Category: Security

  • Prosecutors say they had secret source on Michigan tabulator scheme

    A secret source provided prosecutors in Michigan with information on how five voting machines were obtained and inspected by supporters of former President Donald Trump after the 2020 election, according to newly filed court records.

    In a brief last week, Muskegon County Prosecutor D.J. Hilson’s office described a two-hour interview that occurred in March with someone — referred to as an “unidentified person” — who detailed the dismantling of at least one tabulator and the accessing of its “interior components.”

    The information was shared with prosecutors through what’s known as a proffer, a meeting in which a suspect or defendant can agree to provide key facts.

    “The proffer statement of the informer included information as to how the five voting tabulating machines were obtained, how they were transported and where they were brought,” wrote Timothy Maat, chief assistant prosecutor in Muskegon County, in a Nov. 9 filing. “The proffer also included information as to who was responsible for acquiring the five tabulators.”

    The revelation comes as Hilson, acting as a special prosecutor in the cases, continues to pursue felony charges of conspiracy to commit undue possession of voting machines against Republican former attorney general candidate Matt DePerno of Kalamazoo, ex-state Rep. Daire Rendon, R-Lake City, and lawyer Stefanie Lambert of South Lyon.

    The three individuals were allegedly part of a scheme to acquire and analyze voting equipment in Michigan in 2021 as they spread unproven claims that fraud somehow caused Trump to lose the 2020 presidential race to Democrat Joe Biden. Their accusations gained national attention and became part of arguments in favor of reversing the result.

    Hilson unveiled the criminal charges against DePerno, Lambert and Rendon in August, and the cases are currently playing out in Oakland County Circuit Court.

    There, Lambert and her attorney, Michael J. Smith, have filed motions attempting to force prosecutors to hand over to the defense more of the information they obtained through their investigation.

    Hilson’s team has said it’s provided the defense “thousands of pages of documents, many hours of recorded interviews, access to all tangible evidence seized and numerous pictures and video recordings,” according to a Nov. 9 filing. But prosecutors are contending they shouldn’t be forced to give the defense three specific recorded statements. Two of the recordings were meetings with Michael Lynch, a private investigator who was part of the effort to obtain voting equipment, and Mike Steckel, an agent with the Michigan Attorney General’s office.

    Hilson used the interviews to help make charging decisions, both Lynch and Steckel testified before a grand jury, and their grand jury testimony was provided to the defense, according to prosecutors.

    The third recorded statement that wasn’t provided to the defense came from the unidentified source.

    “The parties agreed that the only exceptions of confidentiality were if the unidentified person provided exculpatory information, provided testimony contrary to the proffer or the court ordered disclosure over the people’s objection,” the prosecutor’s office wrote.

    The unidentified person wants to maintain the confidentiality of the entire statement and his or her identify, prosecutors added.

    The person won’t be called as a witness by prosecutors and the defense won’t be able to call the person as a witness because of the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which protects individuals against self-incrimination, prosecutors said.

    Asked Wednesday if the person had been granted immunity or provided any other benefits, Hilson said only, “Standard proffer language includes the protection that anything that is said will not be used in any case in chief but could be used if the person testified in a court proceeding and made statements contrary to their proffer interview.”

    The Detroit News couldn’t independently determine the identity of the individual.

    But there were others involved in the effort to inspect Michigan voting equipment in addition to DePerno, Lambert and Rendon. Attorney General Dana Nessel referred nine people to a special prosecutor in August 2022 as part of the investigation.

    Hilson ultimately charged three of the nine individuals.

    Lambert has argued that court rules require the disclosure “of all recorded statements by witnesses and potential witnesses.”

    “The only remedy is for all recordings to be turned over to the defense,” Smith, Lambert’s lawyer, wrote in a court filing this month.

    Lambert has submitted an emergency motion urging the recordings’ disclosure on Nov. 3. That motion hadn’t been resolved as of Wednesday afternoon by Oakland County Chief Circuit Judge Jeffery Matis.

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    © 2023 www.detroitnews.com

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Taliban patrols streets in rollerblades with AK-47s

    A video posted on YouTube and social media shows what appears to be Taliban terrorists patrolling through the streets of Kabul, Afghanistan, on rollerblades while armed with AK-47s.

    The video footage was first posted to YouTube on Nov. 11 by Yadullah Marvi, who is described as a parkour athlete in Afghanistan. The 22-minute video shows what appear to be Taliban terrorists skating between moving traffic next to a Taliban truck and holding onto the truck while moving through the streets.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFi0uwZy42s

    “The first part of the military performance of figure skating in the streets of Kabul,” Marvi stated in the video’s description. “In this video, the movement of our figure skaters were filmed, and people’s reactions were also filmed, and this is the first part of the video. Wait for the next parts!”

    READ MORE: Taliban Afghanistan travel video spoof goes viral

    The group of Taliban terrorists featured in the YouTube video are believed to have been outfitted with AK-47 rifles and can be seen wearing camouflage uniforms as they rollerblade through the streets of Kabul.

    In the video, multiple Taliban terrorist uniforms featured the black and white velcro flags of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, which is the official name of the government instituted by the Taliban following the Biden administration’s withdrawal of U.S. troops in 2021, according to Task and Purpose. The Taliban flags displayed in the video also feature an emblem with crossed swords and the Arabic wording, “There is no god but God and Muhammad is God’s messenger.”

    Kabul Police spokesman Khalid Zadron confirmed the authenticity of the video to The Telegraph, noting that the video featured public security police officers who were operating under the authority of the Ministry of Interior.

    The Telegraph reported that another Taliban security officer also claimed to have witnessed the rollerblading event. “It was really fun: amazing balance and body strength,” he said. “It might be common in the world elsewhere, but for us, it was rare to see on the roads of Kabul.”

    According to The New York Post, the Taliban’s rollerblading video seems to be the latest step in the terrorist organization’s rebranding efforts. The outlet noted that the Taliban has previously shared photos of terrorists at amusement parks and swinging on swing sets.



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  • China moves ahead with ‘mass policing’ plan for local communities

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    China is moving ahead with plans to shift local law enforcement from police stations to neighborhood “grids,” where local volunteers and teams of vigilantes will enforce the law and residents will be encouraged to inform on each other.

    The shift was heralded by a Public Security Ministry directive in March, calling for active integration of police stations into “grassroots social governance,” through partnerships with local “vigilante” groups and local ruling Chinese Communist Party officials.

    Now, authorities across the country are starting to lay off auxiliary police officers and merge local police stations with a view to outsourcing much of their daily work to neighborhood officials and local militias under the “grid management” system, according to several state media reports.

    The grid management system is so named because it carves up neighborhoods into a grid pattern with 15-20 households per square, and gives each grid a dedicated monitor who reports back on residents’ affairs to neighborhood committees, the lowest rung in the government hierarchy.

    Several police stations are to shut down in and around the southern province of Guangdong, “to effectively integrate existing police resources” and improve standardization, the Meizhou Daily newspaper reported.

    A Guangdong resident who gave only the surname Liao for fear of reprisals said there are two reasons for the move – one is to cut costs for cash-strapped local governments, but another is a shift to neighborhood policing and “stability maintenance,” a system of coercion and surveillance that seeks to prevent acts of defiance against the ruling Chinese Communist Party before they take place.

    “Stability maintenance measures are getting stricter and stricter,” Liao said. “They will never streamline the stability maintenance forces.”

    China is no stranger to mass law enforcement, and the authorities have previously mobilized large numbers of local residents known colloquially as “red armbands” or “Chaoyang aunties” to act as their eyes and ears during major events and high-level political meetings.

    But the new policing plan seeks to make such mobilization permanent, now that local officials have been granted law enforcement powers and are recruiting “grid officers” across the country to find out everything about residents in their small square of the “grid.”

    Several police stations in the eastern province of Shandong will also be merged, Shandong Toutiou Xinwen reported on Oct. 28.

    ‘Red mass prevention and enforcement’

    A local resident familiar with the situation who gave only the surname Wang said the officers being laid off are most likely to be the auxiliary officers without civil service status.

    “Currently each police station has about six or seven government-employed police officers and maybe 20 or 30 auxiliaries,” Wang said. “Once they merge, there will just be the six or seven government police officers in a station, and the auxiliaries will be laid off to cut costs.”

    A person familiar with the matter who declined to be named said auxiliary police typically do the kind of community policing work that will now be taken over by grid officers.

    “The auxiliary police can only take orders from the police station and carry out specific tasks like maintaining community order and helping the police with law enforcement duties,” the person said. “But grid officers deal with residents all day long, and they are better than the police.”

    “They understand the dynamics of local communities on the ground,” they said.

    The closures and mergers come after the March “action plan” on policing called for the expansion of “red mass prevention and enforcement” forces similar to those mobilized during the Olympics and parliamentary sessions in Beijing in previous years, as well as local partnerships with “social organizations such as vigilantes.”

    The action plan also repeated Communist Party leader Xi Jinping’s recent calls for a “Fengqiao experience,” a reference to the mass mobilization of citizens in aid of law enforcement and to police people on the basis of “class struggle” during the 1966-1976 Cultural Revolution. 

    “Such social control will both strengthen the internal stability maintenance system and set up a volunteer police force, extending the use of Chaoyang aunties across the country to safeguard the regime,” current affairs commentator Ma Ju told Radio Free Asia in an interview when the action plan was released.

    A resident of a Shanghai community who gave only the surname Zhang said grid management is something like the board game Go.

    “They have expanded the scope of their surveillance activities so it’s as if they are playing Go, surrounding you piece by piece,” Zhang said. “That’s what they call grid management.”

    “If a problem emerges in the grid, they will surround it immediately – the people are regarded as the enemy – it’s not a people’s government any more,” he said.

    Xi sees ‘enemies everywhere’

    Last week, Xi gave further official blessing to the “grid” system by marking the 60th anniversary of the “Fengqiao experience” under late supreme leader Mao Zedong with a visit to a number of organizations selected to take part in the expansion of “grassroots social governance.”

    The Ministry of National Security also called in a WeChat post for “a people’s war to safeguard national security,” citing the anniversary.

    Veteran current affairs commentator Hu Ping said the idea of constant “struggle” is at the heart of the “Fengqiao experience” concept.

    “In his mind, there are enemies everywhere,” Hu said. “There isn’t enough room in prison for so many people, so they are expanding [the restrictions of prison] into society at large.”

    “These organizations … are mainly focused on politics [rather than crime],” he said of the organizations singled out for the “Fengqiao experience” under Xi.

    “These are powerful controls, and a way to bring back the class struggles of the Mao era,” Hu said.

    Independent political scholar Chen Daoyin said there is a key difference between Xi and Mao, however. Where Mao sought to stir up the masses and mobilize them in his name, Xi wants to shut them down.

    “Xi Jinping wants to control everything through various means, including digitally, in ways that are already very technologically developed,” Chen said, citing the proliferation of government and police tip-off hotlines to encourage people to inform on each other.

    “Xi Jinping doesn’t want to mobilize people: he wants to calm them down and control them, as if they were in prison,” he said.



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  • Workers building a new Veterans Affairs clinic in Florida got shorted $224,000

    Two companies working on the construction of a new Veterans Affairs clinic in Daytona Beach shorted employees a combined $224,113 in pay and benefits by violating two laws covering federal construction, the U.S. Department of Labor announced.

    Cash and benefits that should have gone to 29 employees of EBP Electric Services, run out of Plant City by company president Edgar Barriga Ponce, accounted for $181,384. The remaining $42,729 should have gone to eight workers employed by M.C.A Communications.

    As with any federal construction work over $2,000, the building of the VA clinic at 1776 N. Williamson Blvd. is covered by the Davis-Bacon and Related Acts. Under Davis-Bacon, employers working on such projects “must pay their laborers and mechanics employed under the contract no less than the locally prevailing wages and fringe benefits for corresponding work on similar projects in the area.”

    The project is also covered by the Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act, which “requires contractors to pay laborers and mechanics, including watchpersons and guards, employed in the performance of covered contracts not less than one and one-half times their basic rate of pay for all hours worked over 40 in a workweek.”

    Both companies, Labor’s Wage and Hour investigators found, didn’t pay the fringe benefits and prevailing wages as Davis-Bacon demands. M.C.A used the lower rate to calculate overtime pay, resulting in another violation. EBP didn’t track or pay sick time, Labor said.

    M.C.A. Communications, a national telecommunications contractor based in Houston, didn’t answer an email from the Miami Herald. Efforts to reach Ponce weren’t successful. Online records say he reinstated EBP’s state registration in December 2021. A contractor’s license search for EBP with the Department of Business and Professional Regulation turns up only a license for Lakeland contractor Eric Hall.

    “Employers and workers can contact our office to learn about their obligations and rights under the law or attend any of our upcoming online compliance seminars,” Wage and Hour Division Deputy Regional Administrator Wildalí De Jesús said. “These violations are avoidable.”

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    © 2023 Miami Herald

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC



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  • South Korea, US revise deterrence strategy amid growing North Korean threats

    The defense chiefs of South Korea and the United States on Monday unveiled an updated security strategy, the first in a decade, specifically designed to counter the growing threats emanating from North Korean nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction.

    South Korea’s newly appointed Defense Minister Shin Won-sik and US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin announced the completion of revisions to the Tailored Deterrence Strategy, a strategic guideline tailored to threats posed by North Korea.

    In December 2021, South Korean and US defense leaders first acknowledged the imperative to amend the TDS, initially crafted in 2013. This recognition stemmed from the rapidly evolving nature of North Korea’s missile and nuclear capabilities. The outcome of revising the strategic guidelines came two years after the initial agreement.

    “(The defense chiefs) recognized that the 2023 TDS revisions render it into a flexible and robust document that serves as a strategic framework to effectively deter and respond to advancing DPRK nuclear and other WMD and non-nuclear capabilities with strategic impacts,” read the joint statement of the annual Security Consultative Meeting, a key bilateral defense dialogue, held in Seoul.

    “Also, both (defense) leaders noted that the 2023 TDS reflects guidance on ways to leverage the full range of US military capabilities, including US nuclear capabilities and ROK conventional capabilities, in preparation against DPRK nuclear and other WMD attacks across armistice, crisis, and wartime.”

    The acronyms ROK and DPRK represent the official names of South Korea and North Korea, which are the Republic of Korea and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, respectively.

    The South Korean Defense Ministry clarified that the 2023 TDS will be pivotal in creating a strong joint defense stance against North Korea’s potential deployment of nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction. This strategic plan will be instrumental as the allies incorporate it into their training exercises.

    The defense chiefs also adopted the “Defense Vision of the US-ROK Alliance” on the occasion of the 70th anniversary of the alliance that was forged by signing the mutual defense treaty in 1953.

    The document reflects the collective vision of the allies in the defense domain, elucidating priorities and development directions for defense cooperation over the next 30 years —strategically aligning with the changing security landscape and aimed at reaching milestones during the 100th anniversary of the alliance, the Defense Ministry said in a separate statement explaining the outcome of the SCM.

    “In recognition of the changing security environment, the Alliance must adopt a forward-looking posture that is responsive to its foundational and most pressing threat — the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) — while also contributing to the security of the region and the world,” the Defense Vision read.

    To that end, the document also “reaffirmed the importance of deterring strategic attacks and aggression from hostile actors in the region, including the DPRK, through continued extended deterrence efforts.” The allies also expressed their determination to “modernize capabilities to strengthen the combined defense architecture of the Alliance.”

    During the SCM, the South Korean and US defense chiefs also engaged in discussions on pending matters, including the September 19 inter-Korean military agreement.

    Minister Shin views the suspension of this agreement as necessary, stating that it has impeded South Korea’s capacity to monitor and conduct reconnaissance over North Korea, leaving the military vulnerable to surprise attacks from North Korea.

    However, when questioned about whether the inter-Korean military agreement affected the South Korea-US combined defense posture and if the allies should reassess its effectiveness, Austin chose not to disclose the US position.

    “We have an opportunity to exchange views on this and we agreed to stay in close consultation going forward,” Austin told reporters at a news conference held at the building of the Defense Ministry following the SCM.

    But Austin was confident when asked by The Korea Herald if it is realistic to maintain the current frequency of deployment of US strategic assets, especially amid the ongoing wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.

    “The answer is yes. The United States has the most powerful military in the world. Having said that, I’ll also say that everywhere we are and everything that we do, we work with allies and partners. That magnifies our strengths,” Austin said. “We will continue to stand with our allies and partners in the face of aggression.”

    The US defense secretary emphasized the fulfillment of the commitment to augment the deployment of strategic assets to the Korean Peninsula, as outlined in the April 26 Washington Declaration. He pointed to significant events such as the entry of the US Navy’s nuclear-capable ballistic missile submarine into a South Korean port — marking the first occurrence since the early 1980s — and the first-ever landing of the B-52 strategic bomber on a South Korean air base.

    “There will be another carrier battle group that comes soon,” he said without providing further details on the upcoming entry of the US Navy’s aircraft carrier. The US has deployed two aircraft carriers to the eastern Mediterranean following Hamas’ attack on Israel on Oct.7.

    “So, we’re going to continue to make sure that this region has what it needs to do, what we and our partners and allies want to do, and that is to maintain a free and open Indo-Pacific region,” Austin said.

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    (c) 2023 the Asia News Network

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Wright State and Sinclair are named among the best campuses for veterans

    A publication has named two Dayton-area schools among the best for veterans nationwide.

    Sinclair Community College was ranked 198 and Wright State University was 212 out of 325 schools ranked by the Military Times.

    The publication considered factors such as completion, retention, and grade point average in determining ranking followed by military-specific resources and financial assistance.

    Seth Gordon, director of the Wright State Veteran and Military Center (VMC), said what veterans need from colleges and universities is actually simple.

    “You want them to feel like they’re welcome,” Gordon said in an interview Thursday. “You want them to feel like they belong. When they walk in, you want them to feel like, we have resources for you.”

    Schools need to get the financial and benefits side of an education right, he said. And they should strive to provide the space and programs veterans need.

    And schools need to know who their veteran students are. Half of Gordon’s veteran students are married and in their 30s, for example.

    “One of my students, she’s 38, and she has a 21-year-old daughter,” Gordon said. “She needs something very different than the 19-year-old who is a (National) Guardsperson, right?”

    Veterans may bring a maturity to college that younger, more conventional students don’t yet possess.

    But they may also bring challenges other students don’t have.

    Those challenges can be big and small. If a student has a crucial VA medical appointment scheduled at the same time as an exam, for example, Gordon’s office will try to help that student navigate that.

    His office has two full-time staff and 12 student workers.

    “They have seen a lot more of life,” Gordon said of veterans.

    Among Ohio universities, Bowling Green State University ranked highest, at 11th overall. Ohio State was ranked 57th. The University of Toledo was placed at 113, Ohio University was 175, and Cleveland State was 237. Youngstown State (259) was also listed.

    Wright State said it serves about 600 veteran and military-connected students each semester.

    The Ohio Department of Higher Education also named Wright State a Collegiate Purple Star campus for its efforts for military-connected students.

    Becky Jones, manager of Sinclair’s Military Family Education Center, said veterans sometimes need help cutting through the red tape.

    “It’s navigating some of the bureaucracy around the benefits and making sure that they’re maximizing it so they can focus on school,” Jones said.

    This is the third year in a row that Sinclair has appeared on the Military Times list.

    Each year, about 2,000 military-affiliated students, including veterans, active-duty, spouses, and children, study at Sinclair, the college said. In 2023, a record 490 military-affiliated students earned Sinclair degrees and certificates, a 40% increase over 2022.

    “It’s not just a popularity contest,” said Scott Markland, Sinclair’s senior vice president of student development

    Shannon Hansen, an Air Force veteran majoring in English with a concentration in professional and technical writing, said Wright State was the best choice for her.

    “I was worried about fitting in as I am older than the average student,” she said in a Wright State release. “Also, with my PTSD challenges, I worried about interacting with so many people. The VMC has helped me through all of that.”

    She credited Wright State with providing a “safe space.”

    “They have listened to me vent, helped me through obstacles, encouraged me to be me by accepting me on my level, just as I am, understanding how difficult it is to ask and accept help,” Hansen said. “Without the support of the VMC, I am not sure I would be able to navigate this next chapter of my life at Wright State.”

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    (c) 2023 the Dayton Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Thai army to bring 41 Thais stranded in Myanmar home this week

    The mission is a collaboration between the RTA, the Thai-Myanmar Township Border Committee and the United Wa State Army to transport Thais stranded in the conflict area in Laukkaing, a town in Myanmar’s Kokong Self-Administered Zone.

    Kokong is in the north of Shan State near the Chinese border, where fighting between the Myanmar junta military and ethnic armed groups of the Brotherhood Alliance has been going on since last month.

    According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, over 200 Thais have been stranded by the ongoing clashes after being conned into working for a Chinese call-centre gang in Laukkaing.

    The RTA said that the Wa army would transport the Thais from Laukkaing to Nanteng and then to Kengtung in Shan state, where officials of the RTA’s 3rd Army Area will be waiting to bring them home in air-conditioned buses. The transport will be under the supervision of the Myanmar army.

    The commute from Nanteng to the Mae Sai border checkpoint would take 3-5 days, the RTA added.

    Upon arriving at the border checkpoint, the Thai workers will undergo health screening by officials from Fort Mengrai Maharaj Hospital, then undergo the usual immigration and humanitarian processes.

    The RTA said it would continue to work with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and related agencies to bring the rest of the Thais stranded in Laukkaing home as soon as possible.

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    (c) 2023 the Asia News Network

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Michigan lawmakers trapped as police clash with pro-Palestinian protesters in DC

    Michigan Democratic U.S. Reps. Debbie Dingell and Hillary Scholten were briefly trapped with other lawmakers inside a Democratic National Committee building on Capitol Hill after a pro-Palestinian protest erupted outside and police clashed with demonstrators.

    Dingell, an Ann Arbor Democrat, was among about 10 members of Congress, including Scholten and a member of House Democratic leadership, who were attending an event with Democratic congressional candidates Wednesday evening when they began hearing the chants of protesters outside, she said.

    She tried to leave out of the building’s rear and front doors, but protesters were blocking the exits. At the front, police stopped Dingell, pointing to a medic treating a young female officer who had just been brought inside after having been pepper-sprayed, she said.

    The lawmakers were trapped inside for about an hour before police evacuated them, Dingell said.

    “This rattled me more than January 6th (attack) did,” Dingell told The Detroit News. “I was scared. Someone is going to get hurt at one of these things. They can get out of control.”

    Organizers of the protest said people did get hurt ― claiming 90 demonstrators were injured and blaming police for “violently” shutting down their peaceful vigil without first warning them to disperse.

    Injuries included being dragged down stairs, hit with police bicycles, pepper sprayed and one individual who is being treated for a concussion, organizers told reporters on a Thursday phone call.

    “Instead of being able to actually talk to our elected officials and pray with them and sing with them and ask them for a cease-fire, the police shoved people down the steps,” said Rabbi Jessica Rosenberg of Minneapolis, a member of Jewish Voice for Peace and its Rabbinical Council.

    “Our intent in blocking various entrances was to make one path for Congress people and elected officials coming and going, so that we could speak to them. We’ve been calling their offices every day for months, desperately trying to get meetings and … often ignored.”

    Police said it was the protesters who were violent.

    U.S. Capitol Police said officers were keeping back approximately 200 people who were “illegally and violently” protesting outside the DNC building in the area of Canal and Ivy streets in southeast Washington.

    “We have handled hundreds of peaceful protests, but last night’s group was not peaceful. The crowd failed to obey our lawful orders to move back from the DNC, where Members of Congress were in the building,” U.S. Capitol Police said in a Thursday statement.

    “When the group moved dumpsters in front of the exits, pepper sprayed our officers and attempted to pick up the bike rack, our teams quickly introduced consequences ― pulling people off the building, pushing them back, and clearing them from the area, so we could safely evacuate the Members and staff.”

    Videos posted to social media showed officers trying to pull protesters in black shirts with “cease-fire now” on them away from the entrance to the building, which they were blocking. Another clip showed officers trying to shove the protesters away from the building.

    Police eventually cleared the area. Six officers were treated for injuries, “ranging from minor cuts to being pepper sprayed to being punched,” according to officials.

    One person, Ruben Arthur Camacho, 24, of Woodbridge, New York, was arrested for assault of a police officer after an officer witnessed him “slam another officer into a garage door and then punch the female officer in the face,” police said in the statement.

    “Last night our team was quick, decisive, courageous and in control,” the statement read. “When demonstrations cross the line into illegal activity it is our responsibility to maintain order and ensure people’s safety.”

    Scholten, D-Grand Rapids, said she was grateful to police for getting lawmakers and staff out of the DNC headquarters safely but she rejected claims that the demonstration was “peaceful.”

    “We have witnessed countless nonviolent gatherings in Washington and across the globe this week and over the past month since the Israel-Hamas war began. Peace is possible,” Scholten said in a statement. “I condemn violence in all forms and urge my fellow Americans to use their voices, but not violence, when working for the change we want to see in the world.”

    Rep. Sean Casten, D-Illinois, also was among the lawmakers evacuated from the building.

    “You have the Constitutional right to peaceably assemble and protest. But blocking all entries to a building with multiple members of Congress in it, protected by Capitol Police officers who have lived through January 6, is putting you and other innocent people at risk,” Casten posted on X.

    “We were rescued by armed officers who did not know the protestors’ intent; they knew only that Members of Congress were inside, could not leave and that protestors would not let police through. Forcing police to guess intent is irresponsible and dangerous.”

    Rosenberg, the rabbi, countered that this was misinformation because it was “clear” why protesters were there, as they wore “cease-fire” shirts, were singing and laying out candles representing lost Palestinian lives.

    At no time did any demonstrators try to enter the DNC building, in contrast to some claims made by lawmakers, Rosenberg said. Organizers also denied that protesters used violence or pepper spray against officers.

    The groups participating in the protest included Jewish Voice for Peace Action, the Jewish group If Not Now and the Democratic Socialists of America, demanding a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war that they say a majority of Democrats support.

    “I don’t understand why this escalated so quickly,” said Eva Borgwardt, political director for If Not Now. “This was a non-violent protest using similar tactics that I’ve seen used all month.”

    Sumaya Awad, a member of DSA-NYC chapter, said in a statement that the Democratic Party “just showed exactly how it feels about its voters.”

    “The Israeli military just stormed a hospital in Gaza, airstrikes have killed over 4,500 children, and water is running out,” Awad said.

    “Over 80% of Democratic voters are demanding a cease-fire and brought that message of peace to party leadership, who responded by unleashing an incredibly violent police attack on them.”

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    © 2023 www.detroitnews.com

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Inside the Israeli lab ‘reassembling and reconnecting’ the mangled bodies of the dead

    A bone. A tooth. A sliver of skull. They came in bags, endless bags, mixed with ash, coins, bullets and shrapnel. Like imperfect tapestries, some held the remains of different people. The bags were numbered, cataloged and scanned. DNA was extracted. The science was precise, but it was hard to know what happened, how a person was killed.

    One bag, which held clues to the final seconds of life, unnerved and intrigued Dr. Chen Kugel, head of the National Institute of Forensic Medicine here. Since Oct. 7, his staff has been working on identifying the remains of some of the 1,200 people killed by Hamas militants. He has been trying to understand not only the causes of death but also the underlying hate. Both, he said, often lie beyond one’s imagination.

    He pointed to a computer screen.

    “This is a piece of something that looks like charcoal,” he said. “But then you see it through a CT scan, and you see two spines, one of an adult and one of someone younger, maybe 10 or 12 years old. And two sets of ribs. You can see they are roped around with this metal wire. These were people who were hugging one another and burned while they were tied together. It might be a parent and a child.”

    So many bags — 748 at last count — have passed through the institute. In the immediate days after the killings, the bags were bigger; the remains, more definable. But since then, like a stain that fades but never goes away, the bags, and what’s inside them, have grown smaller in the realm where science and loss intersect.

    The remains came from towns and kibbutzim near the Gaza border including Sderot, Kfar Aza and Beeri — names now recited like whispered hymns — and the music festival in the Negev desert where 260 died. They were collected by Zaka, a team of mostly Orthodox volunteers, who scoured the landscape so that every possible part of a person could be buried according to religious law.

    A blackened tibia came in one bag.

    “It’s not human,” said Dr. Alon Krispin, head of radiology at the institute. “It’s a dog.”

    Most of the bodies were identified through DNA, and the staff’s mission now, said Kugel, a retired commander in the army’s medical identification unit, “is reassembling and reconnecting pieces.” He was shaken by the fierceness and cruelty that led to the bodies and CT scans he had seen: “This man has a shattered pelvis,” he said. “He was shot, stabbed, burned and run over.” He paused. “This is a 12-year-old girl. A decapitation. I don’t know if it was done before death or after death. I think after, but I cannot tell.”

    Kugel, 61, spoke of death as one might speak of equations, allowing him a certain detachment — at least on most days. He is a fit man with self-deprecating charm. His eyes are bright and deep-set and his voice has a resonance that draws you close. He’s a classically trained pianist who played for years in a jazz band. But he hasn’t sat at the piano — he likes the arrangements of George Shearing — in more than a month. He noted he is sometimes overcome by unexpected kindnesses.

    “One Friday evening volunteers brought food for Shabbat,” he said. “I had to say thank you on behalf of the workers here. I started to cry because it reminded me of humanity, and it reconnected me with the feeling that we are all people and to remember the ones who were murdered for nothing and remember the good people that care for you and think of you.”

    Doors slid open and closed at the institute, a ragged pale-colored building that sits behind a gray gate, testament to an underfunded and understaffed state agency. Odors of chemicals and death threaded cool air. Footsteps were quick; hands darted in and out of surgical gloves. Vans arrived with new bags. They were loaded onto stretchers, their contents scanned before they were wheeled into a holding area and taken to examining rooms where they lay beneath white lights, awaiting scalpels, tweezers, saws and instruments that could narrow the mystery to someone’s identity.

    The shape of a sinus, a filling, an operation from years ago. They make the map of the body, like lines between constellations in the sky. Michal Peer, a forensic anthropologist who grew up in Colorado, where she worked as an autopsy intern before moving to Israel, stood over a table examining bone fragments, ash, coins, pieces of cellphones. “A tooth,” said one of her staff, pointing to a scattering of charred bits on a silver tray.

    Peer helps identify bodies whose DNA has been burned away by heat that surpassed 700 degrees Celsius. “Almost everything I’m getting,” she said, is burned. “High temperatures. A long time.”

    She turned to a piece of blackened soft tissue that had hardened over the weeks. She dug for the bone inside.

    Hamas militants swept out of the Gaza Strip on the morning of Oct. 7 during the Jewish holiday of Simchat Torah. They fired rockets into towns and pushed east, attacking villages and military installations. They shot people at intersections and bus stops and raided homes where families tried to hide behind closed doors. People fled from house to house as the militants advanced. Many were shot multiple times and many were set alight. Bodies were strewn across a wide terrain. About 240 Israeli hostages were taken by militants back to Gaza.

    Kugel was home that Saturday and received a call “about a major event in the south. I didn’t know the magnitude. I thought maybe 100 or 150.” The deaths multiplied quickly, and the institute was too small to handle the tide of victims. The most bodies Kugel had had to deal with at the institute from a single incident was after a stampede that killed at least 45 at an ultra-Orthodox religious celebration in 2021 at Mt. Meron.

    The Israel Defense Forces at the Shura army base in central Israel took in the bodies from the Hamas attack. Identification began, using garments, jewelry, teeth, medical records and other items. To speed up the process and preserve the evidence, fingerprints and DNA samples were collected at Shura. Anyone not immediately identified was sent to Kugel’s institute.

    “Shura was a big place with many containers full of bodies,” said Kugel. “It looked like a port.”

    The attack came at a divisive time in Israel. Protests against the radical right-wing government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had reverberated for months. The nation was restless, angry and off balance. Kugel explained such politics with a joke, saying that Israel is not a country surrounded by enemies but rather enemies surrounded by a country. No one sensed — and Israel’s revered intelligence agencies missed — what Hamas was planning and how it would move like lightning and change a nation’s sense of itself.

    “Maybe,” said Kugel, who, like many Israelis, wants the world to see in grisly detail the damage done, “Hamas wanted to make a post-traumatic stress syndrome for this country. Never have so many Israelis died in one day. They wanted to make us afraid, to feel insecure.

    “But what we saw,” he continued, “was a country reunited. We understood who the real enemy was.”

    The exigencies of war are many and terrifying, leaving suffering on all sides. As the body bags arrived at the institute, much of the international community was condemning Israel’s relentless bombing in Gaza. More than 11,200 Palestinians, most of them women and children, had been killed, according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry. Kugel thought about this, the innocent and the perpetrators, which, depending on the side you’re on, was the story of this bitter and un-reconciled land. But what scared him the most, he said, was how visceral the Oct. 7 attack was, like a fury in the desert.

    “Perhaps you had the belief that one day you could make a compromise for peace,” he said. “But when you see this you understand it is not the leadership. It is not politics. It is real hatred. The [Palestinians] hate us.” The irony, he added, is that “the kibbutzim near Gaza were very left-wing and very pro-peace.”

    It will take a generation, he said, to change such searing hate. But it has been a number of generations, and Palestinians are still without a promised homeland and Israelis are well-armed yet less safe in a land of high walls and fences.

    “We don’t bomb Gaza to teach them a lesson,” Kugel said. “We do it because we learned our lesson.

    “We cannot survive like this. Everyone felt the threat to their existence.”

    Forty or so migrant workers from Asia were victims, he said, including a man found with Sri Lankan money in his pockets and a Thai laborer nearly beheaded with a garden hoe. “They were cuffed and shot and I said, ‘For God’s sake, how are they related to these things? Why be so cruel to them? They came here to make money for their families. Maybe you hate Jews, but why do you hate them?’ “

    Another van carrying bags arrived in the late afternoon. The Zaka men and the soldiers were tired, but they kept to the rhythm and the hours — stretchers rolled and numbers were recorded. Nir Blatman, who has worked at the institute since 2007, walked past the van to a shipping container on the rear grounds of the facility. He opened it. A stench curled out like a wave.

    “I’ve seen all kinds of death but not in this amount,” said Blatman, who at day’s end would go home and walk his dog and not think so much about his work. “I tried not to cry. I’m one of the older ones here. I needed to be strong. You must disconnect and work like a robot. Instead of being sad, I became angry. The people who were killed were scared, and they knew they were going to die and that no one was coming to help.”

    He looked in and pointed to four numbers on a sheet of paper. Hamas militants. They will be buried, he said, in a place where enemies go.

    Doors to examining rooms opened and closed. As he stood over a blackened foot — it was all that was left of a body — Dr. Konstantin Zaitsev struggled to remove a coil of shrapnel. He yanked and tugged it free. It shone silver. Another pathologist held up the foot; like a ray of light through a keyhole, the shrapnel had passed all the way through. The scrap of a garment next to the foot offered a clue.

    “It’s not an Israeli uniform,” Zaitsev said. “It’s probably Hamas.”

    Down the hall, a team waited for a van to deliver a body bag that was expected to contain the remains of a child. Investigators had earlier found a fragment of one of her bones about 100 yards from a house that blew up. A DNA test revealed the girl’s identity, but the fragment was tiny enough that the child could be alive (they didn’t believe she was) and missing, or one of the 240 people kidnapped by Hamas.

    “She was only 12 years old,” said a doctor. “We want to do all we can to finish.”

    He paused.

    It would never be finished. Parts would always be missing.

    The van arrived. It was not carrying the bag. They would have to wait until tomorrow.

    Patience here was demanded, but it was a hard thing to know. The hours and vials, so many things sealed, opened and tested. The way a day disappeared. The staff consoled one another with smiles, hands across shoulders, shared whispers. Earlier that morning, beneath the tall pines in the courtyard, Kugel thanked them for their work and told them that their lives would be divided into “before and after” Oct. 7. They sang the national anthem and went back to their tasks.

    “We had one person where we had only four pieces of his skull. Very small pieces,” said Kugel, holding up the blue tip of a pen. “They were from different parts of the skull so we concluded that he’s dead. His head was probably shattered with a high-velocity bullet. This is what’s in the grave. The only thing we found of him.”

    He said he didn’t want to be a man so detached that he didn’t feel. He didn’t think he was; a man’s burden, he said, makes him stronger.

    “I don’t want to brag,” he said. “But nowhere else in the world were so many people identified in such a short time. Even after 9/11 it took longer. It’s easier here because everyone must serve in the army. Their blood samples and fingerprints are on file.”

    It grew dark. Some of the staff changed out of their scrubs and into street clothes. A body was slid into a cooler. A pathologist rode her bike toward the gate. A security guard watched her glide beneath the trees. A few workers sat in the stillness of the courtyard. Soft music played. The vans were done coming for the night. But there would be more bags tomorrow.

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    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Ex-cop shows border agents a badge while trying to smuggle migrants into US, feds say

    A former police officer flashed a badge when border agents pulled over his SUV containing four migrants who had just illegally crossed the Mexico border, federal officials reported.

    The officer, who left the Los Angeles Police Department after being convicted of rape in 1993, showed agents a badge “similar in appearance and style” to an LAPD badge, the U.S. Border Patrol said in a Nov. 10 news release.

    He identified himself as a police lieutenant, agents said. A search of his SUV revealed an “un-serialized 9mm handgun, commonly referred to as a ’ghost gun,’” the release said.

    Agents had pulled his SUV over near Campo after residents reported a possible human smuggling incident the night of Nov. 6, officials said.

    The three women and one man in the SUV told agents they had recently crossed the border illegally.

    A records check revealed the ex-officer is a registered sex offender who was sentenced to three years in prison after his conviction, agents said.

    He was arrested in connection with human smuggling while in possession of a firearm and taken into custody.

    Campo is a border town, about 60 miles east of San Diego.

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    © 2023 The Charlotte Observer

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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