Category: Metro

  • Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton to Question Candidates Wednesday at Republican Presidential Debate

    Debate Will Air on NewsNation, Rumble, and The CW Networks

    (Washington, DC)Judicial Watch, America’s leading government watchdog group, today announced that Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton will question candidates at the next Republican presidential debate to be aired on NewsNation and Rumble at 8 p.m. ET, Wednesday, December 6, from the University of Alabama. Fitton will present his questions through pre-recorded video. Former Amb. Nikki Haley, Gov Ron DeSantis, Mr. Vivek Ramaswamy, and former Gov. Chris Christie are reportedly expected to meet Republican National Committee requirements to participate in the debate.  

    Judicial Watch is a non-partisan educational foundation that does not endorse or oppose candidates for public office. Judicial Watch promotes transparency, accountability and integrity in government, politics and the law. Through its educational endeavors, Judicial Watch advocates high standards of ethics and morality in our nation’s public life and seeks to ensure that political and judicial officials do not abuse the powers entrusted to them by the American people. Judicial Watch fulfills its educational mission through litigation, investigations, and public outreach. Tom Fitton has been Judicial Watch’s president for 25 years.

    “Voters can be sure that my Judicial Watch questions for these Republican presidential candidates will be quite direct and provide the candidates a chance to educate Americans about what they plan to do about some of the most urgent issues facing our country,” commented Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton.  

    Elizabeth Vargas, the Peabody award-winning anchor of NewsNation’s Elizabeth Vargas Reports,” Megyn Kelly, host of “The Megyn Kelly Show” on SiriusXM and Eliana Johnson, editor-in-chief of The Washington Free Beacon, will moderate.

    According to NewsNation:

    Though former President Donald Trump — the clear Republican frontrunner according to polls by FiveThirtyEight and RealClearPolitics — has remained off the debate stage, several candidates have battled it out in the previous three debates, seeking to narrow the gap with Trump in support and distance themselves in their policy positions.

    ***

    Ahead of the fourth debate, the Republican National Committee (RNC) upped its qualification criteria for candidates hoping to get on the debate stage. Candidates will need to be polling at 6% or higher in two national polls, or at 6% in one early state poll from two separate “carve out” states — listed as Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina — to get behind a podium in December, according to the RNC press release. 

    This is higher than the 4% requirement that was needed for the third debate conducted in early November.

    The polls also need to survey at least 8,000 registered likely Republican voters, among other requirements. 

    While the previous debate required at least 70,000 unique donors, candidates will need to bring in a minimum of 80,000 unique donors to their principal presidential campaign committee, with at least 200 unique donors in 20 or more states or territories each. 

    The NewsNation debate will also be available through the ChannelFinder app, and from the Apple Store or Google Play Store. The debate will also be available on the television network The CW and will be live streamed on Rumble.

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  • The best law firms to do your training contract with — 2024 edition

    Firms Most List ranks firms on training, work quality, support and more


    If you’re on the hunt for a training contract, you’ve likely spent numerous hours scouring law firm websites for a convincing response to the question: “why does working at [insert firm name] appeal to you?”. No doubt this has left your list of target firms blurring into one and leaving you more confused than when you started.

    So, it’s no secret that there’s a multitude of things you need to consider when you’re applying for a TC — quality of work and training, salary, work-life balance, diversity and more. It’s also no secret that it can often be challenging (and time-consuming) to get a comprehensive idea of these factors when deciding on which firms you want to apply to.

    Enter Legal Cheek‘s 2024 Firms Most List. Featuring a record 102 law firm profiles — including all the Magic and Silver Circle, the top US outfits in London, UK-based international elite players as well as leading mid-tier and specialist firms — over 2,000 trainee and junior lawyers rank their firms on a sliding scale across 10 key categories.

    We then crunch the data and grade the firms from A* to D, accordingly. Below is a list of our scorecard categories.

    Scorecard categories

    Training
    Quality of work
    Peer support
    Partner approachability
    Work/life balance
    Legal tech
    Perks
    Office
    WFH
    Eco-friendliness

    The 2024 Firms Most List — featuring the Legal Cheek Survey results in full

    That’s not all, though. In addition to these 10 categories, we also extract exclusive data on other key metrics. What the working hours are like, trainee and NQ salaries, secondment opportunities (both client and international) and, of course, the number of UK TCs on offer at each firm.

    Survey respondents also submit anonymous comments to supplement the scores they give, providing valuable context, insight and brutal honesty into what the work and culture at the firm is actually like. Below is a snapshot of some of these:

    How stimulating is the work you are given?

    “There have been ample opportunities to work on highly interesting matters, from the commercially eye catching to technical legal concepts. It is largely a testament to the quality of our clients.”

    How advanced is your firm’s legal tech?

    “Terrible.”

    How do you rate the training you have received?

    “The firm has a great training program and the training you receive in each seat is unparalleled. Partners talk through topical issues and there are seminars given by external speakers. Trainees are given a lot of responsibility very early on – for example, first seat trainees can run calls/processes and take ownership of workstreams. Whilst daunting, this is a great experience for trainees and helps to provide a level of understanding and improve one’s confidence very early on.”

    How good are your firm’s perks?

    “Private healthcare, dental and free in-house gym. But no free snacks in the office except fruit.”

    How approachable are your superiors?

    “All of my partners and supervisors have been very approachable and willing to give up their time to answer any queries or concerns.”

    How is your work/life balance?

    “Balance? Sorry mate, never heard of him.”

    Those graded A* in one or more categories are shortlisted for an award at The Legal Cheek Awards 2024, taking place this year at the Battlebridge Suite of Kings Place London on the evening of Thursday 16 May 2024.

    The 2024 Firms Most List — featuring the Legal Cheek Survey results in full

    The post The best law firms to do your training contract with — 2024 edition appeared first on Legal Cheek.

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  • Did Jack Smith Investigate Trump’s Twitter Followers? What We Know

    From Newsweek:

    The Department of Justice recently released a redacted subpoena for ex-President Donald Trump‘s account on Twitter, now named X, amid Special Counsel Jack Smith‘s investigation of attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

    Tom Fitton, president of watchdog Judicial Watch, also spoke about the warrant, saying that it “lends further urgency to Congress DEFUNDING NOW this rogue operation. Call your members of Congress now to share your views.”

    Read more here…

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  • Akin confirms salary raise for London lawyers

    Joins top London NQ payers Milbank on £177,500


    Akin Gump has increased the salaries of its London lawyers across the board by a minimum of $10,000 (just under £8k).

    A spokesperson for the firm has confirmed that it will be matching the raise set by Cravath Swaine & Moore last week, which includes a bump of $10,000 for NQs through to 3PQE. The extra dosh doesn’t stop there, however, with those 4PQE receiving an increase of $15,000, and 5-7PQE securing a $20,000 uplift.

    This will leave the London office’s newly qualified (NQ) associates on an eyewatering $225,000 a year, the joint highest in the city alongside competitor Milbank. Although the firm’s conversion rate is undisclosed, today, that sum would balance out at about £177,500.

    The 2024 Legal Cheek Firms Most List

    Last year, Akin used an exchange rate as high as £1 = US$1.2005, before setting a cap on salary rates, the upper limit being £1 = $1.2, and the lower limit £1 = $1.5. The rate today is $1.26568.

    The Legal Cheek Firms Most List shows that Akin takes on eight trainees a year, with a typical day keeping recruits in the office until after 8pm.

    The post Akin confirms salary raise for London lawyers appeared first on Legal Cheek.

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  • NSCDC officers brutalize Journalist in Anambra

    NSCDC officers brutalize Journalist in Anambra

    By Ovat Abeng

    In a shocking incident that unfolded on Saturday in Awka, the capital of Anambra state, over 10 officials of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) launched a brutal attack on journalist, one Izunna Okafor, accusing the media of being part of Nigeria’s problems.

    It was gathered that the journalist was in the same bus with the Civil Defence officials, who were conveyed together with him from Awka to the venue of the Anambra South Rally of the Soludo Ambassadors, which held at Nnewi; while the same bus (provided by the organizers of the event) also conveyed them back to Awka.

    Recounting the harrowing experience, the journalist who said the officials had earlier complained of hunger and frustration on their way back from the rally, said the trouble started when he wanted to alight at the popular UNIZIK Junction Awka, from the bus that was conveying them.

    He said after he severally informed and reminded the driver that he would alight at the UNIZIK Junction, which he ignored on the instruction of the Civil Defence officers, who insisted that everybody must remain in the bus and follow them to the very last bus stop where they themselves would alight.

    Read Also: Ifeanyi Ubah, Ekwunife formally joins APC in Anambra

    He said it was until he spoke with a loud voice before some other civil defence officials and some attendants of the rally in the same bus then told the driver to stop for him to alight.

    According to him, what followed was an appalling display of aggression.

    Narrating further, he said when he alighted, he could not see his second phone which fell out inside the bus when the driver was on a high-speed. However, according to him, as he was informing them that his phone fell off inside the bus and that he would want to pick it, the aggressive civil defence officers ordered the driver to zoom off moving without listening to him.

    He said as he was stretching his hand to request for the phone from the person who volunteered to pick it for him, one of the Civil Defence officials attached to the Awka Capital Territory Development Authority (ACTDA) callously ordered the driver to speed off, and then furiously jammed the door of the bus, leaving him with severe hand injuries caused by the forceful and unexpected locking of the bus door.

    Okafor, who was in severe pains said he had no other option but to board another commercial transport to go to the place where the Civil Defence officers said would be the last bus stop.

    According to him, when he got there, as he sought an explanation from the particular officer for his action, the situation escalated further and aggravated to a chaos as the officer began questioning him back on what gave him the boldness to ask him such question as a uniformed and armed man. He said while the Civil Defence officer began to raise his voice at him, he also conked his gun, while his colleagues, numbering about 11, rushed out and irrationally descended on him, physically assaulting him, kicking and menacingly hitting him with gun heads.

    Okafor said some of the Civil Defence officers also conked their guns and even threatened to shoot him while beating him up, but for the pleas of some other people who were there witnessing what was happening. He said the Civil Defence officers also accused Nigeria journalists of being major part of Nigeria’s problem, while they themselves stand and suffer under the sun to protect the country and her citizens.

    According to the journalist, it took the intervention of Mr. Ossy Onuko, the Managing Director of the Awka Capital Territory Development Authority (ACTDA) to quell the violence.

    Despite Okafor eventually retrieving his phone and receiving an apology from the Mr. Onuko, the Civil Defence officers continued threatening him, vowing to track him and further deal with him. He said the officers further boasted that no one could stop them from unleashing their mayhem on the him as anyone who would attempts to do so should first care for their welfare before advising them.

    The journalist, left with injuries, is currently seeking medical attention as at the time he recounted his ordeal to our correspondent.

    Okafor, who said he could identify the officers involved in attacking him, added that he had recently reported the incident to the Public Relations Officer of the Anambra State Command of the Nigerian civil defence corps,  Edwin Okadigbo, who promised to look into the matter.

    In a swift reaction, the State Commandant of NSCDC, Mr. Edwin Osuala, described the incident as unprofessional on the side of his men.

    His reaction was contained in a statement signed and made available to Journalists in Awka on Sunday by the State Command’s Public Relations Officer, DSC Okadigbo Edwin.

    The statement read in part;

    The State Commandant of Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps, Anambra State Command, Mr. Edwin Osuala, found the report unacceptable and has ordered the Deputy Commandant in charge of  Investigation and Intelligence Department to immediately commence full scale investigation into  the matter with a view to bringing anyone found complicit to book.

    Mr. Osuala noted that the NSCDC as a reputable paramilitary agency in a good working relationship with the Nigeria Union of Journalists would stop at nothing in making sure appropriate disciplinary sanctions are meted against any of the personnel found wanting.

    “I have always partnered with members of Nigeria Union of Journalists ( NUJ)  closely  in show casing most of our activities and achievements in the fight against insecurity. I would not want this isolated case to severe the good relationship I have with them. I always urge personnel to be cautious and polite in dealing with members of the public in the discharge of their duties. If after investigation, they are guilty of the offence, definitely they will face the music as deterrent to other personnel. The command under my watch will not tolerate or condone any act unbecoming of an officer” he said.

    While affirming his unwavering stance against unethical conduct on the part of Officers and Men, the State Commandant further solicited sustained media partnership, cooperation and support of the public in providing timely and relevant information to  the Corps in its renewed efforts against security challenges in the state.

  • Neighbor arrested after missing teen is found dead and buried in homemade box on his property

    RUSH COUNTY, Ind. (TCD) — A 59-year-old man was arrested this week after his missing neighbor and employee was found dead on his property.

    On June 10, the Rush County Sheriff’s Department issued a statewide Silver Alert on behalf of 17-year-old Valerie Tindall, who was last seen June 7 in Arlington driving a green Honda Accord. The Sheriff’s Office said she was believed to be in “extreme danger.” In August, the sheriff’s department said there was a chance she had been “receiving aid from individual(s) whose goal is to keep her hidden,” saying there was a chance she could have changed her hair color or style.

    Over five months after her disappearance, Rush County investigators along with FBI agents, U.S. Marshals, and other law enforcement officials executed a search warrant at a residence on North Oak Street in Arlington. While there, they found a body and subsequently arrested the homeowner, Patrick Scott, on charges of murder, obstruction of justice, and false informing to a law enforcement officer.

    In a press conference, Rush County Sheriff Allan Rice said Scott was previously identified as a person of interest in the case.

    The Rush County Coroner’s Office positively identified the remains as Tindall’s, though the cause and manner of death remain pending.

    According to court records cited by WXIN-TV, an investigator discovered Tindall’s body inside a homemade box constructed of two-by-fours and strand boards. The officer reportedly noticed the victim had orange painted nails, which matched up with a photo Tindall posted on social media the day she disappeared. Detectives also found a second box that contained papers and old VHS tapes.

    Scott reportedly confessed to strangling Tindall with his belt. He said he “put it around her neck and I held onto it until she quit.” After she died, he left her body in his office, then wrapped her body in plastic, placed her in the box, and buried her.

    WXIN reports Tindall and Scott worked and spent time together. Scott, however, alleged Tindall was trying to blackmail him so she could get a new car.

    He reportedly said, “I just knew she wasn’t going to blackmail me.”

    According to WXIN, Scott runs a landscaping business and Tindall worked for him during the summer.

    Scott allegedly also said he “wasn’t too crazy” about strangling Tindall.

    Not long after Tindall disappeared, a neighbor reportedly spotted Scott burning down his garage.

    Rice said in the news release, “This is not the outcome we had hoped for. This case is still under investigation to ensure those responsible are successfully prosecuted.”

    MORE:

    • Silver Alert, 6/10/2023 – Rush County Sheriff’s Department
    • Update, 8/9/2023 – Rush County Sheriff’s Department
    • Body discovered – Rush County Sheriff’s Department 
    • Human remains positively identified – Rush County Sheriff’s Department
    • Court docs: Patrick Scott admitted to officers that he killed Valerie Tindall, buried her in homemade box – WXIN

    TRUE CRIME DAILY: THE PODCAST covers high-profile and under-the-radar cases every week. Subscribe to our YouTube page and don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter. You can also subscribe to our True Crime Daily newsletter.



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  • NYC man convicted of killing cousin, stealing her money, and leaving her body in storage bin

    NEW YORK (TCD) — A jury convicted a 21-year-old man of killing his cousin, taking her money, and leaving her body in a storage container in the Bronx.

    Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said in a statement Khalid Barrow was found guilty of “brutally killing his cousin Nisaa Walcott and concealing her body for days while he stole her money, used her apartment, and tricked her young child to cover his tracks.”

    Court records show a jury also convicted Barrow of concealment of a corpse.

    According to NBC New York, a man discovered 35-year-old Walcott’s body in a container, which had been placed on the sidewalk across the street from a storage facility.

    Surveillance footage reportedly showed Barrow going to Walcott’s apartment, then leaving with a large storage container. A second person was also seen helping Barrow move the bin and take it to the location in the Bronx. Barrow allegedly sent text messages pretending to be Walcott, which raised alarms with her family.  Police arrested Barrow not long after officials found her body.

    NBC New York reports Walcott is survived by her teenage son and other relatives.

    Bragg said following the verdict, “Her death left a hole in her family that can never be filled, and my heart goes out to her loved ones. I thank the members of the jury for the time and attention they paid to the evidence in this deeply disturbing case.”

    MORE:

    TRUE CRIME DAILY: THE PODCAST covers high-profile and under-the-radar cases every week. Subscribe to our YouTube page and don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter. You can also subscribe to our True Crime Daily newsletter.



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  • 'It might be me': N.J. man accused of fatally shooting grandparents and uncle

    SOUTH PLAINFIELD, N.J. (TCD) — A 23-year-old man faces multiple charges after he was arrested for allegedly shooting and killing three relatives in the condo where they all lived.

    According to the Middlesex County District Attorney’s Office, on Nov. 27 at around 9 a.m., South Plainfield Police Department officers responded to Coppola Drive regarding a shots fired call and found three victims suffering from gunshot wounds. Dilipkumar Brahmbhatt and Bindu Brahmbhatt, both 72, were pronounced dead at the scene. A third victim, 38-year-old Yashkumar Brahmbhatt, was transported to a hospital, where he died.

    Investigators concluded there was no threat to the public following the shooting and that it did not appear to be a random act.

    Twenty-three-year-old Om Brahmbhatt was at the scene when police arrived, and officers later arrested him on three counts of murder and three counts of second-degree possession of a weapon for unlawful purposes.

    NJ.com reports the victims are Om Brahmbhatt’s grandparents and uncle. His grandfather, Dilipkumar Brahmbhatt, and grandmother, Bindu Brahmbhatt, reportedly both sustained gunshot wounds to the head. His uncle, Yashkumar Brahmbhatt, was shot multiple times.

    According to NJ.com, Om Brahmbhatt told police when they asked about the shooting, “It might be me.”

    Om Brahmbhatt reportedly had a gun that he bought online in his possession. He allegedly admitted to shooting his grandparents while they slept, then fired at his uncle.

    He reportedly remains in custody while he waits for his case to be presented to a grand jury.

    MORE:

    • South Plainfield Man charged in connection with Fatal Shooting – Middlesex County District Attorney’s Office
    • Man accused of killing grandparents, uncle in N.J. condo to remain jailed – NJ.com

    TRUE CRIME DAILY: THE PODCAST covers high-profile and under-the-radar cases every week. Subscribe to our YouTube page and don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter. You can also subscribe to our True Crime Daily newsletter.



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  • Idaho man wanted for allegedly killing wife and kidnapping their infant son

    TETON COUNTY, Idaho (TCD) — Law enforcement officials are searching for a 48-year-old man they allege killed his wife, then ran off with their 10-month-old son.

    According to the Teton County Sheriff’s Office, on Thursday, Nov. 30, at approximately 11:40 p.m., a dispatcher received a call from someone on Skyline Loop and heard a disturbance in the background. They sent deputies to the home to investigate, and when they arrived, they found 38-year-old Kali Jean Randall deceased. The sheriff’s office and Idaho State Police are investigating her death as a homicide.

    The sheriff’s office said they are searching for Randall’s husband, Jeremy Albert Best, who was believed to be driving a black 1995 Chevrolet Tahoe. Best allegedly fled the home with their son, Zeke Gregory Best.

    An Amber Alert went out as the search continues.

    Officials published photos of Zeke and Jeremy Best and said Jeremy Best is “believed to be heavily armed.”

    According to KBOI-TV, on Nov. 29, one day before the suspected kidnapping, Bonneville County Sheriff’s Office deputies reportedly found Jeremy Best walking around a general store naked. EMS transported him to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center, where he reportedly underwent a mental health evaluation.

    KBOI reports Best does not have custody of Zeke.

    MORE:

    • Homicide and Kidnapping Suspect – Teton County Sheriff’s Office
    • Updated Poster – Teton County Sheriff’s Office
    • Eastern Idaho man suspected of murder and kidnapping had prior run-in with law enforcement – KBOI

    TRUE CRIME DAILY: THE PODCAST covers high-profile and under-the-radar cases every week. Subscribe to our YouTube page and don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter. You can also subscribe to our True Crime Daily newsletter.



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  • Smoking Gun Biden Email

    Joe Biden Email Shows Hunter Was Copied on Ukraine President Information
    DC Spends $270,000 To Repaint ‘Black Lives Matter’ on Street Near White House
    Congress Inches Forward on Biden Corruption Inquiries
    Social Security Overpays Billions Under Leadership of Racial Equity Activist
    Soros-Tied Facebook Censors Consider Suppressing Anti-Immigration Speech

     

    Joe Biden Email Shows Hunter Was Copied on Ukraine President Information

    We received five pages of records from the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) that show then-Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter received a May 26, 2016, email detailing a scheduled “8:45 am prep for a 9 am phone call with Pres Poroshenko,” who was the president of Ukraine.

    This is another smoking gun. It blows out of the water the notion that there was any distance between Joe and Hunter Biden on the Burisma influence-peddling scandal.

    In this email Joe Biden’s address is the alias robert.l.peters@pci.gov and Hunter Biden’s email account is disclosed as hbiden@rosemontseneca.com. (Hunter was on the board of the controversial Ukrainian firm Burisma at the time.)

    The email has the subject line “Friday Schedule Cards” and was sent by John S. Flynn, who was Joe Biden’s assistant:

    Boss–8:45am prep for 9am phone call with Pres Poroshenko. Then we’re off to Rhode Island for infrastructure event and then Wilmington for UDel commencement. Nate will have your draft remarks delivered later tonight or with your press clips in the morning.

    Respectfully,

    John

    The email also contains information on U.S. military troops under the heading “Daily US Troops Update:”

    # US Troops Died in Iraq/Afghanistan: 6,745

    # US Troops Wounded in Iraq/Afghanistan: 52,392

    US Troop Levels:

    Afghanistan (Security Assistance, Advisory and CT): 10,000

    Iraq (Security Assistance): 4,000

    The email was obtained as a result of our lawsuit against the National Archives for Biden family records and communications regarding travel and finance transactions, as well as communications between the Bidens and several known business associates (Judicial Watch, Inc. v. National Archives (No. 1:23-cv-01432).

    In August 2023, James Comer (R-KY), chairman of the House Oversight Committee called on the National Archives to provide then-Vice President Joe Biden’s records regarding his duties that overlapped with his son’s activities in Ukraine. Chairman Comer is pursuing communications in which Joe Biden used a pseudonym, as well as those in which Hunter Biden, Eric Schwerin, or Devon Archer are copied.

    We have nearly a dozen FOIA lawsuits regarding records concerning Biden corruption issues, including:

    In March 2023, the Archives had released only 1,276 pages of over 8,000 records about the unprecedented document dispute and raid on the home of former President Trump.

    In October 2022, we sued the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for all communications between the Secret Service and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) regarding the search warrant that precipitated the raid on former President Donald Trump’s Florida residence at Mar-a-Lago on August 8, 2022.

    Also in October, we sued the Barack Obama Presidential Library for Obama White House records about the 2016 “Russia Collusion Hoax.”  The records, which by law were not available under FOIA until five years after President Obama left office, are held at the Library, which is part of the National Archives system.

     

    DC Spends $270,000 To Repaint ‘Black Lives Matter’ on Street Near White House 

    Crime in Washington, DC, is out of control but local leaders are spending $270,000 in tax money to promote the Black Lives Matter movement that is racist, anti-police, anti-American, and often violent – and doing so in the heart of our nation’s capital.

    We received 25 pages of records in a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request from the Washington, DC, Department of Transportation that show the cost to taxpayers to repaint the Black Lives Matter slogan on a street in the nation’s capital was over $270,000.

    The repainting seems to have taken place shortly before Black Lives Matter groups began defending Hamasat a  terrorist murders of Jews in Israel.

    On June 5, 2020, after days of protests and riots in DC led by the Black Lives Matter movement, a team of artists, residents, District employees, and demonstrators painted “Black Lives Matter” in 50-foot-tall yellow capital letters and the District’s crest, which resembles three stars above an “equals” sign, on 16th Street NW near the White House. The following day demonstrators painted “Defund the Police,” a key demand of the Black Lives Matter movement, alongside the “Black Lives Matter” message.

    The total price tag of $271,231 for the repainting includes $53,551 for paint and supplies, and $217,680 for labor.

    In a purchase order dated September 15, 2023, with the description “Black Lives Matter Plaza Redo,” a vendor charged DC-based Equus Striping a total of $53,551.20 for supplies for “BLMRedo2023.” These supplies included “StreetBond 250 Yellow-BLM (MMA),” “StreetBond 250 Catalyst,” and “StreetBond Primer,” plus shipping.

    The labor for the repainting was provided by a subcontractor called Dewberry and totaled $217,680.

    A memorandum of negotiations for the project dated April 13, 2023 indicates that the project required a foreman, operator, laborer, carpenter, and mason. Equipment included a backhoe/loader, portable air compressor, Bobcat, dump truck, pick-up truck, and service truck.

    The memorandum also indicates that the hourly rates submitted by the contractor on March 9, 2023, were rejected. After negotiation, the contractor submitted lower hourly rates and were accepted on April 13, 2023. The negotiated pricing was signed off on by DC Department of Transportation officials Dr. Eloka Kingsley Achebe (deputy program manager), Jaswant Matharu (project manager-local paving), and Gaiyath Naanou (resident engineer-local paving).

    We obtained the records in a November 6, 2023, FOIA request for:

    1. All budget records, invoices, work orders, authorizations, agreements and contracts involved in repainting the Black Lives Matter logo on Black Lives Matter Plaza in November 2023.
    2. All emails sent to and from the following DC Department of Transportation officials: Interim Director Sharon Kershbaum, General Counsel Frank Seales Jr, Chief of Staff Matthew Marcou, Chief of External Affairs Olivia Dedner, Chief Project Delivery Officer Sandra Marks, Interim Chief Operating Officer Neelima Ghanta, Chief Information Officer Khaled Falah, Chief Performance Officer John Thomas and Chief Equity and Inclusion Officer Nana Bailey-Thomas identified using the following search queries:

    a. BLM+Hamas

    b. BLM+terrorism

    c. BLM+Palestinian

    d. BLM+Palestinians

    1. All emails sent between any of the officials identified in Bullet 2 and any representative and/or employee of Black Lives Grassroots organization and/or with an email account ending in the domain @blmgrassroots.org.

    Here is the history of this story.

    On July 1, 2020, we filed a civil rights lawsuit against Mayor Bowser and other officials for First Amendment violations over their refusal to allow us to paint the message “Because No One Is Above the Law!” on a DC street.

    In August 2020, we filed a FOIA lawsuit against Bowser, the District of Columbia Department of Transportation and the District of Columbia Department of Public Works for records about the painting of “Black Lives Matter” and “Defund the Police” on a DC street in front of the White House.

    In September 2020, we filed a FOIA lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Transportation for records of communication between the Federal Highway Administration and the District of Columbia’s Department of Transportation about the painting Black Lives Matter on 16th Street NW near the White House.

     

    Congress Inches Forward on Biden Corruption Inquiries

    We’ve been probing the suspicious activities of Hunter and Joe Biden in Ukraine and China for years, and Congressional investigators have been at it as well. Our chief investigative reporter Micah Morrison updates us in Investigative Bulletinon what senators and representatives are learning.

    Congress is fitfully inching forward with investigations that could result in the impeachment of President Joseph R. Biden.

    In the House impeachment inquiry, Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer has subpoenaed Hunter Biden, presidential brother James Biden, and key business associates. “The House Oversight Committee has followed the money and built a record of evidence revealing how Joe Biden knew, was involved, and benefited from his family’s influence peddling schemes,” Comer said. “Now, the House Oversight Committee is going to bring in members of the Biden family and their associates to question them on this record of evidence.” The committee already has produced a remarkable array of witnesses, testimony, and documents showing that Biden family members raked in over $24 million from foreign nationals and hid the profits in shell companies.

    In the Senate, Charles Grassley’s interrogation of Justice Department conduct and the Bidens grinds on. In October, Grassley released a letter with the bombshell claim that the FBI “maintained over 40 confidential human sources” with “criminal information” on the Bidens. Grassley’s letter includes a sweeping request for Justice Department documents related to “Hunter Biden, James Biden, Joe Biden, and the Biden family,” as well as records of actions taken (and not taken) by Justice Department and FBI officials in matters related to the Bidens. He also indicates he plans to interview “25 DOJ and FBI personnel” involved in the Biden cases.

    Judicial Watch presses on with its own investigations. In June, we filed a Freedom of Information Act petition for FBI documents tied to a Biden Ukraine corruption probe. And this isn’t our first rodeo. From as far back as 2020, we’ve been uncovering details of Ukraine corruption tied to the Bidens. You can read more about JW’s investigations here.

    In his latest moves, Comer appears to be zeroing in on the flow of funds between James Biden and Joseph Biden, including a personal check from James Biden to his brother for $200,000. The White House has denied any impropriety involving the check, but it’s clear that James Biden is emerging as a major target of the House probe.

    The biggest paydays for James and Hunter Biden came from China—specifically from the energy conglomerateCEFC China. The total amount, flowing to Biden-connected entities, notes the Comer Committee, is “over $8 million.”

    In one gigantic payout, in August 2017, soon after Joe Biden left the vice presidency, CEFC wired $5 million to a new shell company formed by Hunter Biden. The new company would pursue energy and infrastructure deals. Hunter Biden would receive a $500,000 retainer and a $100,000 monthly payment. James Biden would be paid $65,000 per month. Hunter quickly got busy in Washington setting up a new office for himself and his CEFC partners. “Please have keys made available for new office mates,” he emailed building management. “Joe Biden, Jill Biden, Jim Biden, [and CEFC emissary] Gongwen Dong.”

    Was part of the plan also to pay Joe Biden? In an email sent to Hunter Biden and others about percentages of profit-sharing from the CEFC deal, a key Biden business associate asks, in what appears to be a reference to a ten percent share for Joe Biden: “10 held by H for the big guy?”

    An IRS agent who worked on the Hunter Biden case was pressed about that email in July testimony before Congress. He told the House Oversight Committee that “all I can do is speak to the evidence there” and “that email, ‘ten held by H for the big guy’ and from what I understand that to be is his dad, President Biden.”

    With Comer focusing on possible crimes, over in the Senate, Chuck Grassley is pursuing evidence of the cover-up. In his latest letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland and FBI Director Christopher Wray, Grassley writes that “years of investigation…indicate there is—and has been—an effort among certain Justice Department and FBI officials to improperly delay and stop full and complete investigative activity into the Biden family.”

    Grassley added: “I’ve been made aware that at one point in time the FBI maintained over 40 Confidential Human Sources that provided criminal information related to Joe Biden, James Biden, and Hunter Biden. An essential question that must be answered is this: did the FBI investigate the information or shut it down?”

    One key figure on Grassley’s radar is Ukrainian oligarch Mykola Zlochevsky, head of the controversial energy company, Burisma. Zlochevsky is also a focus of the House impeachment inquiry. But while Comer is following the money, Grassley wants to know what the FBI did about stunning allegations from the embattled oligarch.

    Hunter Biden joined the board of Burisma in May 2014 at a salary of $1 million per year. By the end of the year, according to a detailed Comer Committee timeline, Zlochevsky was complaining about U.S. “government pressure” and urged Biden to contact his father, the vice president. According to an interview with a Biden business partner released by the committee, Hunter Biden did “call DC” after being pressured by Zlochevsky and his associates.

    Earlier this year, Grassley released a bombshell FBI informant report of a 2016 meeting with Zlochevsky. In the report, Zlochevsky claimed he had been coerced into paying a $10 million bribe to Hunter and Joe Biden. It “cost 5 [million] to pay one Biden, and 5 [million] to another Biden,” the FBI informant reported Zlochevsky saying.

    Grassley now wants to know if the FBI buried that report and related documents. In his new letter, Grassley notes that in December 2019 the FBI’s Washington field office “closed” a case into “Mykola Zlochevsky, owner of Burisma, which was opened in January 2016 by a Foreign Corrupt Practices Act [FBI] squad.”

    How serious is the Grassley probe? “Based on the information provided to my office over a period of years by multiple credible whistleblowers,” the senator writes to Garland and Wray, “there appears to be an effort within the Justice Department and FBI to shut down investigative activity relating to the Biden family. Such decisions point to significant political bias infecting the decision-making of not only the Attorney General and FBI Director, but also line agents and prosecutors. Our Republic cannot survive such a political infection and you have an obligation to this country to clear the air.”

     

    Social Security Overpays Billions Under Leadership of Racial Equity Activist

    Your Social Security Administration is doling out your tax dollars like they are free money and it’s overpaying people billions of dollars. Our Corruption Chronicles blog has the details.

    Under the leadership of a noted racial equity activist the Social Security Administration (SSA) has mistakenly overpaid beneficiaries tens of billions of dollars, including a 65% spike in overpayments in one year. In 2023 the agency with a stated mission of ensuring equity and accessibility by addressing systemic barriers to participation and a commitment to providing services to underserved communities made a whopping $23 billion in overpayments, according to its latest Agency Financial Report. The figure is a marked increase over the already stunning $11.1 billion in overpayments that SSA erroneously made in 2022.

    SSA’s dreadful habit of overpaying billions in benefits goes back years as American taxpayers get stuck with the hefty price because most of the money is never recovered. In the last few years, the agency has doled out between $6 billion and $7 billion in new overpayments annually, the new report reveals. It shows that most of the 2022 overpayments, around $6.5 billion, occurred within the Old-Age Survivors and Disability Insurance (OASDI) programs which provide monthly benefits to qualified retired and disabled workers and their dependents and to survivors of insured workers. Eligibility and benefit amounts are determined by the worker’s contributions to Social Security. In prior years the problem was mainly in the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program which helps low-income elderly and disabled adults as well as children. In 2022 SSI distributed north of $4.6 billion in overpayments.

    At a congressional hearing earlier this year, SSA Commissioner Kilolo Kijakazi told federal lawmakers that her agency is trying to recover the money by sending out millions of “overpayment notices” to those who erroneously got extra cash. Kijakazi said 1,028,389 people got the notices in 2022 and 986,912 in fiscal 2023, which ended in September. Kijakazi is a renowned racial equity proponent with a storied career of researching—and tackling—structural racism and the racial wealth gap in both government and high-profile nonprofits. She has served as co-chair of the National Advisory Council on Eliminating the Black-White Wealth Gap at the leftist Center for American Progress and on the Washington, D.C. Equitable Recovery Advisory Group. In mid-2021 President Joe Biden named Kijakazi acting SSA Commissioner after previously appointing her to a lower-level position of deputy commissioner for retirement and disability policy.

    In the new agency financial report Kijakazi reveals that in 2023 she began to rebuild the SSA workforce by adding nearly 4,000 employees, yet problems persist. “We made progress toward eliminating our hearings backlog,” the commissioner writes in the report’s opening message, adding that “we ended FY 2023 with 321,819 cases pending, the lowest level since 2000.” The commissioner proceeds to highlight all the great things her agency has accomplished, including working to eliminate a backlog, reducing wait times for claims and improving organizational efficiency. “As good stewards of our programs, we strive to reduce improper payments and combat waste, fraud and abuse through our quality reviews, cost-effective program integrity work, and payment accuracy efforts.” Kijakazi ends her opening message by writing that there are “no material weaknesses in our internal controls.”

    Nevertheless, buried deep in the exhaustive 216-page report the agency discloses the billions it has overpaid in the last few years despite establishing a special Improper Payment Prevention Team in 2019 tasked with developing strategies to determine the underlying cause of payment errors and developing corrective action plans. SSA issues over $1 trillion in benefit payments annually and preventing overpayments can be as simple as providing employees with a “comprehensive tool” when calculating benefits manually. In fact, SSA found that it could have avoided approximately 73,000 overpayments totaling more than $368 million in 2022 if it had furnished a “comprehensive tool” for employees to do their job correctly. “Preventing improper payments is more advantageous than recovering them after they are made because SSA does not have to expend additional resources to recover the overpayments …” the report states.

     

    Soros-Tied Facebook Censors Consider Suppressing Anti-Immigration Speech

    You may enjoy chatting with friends and looking at pictures of the grandkids on Facebook without realizing that the “news” you see is being controlled by left-leaning censors. Our Corruption Chronicles blog reports.

    A few years after Facebook (now Meta) launched a censorship board to decide which posts get blocked an update on the panel, which is currently inviting public opinion on whether to suppress anti-immigration speech, is in order. The original board—as well as new members—is stacked with leftists, including a close friend of leftwing billionaire George Soros who served on the board of directors of his Open Society Foundations (OSF). This is important because the oversight board, as it is officially known, determines which posts get blocked from the world’s most popular social networking website which has an estimated 3 billion users.

    In a recent example, the Meta censorship board is considering whether anti-immigration posts fall under its hate speech policy which removes what the tech giant describes as direct attacks against people on the basis of protected characteristics such as race, ethnicity, national origin and religious affiliation. Refugees, migrants, immigrants and asylum seekers are protected against “the most severe attacks,” according to the oversight board, though “commentary and criticism of immigration policies” are reportedly allowed. Now the panel wants public comments involving how Meta should distinguish commentary and criticism of immigration policies from direct attacks on people based on protected characteristics, especially during elections. Board members will deliberate the case over the next few weeks, according to a statement posted on the Meta oversight website.

    Judicial Watch has gathered some important background on the characters who will ultimately issue the ruling. For starters, the group of 22 is overwhelmingly leftist and likely to restrict conservative views. Nearly half of the members have ties to Soros, the wealthy philanthropist who dedicates huge sums to spreading a radical left agenda that includes targeting conservative politicians, erasing national borders and identities, financing civil unrest and orchestrating refugee crises for political gain. Some on the oversight board have made political contributions to top Democrats such as Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and Elizabeth Warren and others have publicly expressed their disdain for former President Donald Trump. Among the panel’s standouts is András Sajó, the founding Dean of Legal Studies at Soros’ Central European University. Sajó was a judge at the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) for nearly a decade. He also served on the board of directors of OSF’s Justice Initiative.

    Many on the board are connected to leftist groups tied to Soros that have benefitted from his generous donations, according to Judicial Watch’s research. Alan Rusbridger, a former British newspaper editor and principal at Oxford University, serves on the board of directors of the Committee to Protect Journalists, which has received at least $750,000 from OSF. Rusbridger also served as a governor at a global think tank, Ditchley Foundation, that co-hosted a conference with OSF on change in the Middle East and North Africa and understanding political Islam. Afia Asantewaa Sariyev, a human rights attorney, is the program manager at Soros’ Open Society Initiative for West Africa. Sudhir Krishnaswamy, an Indian lawyer and civil society activist, runs a nonprofit called Centre for Law and Policy Research that focuses on transgender rights, gender equality and public health. The group is a grantee of a justice foundation that pocketed $1.4 million from OSF.

    The list of Meta judges connected to Soros and the organized left continues. Julie Owono is the executive director of a Paris-based nonprofit that advocates for privacy and freedom of expression online. The group is part of the Global Network Initiative, an internet oversight and policy consortium handsomely funded by Soros. Nighat Dad is a Pakistani attorney and the founder of the Digital Rights Foundation, a nonprofit based in Pakistan that has received $114,000 in grants from OSF. Civil rights activist Tawakkol Karman sits on the advisory board of Transparency International, which gets significant OSF funding. Helle Thorning-Schmidt, Denmark’s former prime minister, is on the board of the European Council of Foreign Relations, which has received millions from OSF. She is also a trustee at the International Crisis Group which has collected over $8.2 million from OSF and includes George and Alexander Soros on its board. Catalina Botero-Marino is the dean of a Colombian law school called Universidad de Los Andes which got over $1.3 million from OSF. Kenji Yoshino, a law professor at New York University, serves on the board of directors of the Brennan Center for Justice, which took in hundreds of thousands of dollars from OSF in 2021. Suzanne Nossel, an Obama administration official, is on the advisory board of the leftwing think tank Foreign Policy for America, which has received over $1.5 million from Soros in the last few years. Khaled Mansour, an Egyptian academic, is a director at the nonprofit Crisis Action, which has accepted $2.4 million from OSF since 2017.

    Until next week,

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