to end gun violence that we really don't have time right now to get into all this procedural stuff," a spokesperson for 42West said in response to a list of questions from BuzzFeed News. "And in any case, a lot of the things you ask about, like the foundation’s structure and the kids’ long-term plans, haven’t yet been worked out."

Cameron Kasky, the student-organizer who started the March For Our Lives GoFundMe page, tweeted Sunday about “working with money people and law people.”

In addition to the millions of dollars raised by A-list celebrities including Oprah, George and Amal Clooney, Steven Spielberg, and Jeffrey Katzenberg, the March For Our Lives GoFundMe page has raised an additional $2.7 million as of Tuesday.

Some of the highest GoFundMe donations have come from philanthropists such as Jeff Raikes — the former CEO of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation — and his wife Tricia, as well as Chris and Camille Bently, who run the Bently Foundation, which supports organizations in the areas of the environment, the arts, and animal welfare, according to its website.

"My husband has been a supporter of sensible gun laws/rights, he owns guns himself but respects the responsibility involved," Camille Bently said in an email. "We support extensive rigorous background checks, raising the minimum age to purchase weapons and banning assault weapons. Gun laws should be advancing with the advancement of weapons."

Jeff and Tricia Raikes donated $25,000 saying they are "awe of [the students'] moral clarity and courage."

"The students of Stoneman Douglas High School’s leadership in the aftermath of the horrific shooting at their school is a powerful reminder that young people can change the world," they said in a statement.

Aaron Levie, the founder of the cloud company Box, who has been vocal on Twitter about the work the student survivors have been doing, donated $10,000, telling BuzzFeed News he won't be able to join the march on Washington but will be supporting the students from afar.

"I think these young leaders have a real chance of changing our country for the better — FINALLY — so wanted to throw in a tiny bit of support," Levie told BuzzFeed News in an email.

Chris and Camille Bently told BuzzFeed News they have not been in direct contact with the students but plan to march alongside them “and hope to further their cause.”

“These children have more courage at 16 years old to better our country than our law-makers do,” Camille Bently said. “I would love to give every one of those kids a big hug.”

Additional reporting by Remy Smidt



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A Man Has Been Charged With Meatball Theft After Being Found Covered In Red Sauce

Mamma mia!

Lauripatterson / Getty Images

A man who allegedly stole a pot of meatballs out of a homeowner's garage Monday in Hazleton Township, Pennsylvania was caught red-handed — and red-faced, and red-clothed — by police.

After he was spotted at the scene covered in tomato sauce — and the homeowner noticed his meatballs had mysteriously gone missing — Leahman Glenn Robert Potter, 48, was arrested at his home in a neighboring town, police told the Hazleton Standard Speaker.

Stock photo. Duh.

Ratstuben / Getty Images

Police reportedly later found the pot abandoned on the street, according to the Associated Press.

Potter has been charged with burglary, trespass, and theft, as well as a warrant for failing to appear.

In lieu of $25,000 bail, he was sent to Luzerne County prison.

Police did not immediately respond to request for comment by BuzzFeed News.



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Jared Kushner Has Reportedly Lost His Top Secret Security Clearance

Jared Kushner.

Jose Luis Magana / AP

President Trump's son-in-law and White House senior advisor Jared Kushner has reportedly had his security clearance downgraded, meaning he will no longer have access to top security information.

Kushner and other White House staffers learned last week that their "top secret" clearances were being downgraded to "secret," Politico and CNN reported Tuesday.

An unnamed source told CNN that Kushner is accepting the decision.

White House Chief of Staff John Kelly previously recommended ending the practice of granting interim security clearances, and earlier this month issued a memo telling his staff to end top security clearance for personnel whose background checks had been pending since June.

Last week, Trump said at a news conference that Kushner has "done an outstanding job," but added that the issue of his security clearance was up to Kelly.

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



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Barbra Streisand Apparently Cloned Her Dead Dog — Twice

Stars! They’re just like us.

Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Before her beloved 14-year-old dog Samantha died last year, Barbra Streisand had the pup cloned — twice — she revealed in a Variety cover story this week.

Two of her Coton de Tuléar dogs, Miss Violet and Miss Scarlett, were born after Streisand had cells taken from Samantha's mouth and stomach before her death, the star said.

“They have different personalities,” said Streisand. “I’m waiting for them to get older so I can see if they have her [Samantha’s] brown eyes and seriousness.”

Instagram: @barbrastreisand

The clones look so similar that Streisand said she would dress them in red and lavender, which is where their names came from.

Streisand's third dog is a cousin of Samantha named Miss Fanny — which, yes, is a reference to Streisand's iconic Funny Girl character, Fanny Brice.

According to the Variety story, Streisand requested a photo of her and the dogs that was taken for the magazine be titled "Send in the Clones."



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Serena Williams' Husband Welcomed Her Back To Tennis With Four Billboards And Everyone's Dying

“Three Billboards” could never.

Serena Williams is making her much-anticipated return to tennis after taking time off last year to give birth to her daughter, Alexis Olympia Ohanian, Jr.

Instagram: @serenawilliams

Williams will return for the BNP Paribas Open, which will be from March 5-18 in Indian Wells, California, the AP reported.

It's her first tournament since winning the 2017 Australian Open, when Williams was in the first few months of her pregnancy.

Alexis Jr., nicknamed Olympia, was born Sept. 1.

Naturally, everyone is excited to see Williams return to the sport. No one is as excited or as proud, however, as her husband, Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian.

Instagram: @alexisohanian

How stoked is he? So much so that Ohanian has done maybe the most extra romantic display imaginable. He has bought four billboards in Palm Desert, California, to celebrate.

How stoked is he? So much so that Ohanian has done maybe the most extra romantic display imaginable. He has bought four billboards in Palm Desert, California, to celebrate.

Alexis Ohanian

They feature Serena and baby Olympia and spell out "Greatest Momma of All Time Serena Williams."

They feature Serena and baby Olympia and spell out "Greatest Momma of All Time Serena Williams."

Alexis Ohanian

AhhHHhHhh.

AhhHHhHhh.

Alexis Ohanian

They are signed "Alexis Jr. + Sr." OMG.

They are signed "Alexis Jr. + Sr." OMG.

Alexis Ohanian

"These just went up on alongside I-10 into Palm Springs," Ohanian wrote on social media. "Olympia Ohanian & I wanted to welcome her back to tennis. Designed them myself, with some help from Jr."

As if it couldn't get any cuter, Williams and Ohanian proceeded to have the BEST EXCHANGE ever in the Instagram comments of his post.

As if it couldn't get any cuter, Williams and Ohanian proceeded to have the BEST EXCHANGE ever in the Instagram comments of his post.

Instagram

BRB crying forever. 😭❤️

Instagram: @alexisohanian



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Monday, February 26, 2018

YouTube Restores Ads To Logan Paul's Channel, But He Remains On Probation

Frederick M. Brown / Getty Images

YouTube has restored ads to Logan Paul’s channel 18 days after he was suspended amid uproar over his on camera antics.

Paul, who has more than 16 million subscribers on the Google-owned platform, recently returned to the platform after going on a self-imposed hiatus after international outcry over his Japanese "suicide forest" video, but that didn’t stop business deals from being terminated.

The ads were restored after his team acknowledged that they had reviewed and understood the platform's Community Guidelines and Advertiser friendly guidelines, according to a YouTube spokesperson.

Paul's channels will continue to be ineligible for Google Preferred advertising and remains on a 90-day probation period that keeps his content off the trending tab and non-subscriber notifications.

YouTube temporarily suspended ads on his channels on Feb. 8 in response to what it called Paul’s "recent pattern of behavior," which days earlier had included tasing a dead rat and taking a live fish out of his pond to “perform CPR." He also recently filmed his citizen's arrest of an intruder at his home.

Despite the respite, Paul is still grappling with other consequences. In January, the company removed his channels from Google Preferred, a program that allows companies to sell ads on the channels of the top 5% of YouTube’s most popular content creators. YouTube also said that it would not feature Paul in the fourth season of Foursome, a romantic comedy web series produced exclusively for YouTube Red, and put his new originals on hold.

But he has remained active, regardless.

While YouTube’s temporary ad suspension cut Paul’s income stream, estimated by some experts to be more than $1 million a month, he continued with his daily vlogging while promoting his lucrative Maverick merchandise line of lounge wear. During the no ad period, he also continued to grow his fan base, adding more than a 100,000 YouTube subscribers.

LINK: The Logan Paul Suicide Video Shows YouTube Is Facing A Crucial Turning Point

LINK: Logan Paul Has Returned To YouTube 22 Days After His Self-Imposed "Suicide Forest" Hiatus

LINK: Logan Paul Loses Business Deals With YouTube Amid Outcry Over His "Suicide Forest" Video




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This Gun-Toting Guy Said He Would Protect Kids At School "For Free" And Now It's A Huge Meme

I PLEDGE TO WORK FOR FREE,

On Friday, a Twitter user who goes by "Proud American Soldier" joined in the debate about armed guards at schools. He declared he was armed, ready, and able to defend schools. "I PLEDGE TO WORK FOR FREE," he said.

On Friday, a Twitter user who goes by "Proud American Soldier" joined in the debate about armed guards at schools. He declared he was armed, ready, and able to defend schools. "I PLEDGE TO WORK FOR FREE," he said.

"I PLEDGE TO WORK FOR FREE for any school to help secure the children. I am a retired veteran, 29 years of service, Infantry Sergeant Major, U.S. Army Ranger with combat experience. I have a conceal carry, Primary and Alternate side arms, an AR-15, and all necessary tactical gear," the user, @CarlosCruz2016, wrote.

BuzzFeed News has contacted the Twitter user and will update if he has a comment — or if he's really the one trolling us all. He continues to tweet, even making FOR FREE a hashtag.

BuzzFeed News has contacted the Twitter user and will update if he has a comment — or if he's really the one trolling us all. He continues to tweet, even making FOR FREE a hashtag.

Twitter



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This Guy Took Insane Footage Of A Dude Just Chilling Under The NYC Subway During Rush Hour

Monday mood.

New Yorkers have seen some crazy shit in the subway, especially during this past year's drama. However, New Yorker Shon Mogharabi may have had the craziest experience we have seen in a while, and luckily he took a video.

Instagram: @shonnotsean

The hand waved a few times, then put a cigarette out on the train???

The hand waved a few times, then put a cigarette out on the train???

Shon Mogharabi

He then collected his things...

He then collected his things...

Shon Mogharabi

And strolled onto the platform like nothing had happened. When confronted by firefighters, he just did a little jig.

And strolled onto the platform like nothing had happened. When confronted by firefighters, he just did a little jig.

Shon Mogharabi

"Saw a guy on the tracks this AM, with the B train speeding ahead. Tried to pull him out and he ducked under the tracks. He’s all good, he was just enjoying a morning cig under the train," he wrote.



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Former School Officer Is Pushing Back Against People Criticizing His Actions During The Parkland Shooting

Scot Peterson

AP/Broward County Public Schools

After President Trump said he lacked "courage," and his own boss said his inaction had made him "sick to my stomach," Broward Country Deputy Scot Peterson — the resource officer at the Florida school where a gunman killed 17 people this month — has released his own version of events in a letter on Monday.

A letter released by Peterson's attorney and addressed to the "South Florida Community & the American Public," states that the former officer "is confident that his actions on that day were appropriate under the circumstances" and that video and eye-witness testimony "will exonerate him of any sub-par performance."

After viewing security footage from the school last Thursday, Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel said Peterson was armed and in uniform but never went in to confront Nikolas Cruz, who killed 17 people on Feb. 14 during a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

"Devastated. Sick to my stomach. There are no words," Israel said at a press conference announcing Peterson's suspension and subsequent resignation last week.

"When it came time to get in there and do something, he didn’t have the courage or something happened. But he certainly did a poor job. There’s no question about that," President Trump told reporters last week. "That’s a case where somebody was outside, they’re trained, they didn’t act properly or under pressure or they were a coward. It was a real shock to the police department."


But in Monday's letter, Peterson's lawyer, Joseph DiRuzzo, writes that Israel's comments were untrue and that he had omitted facts.

"Sheriff Israel’s statement is, at best, gross over-simplification of the events that transpired," the letter states, before listing 12 points outlining Peterson's version of events.

In the letter, Peterson claims that he received an emergency "call of firecrackers," not gunfire, and responded by running hundreds of yards where he "heard gunshots but believed that those gunshots were originating from outside of any of the buildings on the school campus."

The letter goes on to state that Peterson "was the first BSO officer to advise BSO dispatch that he heard shots fired" and that Peterson hadinitiated the lockdown of the campus.

"Mr. Peterson had the presence of mind to have the school administrators go to the school’s video room to review the closed-circuit cameras to locate the shooter and the obtain a description for law enforcement," another bullet-point states.

The letter goes on to express dismay that Israel made a judgement about Peterson's actions when the investigation is still ongoing.

"Further, Sheriff Israel has made his accusations at a time when he has admitted that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement’s investigation is on-going, in what Israel himself characterizes as 'a fluid investigation,'" the letter reads.

DiRuzzo, the lawyer, writes that Israel "jumped to a conclusion regarding Mr. Peterson’s performance."

On Monday, citing Florida's public records law and "extreme public interest," CNN, the South Florida Sun Sentinel, and The Miami Herald have filed a lawsuit with Broward Circuit Court to release security video footage from outside the high school.

LINK: Several Other Armed Sheriff's Deputies Reportedly Waited Outside Florida School During Shooting Rampage

LINK: The Armed Florida School Officer Didn't Go Into The Building During The Mass Shooting




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Saturday, February 24, 2018

Florida School Shooting Survivor Calls On Melania Trump To Bring Her Anti-Bullying Message To Don Jr.

The president’s step-son liked two tweets referring to a conspiracy theory attempting to discredit survivors.

LINK: Students And Parents Affected By Florida School Shooting Say Trump's Idea Of Arming Teachers Is "Absurd"

LINK: The Latest: Other Deputies Reportedly Waited Outside As Florida School Rampage Took Place



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Students And Parents Affected By Florida School Shooting Say Trump's Idea Of Arming Teachers Is "Absurd"

Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School senior Samuel Zeif weeps after talking about how his best friend was killed during last week's mass shooting during a listening session hosted by President Trump.

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

After pleading with President Trump to enact stricter gun laws during an emotional, tense White House listening session last week, several Parkland, Florida, students and their parents say they are disappointed by his continued campaign to arm teachers.

In the wake of the Valentine's Day school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in which 17 people died, the president has repeatedly touted the idea to arm teachers across the country with concealed weapons as an added layer of security against mass shootings in schools.

"The teacher would have shot the hell out of him before he knew what happened," Trump said Friday. "These teachers love their students. And these teachers are talented with weaponry and with guns. And they feel safe."

The next day, he suggested that teachers trained to fire weapons "should get a yearly bonus," but that it should be "up to states" to implement any such program.

His ongoing comments have riled politicians, educators, parents, and students who contend that arming teachers is not the answer to the nation's gun problem, nor should it be the responsibility of a teacher to learn how to carry and use a weapon while also instructing dozens of children in districts already sapped of resources.

Several students who survived the Florida school shooting, as well as their parents, attended a listening session with the president last week in hopes to persuade him to change federal gun laws. They said that while they felt Trump was compassionate and empathetic, they were incensed by his push to put guns in classrooms.

Parent Melissa Blank (left) and Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting survivors Jonathan Blank (second left) and Julia Cordover (second right) attend the White House listening session.

Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

"I felt that Trump was sincere and the White House was respectful when I was there," Melissa Blank, whose son, Jonathan, survived the shooting, told BuzzFeed News. "I honestly believed he was listening and compassionate toward us and did a great job, but as soon as I heard him say we should arm teachers, I was in shock."

Blank, a teacher's aide at Westglades middle school, which is near Stoneman Douglas, recounted the two horrific hours in which she tried to calm a classroom of petrified seventh-graders while barring the door in case a gunman came barreling in.

"I am holding this door and at the same time trying to text my son, who is in the high school, and he finally answers, 'Mom, students next to me are getting shot,' and then no response after that," she said. "Can you imagine what that is like and then to hear the president say he wants to arm teachers. It's absurd. Are you out of of your mind?"

Jonathan Blank watched two of his classmates die "right in front of me" during his Holocaust study class. While he, like his mother, is not against guns if "someone needs it to protect themselves and they are old enough to handle it," he doesn't think teachers should have them.

"I don't believe guns in the classroom is the way to go," the 17-year-old said. "I think security guards should have a gun, but not a rifle. Why does anyone need this type of gun at all? I don't understand."

Justin Gruber and his father, Cary Gruber.

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

For 15-year-old Justin Gruber, meeting the president was a "powerful, emotional, and moving experience," but the school shooting survivor said he does not feel the president is pitching constructive ideas to ensure a gunman can never again walk onto a campus with an assault weapon and open fire.

"I feel that he wants to make change, but I don’t see realistic, sensible solutions," said Gruber, who, like many in his community, is advocating for an assault weapons ban. "They are weapons of war. The founding fathers intended using weapons for defense, not offense."

Raising the age so that an 18-year-old can no longer buy an assault rifle "is a step in the right direction," Gruber said, but he added that it won't "do the amount of change that needs to be done."

The sophomore also said arming teachers is a "terrible idea."

"Adding guns to solve a gun problem will increase the possible negative outcomes," he said. "Teachers shouldn't have to be trained to carry weapons. They are supposed to mold the minds of the next generation."

Just days before he and his other nearly 3,300 classmates are set to go back to school, Gruber said he was disappointed with the ongoing discussions by politicians as to how the country should proceed after the latest mass shooting tragedy.

"If there is not significant change in this country right now, these tragedies will keep happening again and again," he said. "The president and senators need to write legislation to fix this."

In an interview with CNN, Stoneman Douglas senior Samuel Zeif said he doesn't think Trump will take action, nor does he have hope that the president will push for legislation.

"I just feel everyone saw on his note card, 'I hear you,' and I think he did hear us, but I don't think he was listening to us, mainly because he only listens to people putting money in his pocket," said Zeif, who added that he also does not think raising the age limit goes far enough.

"We had a long talk with [the president] and I'm sure that right after we left, after everyone was gone, he had a long talk with the NRA," he said. "And who is he going to listen to?"

Instead of arming teachers, Gruber and Melissa Blank say they would like to see that money and resources funneled into mental health programs and tighter school security, such as bullet proof windows, automatic locks, steel reinforced doors, and more deputies on campuses.

Educators are also in dire need of mental health support, Melissa Blank added.

"Why would we ever think putting guns where there are children is a good idea?" she said. "My son, he doesn't smile anymore. His head is always down. He jumped and turned pale when he heard a dog bark. We need people in our legislation to help us. We need gun control. To the NRA and any of those politicians who won't help us because of the NRA, I say shame on you."

The NRA has lashed out at critics in recent days, pointing the finger at missed opportunities by local and federal authorities to stop the 19-year-old shooter weeks before the attack.

In a defiant speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference last week, NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre accused critics of exploiting the Florida tragedy for political gain.

"What they want are more restrictions on the law-abiding — think about that," LaPierre said. "Their solution is to make you, all of you, less free. They want to sweep right under the carpet the failure of school security, the failure of the family, the failure of America's school systems and even the unbelievable failure of the FBI."

And not everyone affected by the tragedy is pessimistic when it comes to Trump.

Andrew Pollack, who lost his 18-year-old daughter, Meadow, in the shooting, gripped the nation with a powerful address to Trump during the listening session. The grieving father told BuzzFeed News that he felt "the president heard what he had to say and that he is going to act."

"I am for safe schools," he said. "That is what I want."

LINK: Trump Says Teachers Should Be Armed Because They Love Their Students

LINK: Guess Who Thinks Arming Teachers Is A Really, Really Bad Idea? Military Combat Veterans.

LINK: Teachers Are Speaking Out On What They'd Rather Be "Armed With" Instead Of Guns





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A Conservative Official Said Michael Steele Was Only Elected RNC Chair Because He's Black

Manuel Balce Ceneta / ASSOCIATED PRESS

An official with the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland on Friday declared that former Republican National Committee chair Michael Steele was only elected because he's black.

"This is a terrible thing. We elected Mike Steele to be the RNC chair 'cause he's a black guy, and that was the wrong thing to do," said Ian Walters, a spokesperson for the American Conservative Union, the organizers of CPAC.

Steele served as chairperson of the RNC from 2009 until 2011, taking office during President Obama's first term. He lost his attempt at a second term to Reince Priebus.

Walters' comments, made during the Reagan dinner event on Friday night where tickets started at $250, drew gasps from some in the audience.

Steele told MSNBC he was standing outside of the room when the racist sentence was said. Immediately afterwards, Steele spoke to The Observer and called the comments "painfully stupid."

"I wanted to talk to [CPAC chair] Matt Schlapp first, but I think it’s painfully stupid what he said," said Steele. "If he feels that way I’d like him to come say that to my face. And then I’d like him to look at my record and see what I did.

"I can’t believe an official of CPAC would go onstage in front of an audience and say something like that. I’ve been a strong supporter of CPAC for many years and I thought they raised them better than that here," he said.

On Saturday, Steele spoke on his SiriusXM show "Steele & Ungar" about how to comments regarding him speak to the wider issues of race in the Republican Party.

"It’s the groupthink that has emerged within the party that has now poisoned the national dialogue," he said.

"To hear it come from a young man ... a minority himself ... it makes it even crazier," he said.

Walters wrote on Twitter after the dinner that his words did "not reflect what's intended" and noted in a follow up tweet that he had spoken with Steele to apologize.

"His words came out exactly as they were intended, his words came out exactly as he felt them," said Steele on MSNBC on Saturday, noting that it showed the wider racism in the Republican Party that the comments were said so freely.

"That's the truth of this party right now. We have allowed this element to have voice, we have given countenance to it. We have given it the space to express itself. And there is no taking that back, you can't deny that that has now been freed up," he said.

"You don't worry about saying it, because you think everyone outside that room, who carries the conservative label or considers themselves Republicans will agree with you," he added.



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Colleges Are Promising High Schoolers That Getting Suspended For Protesting Guns Won’t Hurt Their Admittance Chances

Several high schools said students who participate in walkouts could be suspended, but colleges say they won’t penalize them.

As high schoolers across the US lead the charge in protesting for gun reform after the deadly Florida school shooting, many are facing the risk of harsh disciplinary action.

As high schoolers across the US lead the charge in protesting for gun reform after the deadly Florida school shooting, many are facing the risk of harsh disciplinary action.

Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

In the Needville Independent School District just outside Houston, Texas, the superintendent reportedly sent out letters threatening three-day suspensions for any student who joins in on walkouts.

"Life is all about choices and every choice has a consequence whether it be positive or negative," Superintendent Curtis Rhodes said. "We will discipline no matter if it is one, 50, or 500 students involved. All will be suspended for three days and parent notes will not alleviate the discipline."

The Spring Independent School District, also in the Houston area, and the Waukesha County School District in Wisconsin issued similar warnings. (The Wakeusha superintendent later made another statement saying students could participate if they were excused from class by their parents.)

Now, colleges are standing up for the teenage activists, saying it won't affect their admissions decisions if they get suspended for protesting.

Now, colleges are standing up for the teenage activists, saying it won't affect their admissions decisions if they get suspended for protesting.

Win Mcnamee / Getty Images



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Friday, February 23, 2018

These Are The Companies That Have Stopped Doing Business With The NRA As The Gun Debate Heats Up

First National Bank Omaha, Enterprise, and MetLife are just some of the companies that have decided to cut ties with the National Rifle Association.

In the wake of the Florida mass school shooting that left 17 students and staff members dead, people on social media have been pressuring companies to cut ties with the National Rifle Association.

In the wake of the Florida mass school shooting that left 17 students and staff members dead, people on social media have been pressuring companies to cut ties with the National Rifle Association.

National Rifle Association Executive Vice President and CEO Wayne LaPierre.

Jacquelyn Martin / AP

NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre delivered a defiant speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference criticizing gun control advocates who have ramped up their message after the Parkland, Florida, shooting, accusing them of exploiting tragedy for political gain."

"What they want are more restrictions on the law-abiding — think about that," LaPierre told the conference. "Their solution is to make you, all of you, less free. They want to sweep right under the carpet the failure of school security, the failure of the family, the failure of America's school systems and even the unbelievable failure of the FBI."

The 19-year-old shooter, who authorities say legally purchased the AR-15 used in the attack, had been flagged to the FBI, but the message was never delivered to the Miami field office for investigation, a breakdown that the agency acknowledged should never have happened.

However, gun control advocates, particularly survivors and family members of the Parkland shooting, have confronted the NRA head on in recent days, accusing the organization of defending access to weapons at the expense of public safety.

A protester holds a sign outside the courtroom where Nikolas Cruz, the accused Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooter, was having a bond hearing.

Pool / Getty Images

Using hashtags like #boycottnra and #boycottnrasponsors, people are targeting companies that do business with the powerful gun rights group and those who offer discounts its members.

Some major companies in the insurance and car rental industries have already cut ties with the NRA.

Here are some of the companies that have decided to sever their ties to the organization:



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A Former NFL Player's Threatening Instagram Post Closed A High School And Led To His Arrest

Charlotte Observer / Getty Images

A former NFL player was arrested Thursday after posting a picture of a gun to Instagram that reportedly prompted a Los Angeles high school to close.

Jonathan Martin, a former Miami Dolphins player, posted a picture of a shotgun and ammunition Thursday and wrote, "When you're a bully victim & a coward, your options are suicide, or revenge."

A Los Angeles police spokesperson said an individual whose social media post prompted the school to close had been apprehended, but did not comment on their identity. However, sources confirmed to the Los Angeles Times that Martin was the one who had been apprehended.

In his Instagram post, he tagged former teammates Richie Incognito and Mike Pouncey, as well as the Miami Dolphins and Harvard-Westlake, a private school in Los Angeles that Martin attended.

Martin left the Dolphins in 2013 after alleging that Incognito and other teammates had bullied him, including threatening him and his family, sometimes with racial slurs. In response, the team suspended Incognito for a year. Martin retired from professional football in 2015.

Harvard-Westlake closed Friday after it became aware of a "disturbing and possibly threatening social media post attributed to a former student," Shauna Altieri, assistant director of communications for the school, said in a statement.

"The safety of our students, faculty, and staff is always our top priority, so we made the decision to close both campuses of our school today," Altieri added.



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People Are Loving How The Teen Activists Of Parkland Are Responding To Their Trolls

“Emma I’m sorry love but this is business. You’re going down.”

We know by now that the teen activists who survived the Parkland school shooting are very good at using social media to clap back at detractors.

We know by now that the teen activists who survived the Parkland school shooting are very good at using social media to clap back at detractors.

Rhona Wise / AFP / Getty Images

The most vocal Parkland students on Twitter, including Cameron Kasky, Emma González, Sarah Chadwick, David Hogg, and Sofia Whitney, have just confronted trolls head-on in front of a worldwide audience.

The most vocal Parkland students on Twitter, including Cameron Kasky, Emma González, Sarah Chadwick, David Hogg, and Sofia Whitney, have just confronted trolls head-on in front of a worldwide audience.

Colin Hackley / Reuters

Some, like Sarah, have been calling her trolls out directly.

Some, like Sarah, have been calling her trolls out directly.

Twitter: @sarahchad_

Adam Alhanti, another teen survivor, dug up an old tweet from the NRA's Dana Loesch to make his quip. "We know" he wrote, in response to Loesch's "Teenagers piss me off."

Adam Alhanti, another teen survivor, dug up an old tweet from the NRA's Dana Loesch to make his quip. "We know" he wrote, in response to Loesch's "Teenagers piss me off."

Twitter: @AAlhanti

Other teen activists used memes to spread their message.

Other teen activists used memes to spread their message.

Twitter: @kaylynpippy

👀

👀

Twitter: @alana_agron

They also tweeted things that were delightfully normal.

They also tweeted things that were delightfully normal.

Twitter: @AAlhanti

And it seems like they know it too. "Yeah we are."

And it seems like they know it too. "Yeah we are."

Twitter: @sofiewhitney

LINK: The Pro-Trump Media Has Met Its Match In The Parkland Students

LINK: Students Who Lived Through The Florida Shooting Are Angry And They Want You To Know

LINK: Florida School Shooting Survivors Are Trolling Trolls Who Think They're Paid Actors



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Florida Governor Wants To Raise Age For Buying A Firearm To 21 And Require Armed Officers At All Schools

Colin Hackley / Reuters

Florida Governor Rick Scott on Friday called for raising the legal age to purchase a firearm to 21 and outlined his plan for increasing safety at school campuses more than a week after 17 people were killed by a gunman at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.

The current law, which allows those as young as 18 to purchase firearms, has been derided by critics who point out that people at that age can't even buy alcohol. The Florida shooter, 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz, legally purchased the AR-15 rifle that he used in the attack, authorities say.

But Scott said he would be working with state legislators to change that.

"Let me repeat: we will require all individuals purchasing firearms to be 21 or older," he said, adding that exceptions will be made for active duty and reserve military and their spouses, National Guard members, and law enforcement.

Anyone who is the subject of protective orders for stalking, cyberstalking, dating violence, repeat violence, sexual violence, or domestic violence should also be prohibited from purchasing or possessing a firearm, Scott said.

Family members pick up students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland after the shooting.

Wilfredo Lee / AP

The Republican governor also pledged $500 million to improve school safety and expand mental health care access to students. Part of the plan includes requiring one armed officer either sworn sheriff’s deputies or police officers for every 1,000 students at every school by the start of the fall 2018 school year.

The sole armed school resource deputy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, with a student population of more than 3,000, stood outside the building and did "nothing" as the shooter opened fire on students and teachers, authorities said this week.

The governor did not agree with President Trump's proposal to arm teachers with firearms as a deterrent and form of protection.

"I disagree with arming teachers. My focus is on bringing in law enforcement," he said. "We need to have individuals that are well trained."

Scott also wants schools to submit safety plans to their county sheriff's department yearly and hold active shooter scenario training drills at least once a semester.

Scott told reporters that he did not support banning AR-15s, saying "banning specific weapons and punishing law abiding citizens isn't going to fix this." However, he did call for banning the sale of bump stocks, a gun attachment device used gives semi-automatic firearms the ability to fire like machine guns.

Although bump stocks were not used in the Parkland shooting, they were used by Stephen Paddock to kill nearly 60 people in the Las Vegas shooting last year.

Mourners hug as they place flowers on a makeshift memorial for victims of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting.

AFP / Getty Images

The governor also proposed a new "Violent Threat Restraining Order" program, which would allow courts to prohibit people from buying or possessing a firearm if "a family member, community welfare expert, or law enforcement officer" presents evidence of a threat of violence involving firearms or other weapons.

The governor also proposed establishing funding to require every school in Florida to have dedicated mental health counselors.

"These counselors cannot serve dual roles, like teaching or academic advising," he said. "Every student must have the opportunity to meet one-on-one with a mental health professional, and receive ongoing counseling as needed."

Scott also wants to set up a tip hotline and mobile app to report concerns.

LINK: The Armed Florida School Officer Didn't Go Into The Building During The Mass Shooting

LINK: This Is What We Know About Nikolas Cruz, The Florida High School Shooting Suspect




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Thursday, February 22, 2018

Schools Are Threatening To Suspend Students Who Participate In Walkouts Over Gun Violence

Alex Wong / Getty Images

Thousands of students are expected to walk out of their classrooms in the coming months to support a growing movement for tighter gun controls in the wake of the mass school shooting in Florida. But some will do so at risk of scarring their academic record as adminstrators in some district threaten them with suspension.

The threats of disciplinary action has prompted lawyers and even a prestigious university admissions department to lend their support.

The survivors of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Florida, where 17 people were killed, have sparked a national debate over gun control laws, prompting students across the country to demonstrate in favor of stricter regulations.

There are national school walkouts scheduled for March 14 and April 20. A march on the nation's capitol is scheduled for March 24. Thousands of students also participated in walkouts across the country on Feb. 22.

But some schools districts want their students to stay put.

Spring Independent School District north of Houston, Texas, said in a statement that any student who walks out "could face an in-school suspension per our normal policies."

The superintendent of the Needville Independent School District, southeast of Houston, also threatened to suspend students over walkouts.

"Should students choose to [walk out], they will be suspended from school for three days and face all the consequences that come along with an out-of-school suspension...We will discipline no matter if it is one, fifty or five hundred students involved," according to post on the district's Facebook page, which is no longer up.

The Waukesha County School District in Wisconsin also said Wednesday that students were prohibited from participating in walkouts, though the superintendent did not specify what the punishment would be.

Thursday, however, the district issued another statement saying it would allow students excused from school by their parents to participate so long as they did not disturb other students.

Needville, Spring, and Waukesha school districts did not respond to requests for comment.

Alex Wong / Getty Images

But plans to protest can pose challenges for administrators caught between fulfilling their legal responsibilities and accommodating students' civic participation.

Bob Mosier, a spokesperson for Anne Arundel County Public Schools in Maryland, said administrators were in talks with student leaders to determine what shape the protests would take. Still, schools must supervise students during the day and keep them out of the danger, which can be challenging during a large protest, he added.

"Students need to be involved in this discussion, and what comes out of those conversations may be different at each school. What we can’t do is have activities that place students in unsupervised situations during the school day, or where you have a mass of students together outside," Mosier said. "It makes for an unsafe situation if someone wishes to do some harm as they drive their truck down the road."

Lawyers, meanwhile, have volunteered to support students in court if their school takes action against them.

New York City-based attorney Steven Golden tweeted Thursday: "I'm a Texas-barred attorney and will represent these students pro bono should they choose to exercise their rights to free speech."

Golden vowed to defend any suspended student who reached out in any of the states where he is licensed to practice, which according to state bar databases, include in Texas, Maryland, and New York. Several people claiming to be lawyers replied to Golden saying they would do the same in their respective states.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) also published a blog post, "Can schools discipline students for protesting?"

"The short answer? It depends on when, where, and how the students decide to express themselves," the ACLU wrote.

The group advised students to "find out what policies govern discipline for absences in their state, school district, and their particular school so that they’re aware of the potential consequences."

Schools cannot, the organization wrote, discipline students more harshly because of the content of their speech or punish them for speaking out in a way that does not disrupt the function of the school. The ACLU did not say whether it would represent students whose schools take action against them.

One university also weighed in on Thursday.

The admissions office of MIT said it would not count disciplinary actions related to the protests against students applying or already admitted to the university. Normally, students can be denied admission or have it rescinded for infractions that result in serious punishment, such as a suspension.

"We do not view such conduct on its face as inappropriate or inconsistent with their prior conduct, or anything we wouldn't applaud amongst our own students," wrote Stu Schill, MIT's dean of admissions. "It will not negatively impact their admissions outcome."

LINK: Teachers Are Speaking Out On What They'd Rather Be "Armed With" Instead Of Guns

LINK: The Latest: Florida Sheriff "Devastated" That Armed Deputy Didn't Confront School Shooter




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This Is What More Than 20 Years Of Mass Shootings Looks Like In The US

Columbine High School massacre — April 20, 1999

Columbine High School massacre — April 20, 1999

Columbine High School students Sarah Fisicaro, right, and Katie Teitsworth embrace after two teenage shooters killed 13 students before killing themselves in Littleton, Colorado.

Jeff Mitchell / Reuters

Red Lake shootings — March 21, 2005

Red Lake shootings — March 21, 2005

A flag-bearer and several hundred people hold a traditional Native American prayer service in St. Paul, Minnesota, in response to the shootings at Red Lake High School after a young man killed nine people at the school, including five students, before killing himself.

Ann Heisenfelt / AP

Virginia Tech shooting — April 16, 2007

Virginia Tech shooting — April 16, 2007

Thousands of Virginia Tech students take part in a mass candlelight vigil to honor the victims of a shooting that took the lives of 32 people when a gunman opened fire on the campus.

Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

Binghamton shootings — April 3, 2009

Binghamton shootings — April 3, 2009

Zoriana Zobniw at the American Civic Association in Binghamton, New York, in honor of her relative, Maria Zobniw, who was among 13 people killed in the shooting.

Heather Ainsworth

Fort Hood shooting — Nov. 5, 2009

Fort Hood shooting — Nov. 5, 2009

US Army soldiers in prayer during a vigil for those killed and wounded when a soldier went on a shooting rampage on the grounds of Fort Hood in Killeen, Texas. The gunman killed 13 people and wounded 30.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Tucson shooting — Jan. 8, 2011

Tucson shooting — Jan. 8, 2011

Safeway grocery store employees hold a moment of silence at 10:11 a.m., the moment when a shooting occurred in front of the grocery store killing six and injuring several others.

Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting — Dec. 14, 2012

Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting — Dec. 14, 2012

A mother hugs her daughter while mourning the victims of a shooter's elementary school rampage that killed 20 children and six adults in Newtown, Connecticut.

Lucas Jackson / Reuters

Aurora shooting — July 20, 2012

Aurora shooting — July 20, 2012

Titia Stillwell and Lori Meade pray with thousands of others during a vigil for the victims of a mass shooting at the Aurora Municipal Center in Aurora, Colorado. The shooter killed 12 people and injured 59 during an early morning screening of The Dark Knight Rises.

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

Wisconsin Sikh temple shooting — Aug. 5, 2012

Wisconsin Sikh temple shooting — Aug. 5, 2012

Members of the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin attend a vigil to mark the one-year anniversary of the shooting in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, when a white supremacist killed six members of the temple during a shooting rampage.

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Washington Navy Yard shooting — Sept. 16, 2013

Washington Navy Yard shooting — Sept. 16, 2013

Brittany Carter and Jibri Johnson take part in a vigil for the mass shooting at the US Navy Yard in Washington, DC, which left 12 dead and eight injured.

The Washington Post / Getty Images

Isla Vista killings — May 23, 2014

Isla Vista killings — May 23, 2014

Students march on the campus of the University of California, Santa Barbara, during a vigil held to honor the six victims of a mass killing in Isla Vista, California.

Jae C. Hong / AP

Charleston church shooting — June 17, 2015

Charleston church shooting — June 17, 2015

Allen Sanders and his wife, Georgette, at a memorial outside the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, to remember nine black men and women who were shot and killed by a white supremacist.

Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty Images

Chattanooga shootings — July 16, 2015

Chattanooga shootings — July 16, 2015

Cathy Wells at her son's vigil in Marietta, Georgia. Wells is the mother of one of the five military servicemen killed in Chattanooga, Tennessee, after a shooter opened fire at a Naval Reserve Center.

Christopher Aluka Berry / Reuters

Umpqua Community College shooting — Oct. 1, 2015

Umpqua Community College shooting — Oct. 1, 2015

Residents of Roseburg, Oregon, at a vigil for the victims of a shooting in which 10 were killed and 20 injured when a shooter opened fire at Umpqua Community College.

Michael Lloyd / Getty Images

Colorado Springs Planned Parenthood shooting — Nov. 27, 2015

Colorado Springs Planned Parenthood shooting — Nov. 27, 2015

Students at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs hold a vigil for university police officer Garrett Swasey, who was shot and killed along with two others at the Colorado Springs Planned Parenthood clinic.

Andy Cross / Getty Images

San Bernardino attack — Dec. 2, 2015

San Bernardino attack — Dec. 2, 2015

People attend a vigil at the San Manuel Stadium to remember victims of the shooting at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, California, which left 14 people dead and 22 injured.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Dallas, Texas — July 7–8, 2016

Dallas, Texas — July 7–8, 2016

Civilians and police officers attend a vigil for five officers killed during anti-police brutality protests in Dallas, Texas.

Anadolu Agency / Getty Images

Orlando nightclub shooting — June 12, 2016

Orlando nightclub shooting — June 12, 2016

A memorial in front of the Stonewall Inn, paying respects to the 49 people killed and 58 wounded after a shooter opened fire in a gay nightclub.

Prince Williams / WireImage

Congressional baseball shooting — June 14, 2017

Congressional baseball shooting — June 14, 2017

House Chaplain Patrick J. Conroy leads the Republican team in a prayer before the Congressional Baseball Game on June 15, 2017, in Washington, DC. A critic of President Trump opened fire on US lawmakers practicing for the event, seriously wounding a congressman and three others before he was killed by police.

Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty Images

Las Vegas shooting — Oct. 1, 2017

Las Vegas shooting — Oct. 1, 2017

Mourners observe a moment of silence to mark one week since the mass shooting at the Route 91 Harvest country music festival in Las Vegas, Nevada. On Oct. 1, 2017, where a shooter killed 58 people and injured more than 450.

Drew Angerer / Getty Images

Sutherland Springs church shooting — Nov. 5, 2017

Sutherland Springs church shooting — Nov. 5, 2017

Visitors pay respects at a memorial to honor the 26 victims at the First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs in Texas after a shooter opened fire during Sunday service.

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Stoneman Douglas High School shooting — Feb. 14, 2018

Stoneman Douglas High School shooting — Feb. 14, 2018

Activists and students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School attend a rally at the Florida Capitol to address gun control on Feb. 21 in Tallahassee, Florida, in the wake of last week's mass shooting that left 17 people dead.

Don Juan Moore / Getty Images




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