Tag: United States

  • Las Vegas man arrested after stray bullet kills 9-year-old boy, injures brother

    LAS VEGAS (TCD) — A 41-year-old man faces charges in connection with the death of a 9-year-old boy who was fatally struck by a stray bullet in March.

    On March 7 at approximately 6:02 p.m., the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department responded to the 5300 block of Boulder Highway and found a male juvenile, identified by KLAS-TV as Sir’ Armani Iyair Clark, suffering from an apparent gunshot wound to the head. Medical personnel transported the victim to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

    Upon further investigation, police learned a bullet pierced a wall from a neighbor’s apartment, which struck Clark and his 10-year-old brother. Clark’s brother was reportedly transported to the hospital and treated for non-life-threatening injuries.

    During the shooting, the brothers were home with their parents and another sibling, KLAS reports.

    Las Vegas Police detectives identified Eliazar Quintero, who is in custody in the Nevada Department of Corrections for unrelated gun and drug convictions, as the primary suspect Wednesday, Oct. 11.

    According to KLAS, on March 8, two days after the shooting incident, Quintero was supposed to receive sentencing for firearm ownership or possession by a prohibited individual. However, he failed to appear in court, which resulted in a judge issuing a bench warrant for his arrest. Quintero was taken into custody March 10 and is currently serving a two-to-five-year sentence.

    Police said he will be booked into the Clark County Detention Center for second-degree murder involving a deadly weapon.



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  • Fact Check: Joe Biden isn’t ‘funding every angle’ of Israel-Hamas war, as misleading post claims

    As Israel bombarded Gaza with airstrikes in the days following a surprise attack by Hamas militants, one social media user attempted to tie the escalating conflict to money provided by President Joe Biden.

    “Biden doesn’t want the world to know that he is funding every angle of this conflict,” said text in an Oct. 11 Instagram post atop an image of competing missiles in the night sky.

    The post listed three claims about funding provided by Biden:

    • “Biden unfroze $360 million in 2021 and began sending it to Palestine.”

    • “America sends billions every year to Israel for military aid.”

    • “Biden unfroze $6 billion cash for Iran on 9/11.”

    This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

    The post misleads by leaving out critical facts to give the impression that money provided by Biden is behind the current Israeli-Hamas fight. In short, U.S. aid to Palestinians was for humanitarian reasons; Biden’s military funding to Israel continues a long tradition of U.S. aid that predates Biden’s administration; and the $6 billion of unfrozen Iranian oil money has yet to be disbursed.

    Let’s take a closer look at the three claims.

    Claim: “Biden unfroze $360 million in 2021 and began sending it to Palestine.”

    The State Department announced in May 2021 that the U.S. was providing more than $360 million in aid to the Palestinian people in Gaza and the West Bank. The announcement came soon after a cease-fire in an 11-day conflict between Israel and Hamas.

    It also reversed a decision by former President Donald Trump, who in 2018 cut off U.S. funding for humanitarian assistance to Palestinians.

    The money Biden provided was for humanitarian purposes, not for military aid, as the Facebook post suggests. According to a 2021 statement from Secretary of State Antony Blinken, the aid would not go to Hamas, an Islamic militant group the U.S. designated as a terrorist organization in 1997. Hamas won elections in 2006 and has ruled Gaza since 2007.

    “All of these funds will be administered in a way that benefit the Palestinian people — not Hamas, which has only brought misery and despair to Gaza,” Blinken said in 2021.

    Claim: “America sends billions every year to Israel for military aid.”

    The U.S. sends billions of dollars every year to aid Israel’s military, but it has been doing so for decades under both Republican and Democratic administrations. In fiscal years 2021 through 2023, the U.S. sent about $12.4 billion total to Israel for its defense, according to a March report from the Congressional Research Service. 

    The U.S. has sent more than $124 billion dollars in military aid and missile defense to Israel since 1946, according to that report.

    Claim: “Biden unfroze $6 billion cash for Iran on 9/11.”

    In the context of this post, this claim omits some important details. The Biden administration made a deal with Iran to unfreeze $6 billion in Iranian oil revenue held in South Korean banks in exchange for the release of five American prisoners held in Iran. Five Iranians held in U.S. prisons were also released as part of the deal.

    The $6 billion deal was announced in August, although the administration officially told Congress on Sept. 11 that it had issued a waiver to give Iran access to the money.

    In the days after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack, many Republicans, including presidential candidates, criticized the deal, claiming that the money could have indirectly helped fund the assault on Israel. Some argued that “money is fungible” — meaning Iran may have spent money arming Hamas knowing it would soon have access to the released funds.

    Biden administration officials said none of the $6 billion, which was transferred from South Korea to Qatar’s central bank, has been disbursed to Iran yet, and any distribution would be supervised by the U.S. Treasury Department.

    Blinken said in an Oct. 12 news conference in Tel Aviv, Israel, that the money can only be dispensed for humanitarian goods and that the U.S. has “strict oversight of the funds, and we retain the right to freeze them.”

    Our ruling

    An Instagram post said Biden is funding “every angle” of the Israel-Hamas conflict, citing $360 million in aid to the Palestinians, military funding to Israel and the unfreezing of $6 billion in Iranian oil revenue.

    The post leaves out key context. The $360 million in aid to Palestinians was for humanitarian purposes, and didn’t go to Hamas. The U.S. has given military funding to Israel for decades. The $6 billion in Iranian oil money has yet to be disbursed, and also can be used only for humanitarian reasons.

    We rate the claim Mostly False.

    RELATED: 

    The US freed $6 billion in Iranian money. Did it help fund Hamas’ attack on Israel? 

    How to avoid misinformation about the war in Gaza 

    Donald Trump wrong that US tax dollars went to Iran, Hamas 

    Fact-check: What Trump said about ‘$6 billion to Iran,’ immigration, economy at New Hampshire rally 

    Hamas militants ‘pouring’ across U.S. southern border? Donald Trump’s claim is Pants on Fire! 



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  • Andalusia powers past Slocomb for 8-0 start with 42-6 win

    Andalusia powers past Slocomb for 8-0 start with 42-6 win

    Published 11:19 pm Friday, October 13, 2023

    For the second straight week, Andalusia exploded out to a commanding lead in the first quarter and remained undefeated on the season with a 42-6 win at Slocomb Friday night.

    The top-ranked Bulldogs continue their unbeaten run and move to 8-0 overall and 5-0 in 4A Region 2. The Red Tops dropped to 1-6 and remain winless against region competition at 0-5.

    J’Marion Burnette started the scoring with a 55-yard touchdown run in the opening quarter. Cobb Stewart added the PAT for a 7-0 lead just 29 seconds into the contest. Burnette then followed up with a 42-yard touchdown run at the 5:38 point, and Stewart’s point after took the lead to 14-0. Jack Lathrop connected with Tyler Sigers on a 33-yard touchdown pass for a 21-0 margin with 1:30 left. Andalusia capped its offensive outburst when Burnette delivered his third touchdown of the first on the final play of the quarter. This one went for 34 yards as Stewart’s fourth PAT made it a commanding 28-0 lead after one.

    Lathrop went to the air again and found Jordan Stallworth open on a 27-yard touchdown pass. Stewart booted the extra point with 9:05 left until halftime, and the score remained 35-0 going into the break. Jordyn Skanes had a 3-yard touchdown run with 6:23 to go in the third. Logan Reeves tacked on the point after for a 42-0 lead. Slocomb averted the shutout bid with an 84-yard touchdown pass late in the fourth quarter. Nick Appleyard blocked the PAT attempt.

    Lathrop was 3-of-5 for 77 yards and two touchdowns in the win. Noah Curry went 2-of-3 and added 27 yards passing. Burnette had a strong ground game and led the attack with six runs for 167 yards and three touchdowns. Zerrick Jones added five carries for 46 yards, while Skanes had three carries and 24 yards. Curry and Pickle Calloway rounded out the rush attack with 14 and eight yards, respectively.

    Sigers led the receiving department with 33 yards and a score. Stallworth was next at 27 yards and followed by Kal Crittenden with a 17-yard grab. Brunson Wilson made one catch for 15 yards as Elijah Bradley had a reception for 12 yards.

    Xavier Marshall, Landon Caldwell, Riley Tucker, and Will Dalton paced the defensive effort with three tackles each in the win.

    The Bulldogs will be back at home for the final time in regular season play against B.T. Washington (5-2, 4-1) on Friday, Oct. 20.

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  • 20-year-old, 6 others charged in connection with death of missing 17-year-old

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (TCD) — A 20-year-old man and six others, including two juveniles, face charges in connection with the death of a 17-year-old who went missing in September.

    According to the Columbus Division of Police, Imperial Stewart was last seen Sept. 20 near Cleveland Avenue and Huy Road, and his family subsequently reported him missing. Police identified Michael Bowles, 20, and his brother, Mi’Quel Bowles, as persons of interest in his disappearance.

    On Oct. 3, police said Homicide Unit detectives believed Stewart was likely deceased, which led to the arrests of six people. Mi’Quel Bowles, Tywisha Peterson, and Russell Hardgrove-Madison are charged with third-degree obstruction of justice, and Genee Dumas and Samiya Proctor face charges of obstruction of official business, tampering with evidence, and resisting arrest. Investigators were still searching for Michael Bowles at the time.

    WCMH-TV reports a seventh suspect, Raymor Dumas, was taken into custody for tampering with evidence and obstruction of justice. Peterson is Michael and Mi’Quel Bowles’ mother.

    On Oct. 4, police announced they are charging Michael Bowles with murder and 16-year-old Hardgrove-Madison with murder, robbery, and obstructing justice. In a statement Friday, Oct. 13, the Franklin County District Attorney’s Office said Michael Bowles was officially indicted on two counts of murder, and one count each of aggravated murder, aggravated robbery, tampering with evidence, gross abuse of a corpse, and having a weapon under disability.

    According to WCMH, Stewart reportedly bought a gun from Michael Bowles. After the purchase, Hardgrove-Madison allegedly tried to rob him inside a bar, which led to Bowles shooting Stewart. Mi’Quel Bowles also reportedly sustained a gunshot wound, but it was not life-threatening. Investigators reportedly located the burned-out car in another county.

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  • Fact Check: Fact-checking Day 1 of the New Hampshire GOP summit

    NASHUA, N.H. — On the first day of a summit sponsored by the New Hampshire GOP, Republican presidential candidates emphasized support for Israel, embraced get-tough policies at the U.S.-Mexico border and advocated for federal spending cuts.  

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis railed against “moral equivalence” about deaths in Gaza as Israel’s military strikes back after an Oct. 7 attack by Hamas militants. DeSantis also said when it comes to Mexican drug cartels, he would “shoot them stone cold dead right at the southern border.”

    Former South Carolina governor and United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley took aim at Congressional Republicans, pointing to what she said is exorbitant spending on earmarks, a category where Republicans have outpaced Democrats. 

    Frontrunner and former President Donald Trump was the only leading candidate who didn’t make an appearance in Nashua. Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie earned the day’s only chorus of boos when he called out Trump for promoting the false narrative that the 2020 election was rigged.

    Vivek Ramaswamy joined other candidates in criticizing China. He said that we should “unshackle ourselves from the climate cult … while leaving China unchained.”

    Adding an element of unexpected drama to the event, Ramaswamy walked to the podium with a Colonial-era fife and drum corps. 

    Here, we fact-check several of the candidates’ claims. 

    Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie speaks to the press after his Oct. 13 speech at the GOP’s First in the Nation Summit in Nashua, New Hampshire. (Samantha Putterman/PolitiFact)

    Immigration

    DeSantis: “You have 7 million people coming into your country through the border illegally.”

    Haley: “6 million illegal immigrants have crossed that border.” 

    This is Mostly False.

    DeSantis and Haley misrepresent the data. Since Joe Biden took office in January 2021, U.S immigration authorities have encountered migrants about 7.2 million times at and between ports of entry. But that doesn’t mean that many migrants entered and remained in the U.S. That data shows events, not individuals, and one person can be recorded multiple times. 

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection data also shows that millions of those encounters led to removals. 

    Congress and federal government

    DeSantis: Imposing a central bank digital currency would allow the government to “limit transactions for ammo and gas and all the things elites don’t like.”

    This is misleading.

    When DeSantis made similar remarks in April, banking experts told PolitiFact that he  overstated the likelihood that such a system is possible, much less likely, to emerge in the United States — for a variety of technical, legal and political reasons.

    Experts said such surveillance may be technically possible. But in practice, U.S. laws do not permit the kinds of surveillance and control that DeSantis describes. 

    And even if it is technologically possible,”technology does not operate in a vacuum,” said American University law professor Hilary J. Allen. Systems can achieve specific goals only “if the relevant social and legal institutions permitted such use.”

    Haley: “Let’s claw back the $500 billion of unspent COVID funds that are still out there, instead of 87,000 IRS agents going after middle America.”

    The claim about the unspent COVID-19 funds is Half True, and the claim about 87,000 IRS agents is misleading.

    Government estimates show that more than $400 billion in pandemic relief money remained unspent as of Jan. 31. But a majority of the money has been allocated, meaning it’s earmarked to be spent and wouldn’t be eligible to be rescinded. Estimates about how much remains unspent and unallocated range from $70 billion to $90.5 billion.

    The government injected more money into the IRS as part of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. But the 87,000 figure includes all new hires — such as information technology experts and customer service representatives — not just enforcement staff. And many of those hires would go toward holding staff numbers steady in the face of budget cuts and retirements. About 7,000 new hires will focus on enforcement, making sure wealthy taxpayers and big corporations pay their taxes, according to an April 2023 IRS report.

    Haley: “Congress has only put out a budget four times in 40 years on time.”

    This is correct. The Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan research group, wrote earlier this year that Congress has passed its required appropriations measures on time only four times in the modern budgeting era. 

    Those were in fiscal years 1977, 1989, 1995 and 1997. 

    Ramaswamy: “Government agencies that should not exist … we will get in there and shut them down.”

    Ramaswamy repeated his promise to reduce the federal workforce by 75% during an eight-year presidency. Regardless of whether it’s a good or bad idea, he could be unable to carry it out on his own.

    Legal experts said sweeping cuts must be approved by Congress, and cannot be accomplished by presidential action alone.

    “The only way this could be changed would be for Congress to grant the president new reorganization authority,” said Donald F. Kettl, the former dean of the University of Maryland’s public policy school. “That seems highly unlikely.”

    Anne Marie Lofaso, a West Virginia University law professor, said Ramaswamy is arguing that the president “can unilaterally repeal a statute that authorizes the establishment of a government agency. That would be a radical revision of presidential power and a likely violation of separation of powers.”

    GOP presidential candidate and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis addresses the First in the Nation Summit in Nashua, N.H., on Oct. 13. (Louis Jacobson/PolitiFact)

    Fentanyl

    DeSantis: In Florida, “we had an 18-month-old baby crawling on the carpet of an AirBnB rental, and presumably whoever had it before was doing drugs. There was fentanyl residue in the carpet. The baby came in contact with it. And the baby died.”

    That’s what a March lawsuit alleges.

    Enora Lavenir, a 19-month-old visiting Wellington, Florida, died Aug. 7, 2021, at an AirBnB rental where her family was staying.

    The Palm Beach County Medical Examiner’s Office determined that the toddler died of acute fentanyl toxicity, NBC News reported when the lawsuit was filed. The family, who was visiting from France at the time of their AirBnB stay, filed a wrongful death lawsuit that said the property had a history of being used for parties. 

    NBC reported that a sheriff’s incident report showed investigators interviewed the prior renter, who said cocaine and marijuana were used during his stay, but not fentanyl. The sheriff’s office said the death is listed as accidental and the case is now closed.

    Education

    Haley: “Only 29% of our eighth graders in our country are proficient in reading. Only 26% of our eighth graders are proficient in math.”

    This is accurate. 

    The National Assessment of Educational Progress report — known as the nation’s report card — tests fourth and eighth graders on key academic subjects. The 2022 report, the first since the COVID-19 pandemic began, found that eighth grade reading scores declined in several states, and no state showed significant improvement, with an average 29% being proficient nationally. This continued a downward trend that predated the pandemic, but represented the largest average reading score decline since 1990.

    The report also found that eighth grade math scores fell in nearly every state, with 26% rated as proficient, down from 34% in 2019. 

    Electric vehicles

    DeSantis: “Places like California, they’re forcing all new cars, at a certain date, in the pretty close future, to be electric.”

    This is accurate.

    California has instituted an escalating scale for the percentage of new zero-emission cars and light trucks that must be sold on car lots  — 35% by 2026, 68% by 2030 and 100% by 2035. The state did not ban existing gasoline-powered cars.



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  • Bobcats get back on track with 33-14 win over Daleville

    Bobcats get back on track with 33-14 win over Daleville

    Published 11:24 pm Friday, October 13, 2023

    Opp caught fire in the second quarter and erupted for three touchdowns on the way to a 33-14 senior night win against Daleville at home Friday night.

    OHS Head Coach Matt Brunson was proud of his team for the crucial region win.

    “I thought the defense played extremely well early, and we had a blocked punt that swung momentum in our favor. Our offense got going after that, but it was a great defensive effort containing Daleville’s quarterback who is very athletic. Tonight was a big team win for us. We definitely needed it going into this four-week run of region play. While it was a big win and good for our seniors, we will have our hands full next week at Houston Academy,” Brunson said.

    The Bobcats (3-4, 3-2 3A Region 2) went three-and-out on their opening possession of the game. Omarion Pinckney then hit Devan Bush for a 12-yard gain across midfield. The drive ultimately stalled for the Warhawks (2-6, 1-5) as a punt attempt was blocked and recovered by Dylan Reisnour. Jaymaryon Allen needed only one play for a 1-yard touchdown run. The PAT was no good and left the score 6-0 with 5:51 to go in the opening quarter.

    The home defense forced its first three-and-out as Opp began its next drive at its own 37-yard line. Allen converted a third-and-7 with an 18-yard run to the visiting 42. Two plays later, Colby Ballard called his own number with a 16-yard scamper to the 21. Ballard then had a 6-yard carry on the final play of the first. After moving the chains for a first down, Ballard capped the nine-play, 63-yard drive with a 9-yard touchdown run. Allen converted the two-point conversion for a 14-0 lead with 11:23 left in the half. Grady Patterson recovered a fumble by Daleville on the ensuing kickoff.

    Starting at the visiting 30, Allen moved the chains again on third down with a 9-yard run. Ballard kept the drive alive with a 3-yard run on third-and-1 before Allen found the end zone from six yards out. The PAT came up short, but the score moved to 20-0 with 7:11 remaining in the second quarter. The Warhawks were unable to muster any yards on their next drive and forced into another punt. Allen continued his good work on the ground with a 25-yard run. The Bobcats rolled the dice on fourth down and saw it pay off when Ballard connected with Reed Adams for 10 yards. Damirian Thompson then hauled in a 4-yard touchdown pass from Ballard. Saban Sasser booted the point after for a 27-0 lead. Landon Langley picked off a pass by Pinckney and returned it 36 yards on the last play of the half.

    Daleville averted the shutout with a strong 8-play, 76-yard opening drive of the second half. Pinckney earned two first-down carries of 17 and 20 yards before a holding call sent the ball back. After two more runs, Pinckney went to the air and found Carrington Garland for a 44-yard touchdown. Pinckney ran in the two-point conversion and cut the deficit to 27-8 with 8:27 left in the third. Opp stuck to its ground attack and chewed up the rest of the clock for the remainder of the quarter. Ballard moved the chains three times including a pair of fourth-down conversions. Ballard then threw an 8-yard touchdown pass to Thompson on the first play of the fourth quarter. The PAT was no good, but the lead swelled to 33-6 with 11:46 to go in the game.

    Starting across midfield on their next drive, the Warhawks had a touchdown called back due to a holding call. On fourth-and-19, an incomplete pass turned the ball over on downs. The Bobcats were unable to pick up a first down and had to punt. Mark Romero took a handoff up the middle on the first play of the drive and raced 69 yards to the end zone. The two-point attempt failed and left the score 33-14 for the final outcome.

    Ballard was 3-of-7 passing for 26 yards and also had 23 carries for 81 yards and a touchdown. Allen earned nine carries for 74 yards and a score. Thompson finished with a pair of receptions for 16 yards and both receiving touchdowns.

    Jakelleus Lane led the strong defensive effort with eight tackles and a sack. Nelson Hall followed with seven tackles and a sack. Hank Messer and Landon Langley had four and three tackles, respectively.

    Opp travels to Dothan for the third time this year and meets Houston Academy (6-1, 4-1) in another region contest on Friday, Oct. 20.

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  • Ala. man allegedly killed and dismembered roommate, buried him in concrete grave under stairs

    WALKER COUNTY, Ala. (TCD) — A 30-year-old man is accused of killing, dismembering, and burying his missing roommate in what investigators are calling a “gruesome” crime.

    Terry Drummond, 62, was reported missing to the Walker County Sheriff’s Office on Oct. 7 after he was allegedly last seen three days prior at approximately 6:30 a.m.

    In a Friday, Oct. 13, news conference, Walker County Capt. Darrell Mote said investigators began looking into the case and securing interviews after Drummond’s roommate, Kevin Chad McLemore, filed the report.

    Officials obtained search warrants for Drummond’s home and the surrounding area after getting “basic information” from the interviews and their own investigation.

    On Oct. 11, detectives went to Drummond’s home on Harvey Drummond Road and executed the search warrant. When they looked in the back, they reportedly discovered a “makeshift grave covered in concrete blocks.”

    Investigators took the blocks apart and found dismembered remains in the shallow grave.

    Walker County Sheriff Nick Smith said Drummond’s death was a “very gruesome, detailed-out murder.”

    McLemore was arrested Thursday, Oct. 13.

    WBRC-TV reports McLemore faces murder and abuse of a corpse charges.

    According to the search warrant cited by WBRC, Drummond’s remains were located in a “garbage can filled with concrete, and buried the victim under a set of stairs.”

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  • Fact Check: Nikki Haley mixes red meat with more moderate tone in Exeter, New Hampshire, town hall

    EXETER, N.H. — After gaining ground in Republican presidential primary polling, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley brought her message of budgetary restraint and heightened immigration control to voters packed inside of an historic town hall.

    Haley and other Republican presidential candidates are gathering for campaign events and a state Republican Party summit in New Hampshire, which will host the first-in-the-nation primary slated for Jan. 23. PolitiFact reporters are in the state to cover the candidates in partnership with WMUR in Manchester, New Hampshire, and WCVB in Boston.

    During the event, hosted by USA Today, Haley received applause for promoting parental control in the classroom; instituting term limits for Congress; preventing Chinese entities from buying U.S. land; and “defunding” sanctuary cities for immigrants illegally in the United States.

    “Instead of catch-and-release,” Haley said, “we’ll do catch and deport.”

    Haley went after Republicans in Congress for approving more pet projects, known as earmarks, than Democrats, and she reminded the audience that Republicans have lost seven out of the past eight presidential election popular votes. When asked by an audience member how she would “represent the middle,” Haley described her response to the mass murder of Black parishioners at Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, when she took down the Confederate flag from the state’s Capitol. 

    Haley also distanced herself from former President Donald Trump, saying he “was the right president at the right time. I don’t think he’s the right president now.” 

    Haley, 51, urged a “competency test” for candidates over 75 years old. “We need people at the top of their game,” she said.

    New Hampshire voters listen to Nikki Haley at a town hall in Exeter, N.H. (Louis Jacobson/PolitiFact)

    Here’s our assessment of some of the claims she made in the stump speech and her responses to audience questions.

    On education, Haley promised to increase children’s proficiency levels. She said, “29% of eighth graders in our country are proficient in reading. 29%. 26% of eighth graders are proficient in math. That’s it.

    This is accurate. The National Assessment of Educational Progress report — known as the nation’s report card — tests fourth and eighth graders on key academic subjects. The 2022  report, the first since the COVID-19 pandemic, found that math scores for eighth graders fell in nearly every state, with 26% rating as proficient, down from 34% in 2019. 

    Reading scores also declined among eighth graders in several states and no state showed significant improvement, the report found. This continued a downward trend that predated the pandemic but represented the largest largest average score decline in reading since 1990.

    Haley also took aim at federal spending. She said, “Let’s claw back the $500 billion of unspent COVID that are out there instead of 87,000 IRS agents going after middle America.”

    Haley’s claim about the unspent COVID-19 funds is Half True. Government estimates show that more than $400 billion in pandemic relief money remained unspent as of Jan. 31. But a majority of the money has been allocated, meaning it’s earmarked to be spent and wouldn’t be eligible for rescission. Estimates about how much remains unspent and unallocated range from $70 billion to $90.5 billion.

    The government injected more money into the IRS as part of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, but the 87,000 figure includes new employees across the agency, including information technology experts and customer service representatives, not just enforcement staff. And many of those hires would go toward holding staff numbers steady in the face of budget cuts and  retirements. About 7,000 new hires will focus on enforcing that wealthy taxpayers and big corporations pay their taxes, according to an April 2023 IRS report.

    Haley also said there are “hundreds of billions of dollars of COVID fraud that we know exist, one out of every $7 spent.

    This is mostly right. A September Government Accountability Office report found that fraudsters may have stolen between $100 billion and $135 billion in federal unemployment aid during the COVID-19 pandemic. This comes out to about one out of every seven dollars set aside for unemployed Americans during the public health emergency.

    Haley also took shots at Congress. “They’ve only put out a budget four times in 40 years on time. Four times.

    This is correct. The Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan research group, wrote earlier this year that Congress has passed its required appropriations measures only four times in the modern budgeting era. 

    Those were in fiscal years 1977, 1989, 1995 and 1997. 

    Asked about her position on a national policy for abortion, Haley told the audience that there aren’t enough votes in the Senate to pass a national ban. “We may have 45 pro-life senators,” she said, which is short of the 60 votes needed to pass a national ban, given the Senate’s rules. “We haven’t had 60 Republicans in over 100 years,” Haley said.

    This is correct. The last time the Republicans had 60 Senate votes was from 1909 to 1911.

    Haley also touched on the public health danger from fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid. “More people have died of fentanyl than the Iraq, Afghanistan and Vietnam wars combined,she said.

    This is accurate. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data shows that about 77,000 Americans died from synthetic opioids overdoses in the 12 months ending in April of this year, according to a provisional estimate. Those three wars killed more than 65,000 Americans.

    PolitiFact Copy Chief Matthew Crowley contributed to this report.



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  • William Dudley ‘Billy’ Melton

    William Dudley ‘Billy’ Melton

    Published 10:51 am Friday, October 13, 2023

    William Dudley “Billy” Melton departed his earthly life on Oct. 10, 2023.  He died at his residence in Evergreen, Conecuh County, Alabama.  He was born at Stabler Clinic in Greenville, Butler County, Alabama on June 30, 1943.  He was a descendant of the earliest pioneer families who settled western Butler and eastern Wilcox Counties in the community of Friendship, which later became Pine Apple, Alabama.  He was predeceased by his parents, Thomas Plowden Melton, Jr. and Eulynne Brantley Melton.

    He grew up in Evergreen and attended the public schools.  He graduated from Evergreen High School in the Class of 1961.  In high school he was a letterman in three sports and was an All-State football player.  He was an honor student and President of his Senior Class.  He was State President of the Alabama Beta Clubs, Lieutenant Governor of Boy’s State and Attorney General of Boy’s Nation.

    He signed a football scholarship with Auburn University and played on the freshman team of 1961.  While at Auburn, he was a member of Squires, a men’s sophomore honor fraternity, and a member of Nu Chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order.  He graduated in 1964.  He was a life member of the Auburn Alumni Association.

    He entered the University of Alabama Law School in the fall of 1963 and graduated therefrom in January 1966.  At the Law School he was President of the Student Bar Association.  After graduation from Law School, he was employed by the Office of the Attorney General.

    In the spring of 1966, he entered the Democratic Primary to seek election to Place 2 of District 34 in the Alabama House of Representatives.  He won this nomination and had no opposition in the General Election.  He served on the Judiciary and on Inter Governmental Committees.

    He declined to seek re-election to the House and was nominated to the Senate by the State Democratic Committee to fill a vacancy in the 19th District.  He was sworn into the Senate on March 26, 1973 and served on the Judiciary and Insurance Committee.  He supported, among other things, the Judicial Article.  He never sought public elected office again.

    He was admitted to the Alabama Bar Association on April 22, 1966.  He was a trial lawyer for nearly fifty years.  He was an AV Bar Register lawyer by the time he was thirty nine years old and remained so until his death.  He was an involved member of the Alabama Bar most of his professional life.

    He was a member of the following associations and served in the following capacities, viz., Conecuh County Bar Association; Alabama State Bar (Member: Grievance Committee; Character & Fitness Committee; Alabama Rules of Appellate Procedure Committee; Advisory Committee on the Alabama Rules of Evidence; Disciplinary Commission; Board of Bar Examiners Advisory Committee; Chairperson, Supreme Court Liaison Committee; Vice President; Member and Chairman, Alabama Board of Disciplinary Appeals; Member, Leadership Forum Standing Committee; Batson Task Force; Federal Judiciary Liaison Committee; Board of Governors; American Board of Trial Advocates (Member, National Executive Committee); as well as being a  Life Fellow of the Alabama Law Foundation.

    He also authored “Uninsured Motorist Coverage: A Significant Decision,” 32 Alabama Lawyer 185, 1970.He was a member of The International Society of Barristers.  He served on the Editorial Boards of Alabama Trial Lawyers Journal and The Alabama Lawyer.  He was the Bar Commissioner, 35th Judicial Circuit, 1986-1996 and the Alabama Pattern Jury Charges Committee.

    He served as a Judge on the Alabama Court of the Judiciary for many years.

    He was licensed to practice in the State of Alabama, U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. Court of Appeals, Fifth and Eleventh Circuits and Poarch Band of Creek Indians Tribal Court.

    He was a supporter of the University of Alabama Law School. He received the 2007 Sam W. Pipes Farrah Law Alumni Society Award. He served as Vice-Chairman, and Chairman, of the Farrah Law Society; a member, Law School “Campaign for Alabama” Steering Committee; Member, Board of Directors, Secretary, Vice President, and President, of the  University of Alabama Law School Foundation.  He served the University of Alabama School of Law on the Law School Foundation Executive Committee. 

    His hobby was the study of history.  He was a member and Director in the Alabama Historical Association, Friends of Alabama Archives, Archives Foundation, and Alabama Bench and Bar Historical Society. He was a member of the Wilcox County Historical Society and the Butler County Historical and Genealogical Society.  He served as a member of Board of Directors of The Alabama Heritage Foundation.

    He held a membership in Sons of American Revolution, Sons of Confederate Veterans, Alabama Genealogical Society and First Families of Alabama.

    He was Baptized into the fellowship of The Evergreen Baptist Church on January 17, 1954 and became a lifelong member.  He taught Sunday School for many years and served as a Deacon.  He edited and co-authored “The History of The Evergreen Baptist Church.”  He served as a Trustee for many years. He also served on the Board of Directors of The Alabama Baptist.

    He was a member of the Board of Directors of Eastern Sleep Products, Inc. in Richmond, Virginia for many years.

    During his vacations from his early educational years, he worked at Max Kahn Curtain Corporation, Flexible Southern Company and with the Conecuh County Road Department.

    He is survived by his beloved wife of 56 years, Nancy Miller Melton, and their two children:  Nancy Dudley Melton (Tyler) Berry of Franklin, Tennessee and Richard Plowden (Jennifer) Melton of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and five grandchildren:  Lathram Olivia Berry, Tyler Rieves (Tori) Berry, V, Mary Dudley Berry, Lee Miller Melton and Virginia Catherine Melton.

    A memorial service will be held on October 13, 2023 at 12:00 noon at the Evergreen Baptist Church, with visitation one hour prior to the service.  In lieu of flowers, memorials can be made to The Nancy Melton Scholarship for Girls at Alabama Baptist Children’s Homes, Post Office Box 361767, Birmingham, Alabama 35236-1767.

    Cope-Keahey Funeral Home is entrusted with arrangements.

    Source

  • Calif. man accused of killing his 2 young kids with spear gun is deemed not competent to stand trial

    SAN DIEGO (TCD) — A Southern California man who was arrested in 2021 for allegedly kidnapping his young children and killing them with a spearfishing gun in Mexico because they were “possessed by serpent DNA” was found not competent to stand trial.

    The San Diego Union-Tribune reports a judge in the U.S. District Court of Southern California determined the ruling Thursday, Oct. 12. The suspect will reportedly undergo a second competency hearing in March and will be sent to a facility until then.

    Federal prosecutors with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of California charged Matthew Coleman in September 2021 with two counts of foreign first-degree murder of United States nationals in connection with the death of his 2-year-old son, Kaleo, and 10-month-old daughter, Roxy. He was indicted on the same charges in the Central District of California, but the U.S. Attorney’s Office in San Diego said those charges will be dropped.

    According to the affidavit, on Aug. 7, 2021, Coleman allegedly took Kaleo and Roxy from their home in Santa Barbara and drove them to Rosarito, Mexico. While there, he allegedly “murdered his children by shooting a spearfishing gun into their chests,” then left their bodies in a ditch.

    Around the same time, Coleman’s wife spoke with law enforcement, and she said Coleman told her he was taking the kids on a camping trip. The wife reportedly “did not believe that M. Coleman would harm their children, nor did she believe her children were in any danger,” but she expressed some concern because Coleman did not have a car seat in his vehicle.

    One day later, on Aug. 8, 2021, Coleman’s wife reported them missing to the Santa Barbara Police Department. Police used Find My iPhone to pinpoint Coleman and saw he was in Rosarito. Santa Barbara Police contacted the FBI, and he was stopped at a port of entry Aug. 9, 2021, without any other occupants in the car.

    The special agent at the border reportedly noticed blood on the car’s registration paperwork.

    According to the affidavit, Coleman allegedly confessed to killing Kaleo and Roxy because “he believed his children were going to grow into monsters, so he had to kill them.”

    Their bodies were found Aug. 9, 2021, with “large puncture wounds in their chest cavities.”

    After allegedly killing them, Coleman discarded the gun and bloody clothing in a creek and in a trash can in Tijuana.

    Coleman was reportedly “enlightened by QAnon and Illuminati conspiracy theories,” which supposedly gave him visions that his wife “possessed serpent DNA and had passed it onto his children.”

    He allegedly claimed he “was saving the world from monsters.”

    The affidavit says Coleman admitted he knew his actions were wrong, but “it was the only course of action that would save the world.”

    Prosecutors were reportedly debating about whether to pursue the death penalty, but in January, they announced they would not, according to KFMB-TV.

    Source