Boeing Co.’s approach to making the 737 Max was supposed to save money and help it compete with rival airplane maker Airbus.

Instead, the design created a crisis that killed hundreds of people, ate up billions of dollars, angered airlines and regulators, and cost Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg his job.

Muilenburg became CEO in 2015 — a few years after the company decided to create the Max by modifying its 1960s-era 737 airplane design rather than devising a modern passenger jet from scratch. But he was at the helm when an engineering quirk and a single tragic accident blossomed into a catastrophe that has consumed the company.

After a 737 Max crashed in Indonesia in October of last year, killing everyone on board, Muilenburg seemed to point blame at the pilots, and Boeing simply issued a notice saying flight crews should follow a safety checklist. Less than six months later came the deadly crash of a 737 Max in Ethiopia and the subsequent grounding of the plane worldwide. Boeing has endured a steady stream of bad publicity as details emerge about how Boeing handled the system that caused the crashes. Muilenburg has also riled the Federal Aviation Administration as the agency investigates the accidents, and the once-cozy relationship between the company and the regulator has deteriorated.

This weekend, Boeing’s board reportedly decided Muilenburg was finished.

“He was becoming seen as not only a public relations obstacle but a regulatory barrier,” said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, senior associate dean for leadership studies at the Yale School of Management.

In 2011, Boeing’s airplane business was in disarray.

Two of its major passenger jet programs — the new, fuel-efficient 787 Dreamliner and the 747-8 Intercontinental — were behind schedule and over budget. On top of that, rival Airbus was wooing stalwart Boeing customers such as American Airlines with its single-aisle A320neo plane.

To counter Airbus and save on development costs, Boeing announced it would outfit its old 737 with a new engine and a new name: the 737 Max. The company’s chief financial officer at the time said that would cost only 10% to 15% as much as designing a whole new plane.

Now, of course, the costs incurred by the 737 Max saga may outstrip the expected savings.

The two crashes killed a total of 346 people. There’s no telling when the Max will be cleared to fly again, which has put a dent into the plane’s sales and airlines’ flight schedules. The company faces congressional scrutiny and a criminal investigation for its handling of the incidents and the plane’s development.

The company estimates that the situation could cost it at least $9.2 billion. And it’s losing sales to Airbus. In October, Airbus’ A320 overtook the 737 in total orders for the first time.

“I really fully understand all the reasons that went into it,” Scott Hamilton, aviation industry consultant with analysis firm Leeham Co. in Washington, said of the Max design. “But obviously in hindsight, they should have taken a different direction. They could have built two airplanes for what it may wind up costing them.”

The original 737 design, which debuted in 1967, was low to the ground with foldable metal stairs that attached to the fuselage for passenger boarding. That low profile was good in the days before airport jetways, but it has since become a constraint Boeing engineers have had to work around.

As Boeing looked to modernize the plane, it added larger and more powerful engines to accommodate a bigger fuselage and more passengers. But engineers had to place those larger engines in a different position than the previous engines so the plane could clear the ground.

The new location changed the plane’s center of gravity and could cause the plane to pitch up under certain circumstances. To counteract that, engineers added the now-infamous flight control software known as the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System, or MCAS.

That software was implicated in the 737 Max crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia after it received faulty information from a sensor and pushed the planes’ noses down into a fatal dive.

After the crashes, the nation learned more about actions taken at Boeing during Muilenburg’s tenure.

In 2016, the chief technical pilot for the 737 Max expressed misgivings about the MCAS system. But the company went ahead with it and then successfully petitioned the FAA to take mentions of the system out of the plane’s flight manuals, arguing that it was benign. After the crashes, Boeing became aware of messages describing those concerns — but it waited months before giving those messages to FAA investigators.

The company also has exasperated the FAA in recent months by offering too-optimistic predictions of when the regulator would clear the Max to return to the skies.

In addition to the 737 Max crisis, Boeing has faced delays on its KC-46 aerial refueling tanker, which had problems with a camera system that helps the plane refuel other military jets.

Then on Friday, Boeing’s Starliner capsule — which is expected to carry NASA astronauts next year — failed to reach the International Space Station on its first test mission after a faulty timer threw off the craft’s autonomous functions.

Although these incidents are distinct, they suggest that the company has moved away from the engineering-first mindset it was once known for, said Jeff Yastine, equities analyst at investment advice site Banyan Hill Publishing.

“It really has become a crisis of confidence,” he said.

Boeing said in a Monday statement that the leadership change was “necessary to restore confidence in the company moving forward as it works to repair relationships with regulators, customers, and all other stakeholders.” David Calhoun, current chairman of the company, was named president and CEO.

While the timing of Muilenburg’s ouster was unexpected — in a crisis, companies typically try to maintain stability — the move can be seen as a symbolic one.

“Boeing has mishandled it all,” Hamilton said, adding that Muilenburg was “the face of Boeing. All that falls under his watch.”

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2019-12-23/boeing-737-max-dennis-muilenburg?_amp=true

Mark Steyn reacts to Bernie and AOC’s call for his young base to convince their parents to vote for him. #Tucker #FoxNews

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oh1fR2hwUxk

“The Trump administration’s repeated attacks defy the common-sense, bipartisan support that energy efficiency has long enjoyed,” said Steve Nadel, executive director of the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy. “They will cost consumers and businesses money, create uncertainty for businesses as rollbacks are contested in courts, add to harmful pollution, and undermine our efforts to address the climate crisis.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-attacks-on-wind-turbines-low-flow-toilets-and-led-lightbulbs-set-up-key-campaign-clash-with-democrats/2019/12/23/1077f64a-25a3-11ea-ad73-2fd294520e97_story.html

Abercrombie, a former longtime House member, said his decision comes from his experience as an ex-special election candidate and a gubernatorial candidate who himself resigned from Congress.

“Trying to do my job in Washington and run for office, another office, in Hawaii was just too difficult. I couldn’t do it,” he recalled. “I had hoped maybe I could do it, and it became obvious that I couldn’t. So I resigned my seat.”

Abercrombie serves as co-chair of state Sen. Kai Kahele’s congressional campaign to succeed Gabbard. But the former governor stressed that he concluded that Gabbard should resign on his own.

“He didn’t ask me to do it. I didn’t ask him whether he thought it was OK for me to do it,” Abercrombie said of Kahele. “Whether it’s good for him or not good for him, I don’t know. I think what’s good for the people of the 2nd District should be the primary question, and I’m sure he agrees with that.”

Abercrombie acknowledged, however, that he gave Kahele a heads-up and said he would support him if Gabbard were to resign and Kahele were to run in the special election.

“We have a new mail-in ballot system now in Hawaii so I think we can hold a special election pretty conveniently and at reasonable cost,” Abercrombie said. “The cost by not having representation … severely outweighs any logistical or mechanical problems associated with running a special election.”

Gabbard’s congressional office indicated she would continue to serve in Congress, crediting her for securing “major legislative wins for Hawai‘I” this session, such as improving reporting on Red Hill aquifer protection and helping veterans impacted by toxic burn pits.

“Hawaiʻi is Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard’s home and her heart,” said T. Ilihia Gionson, Gabbard’s Hawaii communications director. “Her pursuit of the highest office in the land has not compromised her and her team’s commitment to serving the people of Hawaiʻi in her fourth term in Congress.”

Abercrombie said he backed Gabbard’s first run for Congress in 2012. But he wouldn’t have advised her to pursue the presidency because he believes she’s more effective on foreign policy issues as a member of Congress.

He said he thought it would be difficult for Gabbard to represent her district once she announced her campaign for president. Abercrombie noted that she has rented a home in New Hampshire and missed more than 85 percent of votes since October, despite voting “present” on President Donald Trump’s impeachment last week.

“Then she didn’t vote on the budget for next year,” Abercrombie said. “I thought, ‘That’s it.’ Regardless of what her intentions were or what her motivations are, she’s not able to do the job for the 2nd District.”

“The bottom line for me is simple,” he added. “I believe that the only really honorable thing to do and sensible thing to do and politically forthright thing to do is to resign the seat, let us have a special election and then see whoever wins that seat whether they can do a good enough job to win a primary in August and a general election next November.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2019/12/23/tulsi-gabbard-neil-abercrombie-resign-089647

REXBURG, Idaho — A Rexburg attorney representing Chad and Lori Daybell says he is in contact with the couple but has no information regarding the whereabouts or welfare of two of their children — 7-year-old Joshua Vallow and 17-year-old Tylee Ryan.

The children have been missing from Rexburg since September. On Friday, the Rexburg Police Department announced an ongoing search for the kids and said the parents are not cooperating with officers’ attempts to check on the welfare of the children. Both Chad and Lori, whose maiden name is Vallow, have been named “persons of interest” in the children’s disappearance.

The couple is also connected to two active death investigations involving both of their former spouses — one in Fremont County, Idaho, and another in Maricopa County, Arizona. However, authorities in both jurisdictions say Chad and Lori are not persons of interest or suspects in those cases.

No charges have been filed against Chad or Lori in Idaho or Arizona. So far, Rexburg police have only indicated they want to talk with the couple to ensure the children are OK.

On Monday, attorney Sean Bartholick, of Rigby, Andrus & Rigby, issued the following statement on the Daybells’ behalf:

“Chad Daybell was a loving husband and has the support of his children in this matter. Lori Daybell is a devoted mother and resents assertions to the contrary. We look forward to addressing the allegations once they have moved beyond speculation and rumor.”

Family members say Chad and Lori Daybell bonded over some common religious beliefs.

Chad is a self-published Latter-day Saint author and owns Spring Creek Books, a publishing company he started with his former wife, Tammy, who died in October.

Many of the books he writes or publishes deal with doomsday situations or near-death experiences. In his autobiography “Living on the Edge of Heaven,” Daybell describes his two near-death experiences. On his website, Daybell says he’s helped “several prominent people publish books about their own near-death experiences.”

Both Chad and Lori were affiliated with a group called Preparing A People, an organization that says its mission is to “help prepare the people of this earth for the second coming of Jesus Christ.” On its website, the group says it doesn’t represent any church or official church doctrines, policies or positions; however, many associated with Preparing A People and those who speak at their workshops are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Preparing A People hosts several podcasts, a number of which both Chad and Lori have appeared on together over the past year to discuss their religious beliefs.

As of Monday morning, those podcasts were removed and the website posted a statement:

“We considered Chad Daybell a good friend, but have since learned of things we had no idea about. … We did not know Lori as well as we thought we knew Chad,” the statement reads. “In light of current concerning media reports and ongoing criminal investigations regarding the recent death of Lori Vallow’s previous husband in Arizona, and the sudden death of Chad Daybell’s previous wife in Idaho, and with new reports of Lori’s missing children and the death of Lori’s brother-in-law, and the unknown whereabouts of Chad and Lori, we feel it inappropriate to not (sic) promote any media content that may feature or contain references to either Chad Daybell or Lori Vallow.”

Michael James, the website operator, says Chad was a popular speaker at some of their events.

“He was one of our best speakers, and people really trusted him, (but) Chad evidently had some strange ideas about things we didn’t know about,” James said. “Occasionally, that happens, and when it does, you need to break with them.”

Two members of Lori’s extended family, Kay Vallow Woodcock of Louisiana and Brandon Boudreaux of Arizona, have spoken to multiple national news outlets about Chad and Lori’s involvement with the group. Woodcock said Lori’s behavior radically changed after becoming affiliated with the group.

Both told EastIdahoNews.com they believe involvement with Preparing A People, which they call a cult, led to the suspicious deaths of Chad and Lori’s former spouses.

“I don’t want to attack anyone’s beliefs … but when you look at the fruit that’s come from this group and its beliefs … it certainly, from my mind, doesn’t come from God,” said Boudreaux. He said his ex-wife, Lori Daybell’s niece, also joined the group. He claims in interviews and on social media that several months ago, someone tried to kill him by shooting at him.

James strongly denies the characterization that his group is a cult and says it is offensive to describe it as such.

“I have no idea what Chad and Lori did in their spare time, but Preparing A People is not a cult,” James said. “It’s just LDS people that go to conferences.”

The Fremont County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the suspicious death of Chad’s former wife, Tammy Daybell, who was 49 when she died.

She worked as a school librarian in Rexburg and Sugar City and was found deceased in her Salem home Oct. 19. Her death was believed to be from natural causes, according to a Rexburg Police Department news release, and she was buried shortly after in Springville, Utah.

But recently, questions were raised about her death and Fremont County Sheriff’s deputies had her remains exhumed Dec. 11. The Utah Office of the Medical Examiner conducted an autopsy, but the results of that investigation have not been released. On Friday, Rexburg police indicated they believed the death was related to the disappearance of Joshua and Tylee, but they did not specify how.

Fremont County Sheriff Len Humphries could not be reached for comment Monday.

The Chandler Arizona Police Department is investigating the death of Charles Anthony Vallow, the estranged husband of Lori. On July 11, Vallow was shot and killed by Lori’s brother, Alexander L. Cox, in a family fight.

Charles Vallow. (Photo: Linkedin profile photo via EastIdahoNews.com)

According to Fox10 in Phoenix police in Chandler say first responders found Vallow with two gunshot wounds in the chest. Investigators told reporters the estranged couple began arguing when Cox stepped in, and a physical fight ensued. Vallow reportedly hit Cox with a baseball bat, and investigators believe Cox fatally shot him.

Cox died Dec. 12 in Gilbert, Arizona. His death and Vallow’s are active cases and are under investigation, the Chandler Police Department told EastIdahoNews.com on Monday.

Authorities believe Chad and Lori were married several weeks after the death of Tammy Daybell.

Local authorities became involved in the investigation Nov. 26 after out-of-state family members contacted the department requesting a welfare check on Joshua, Lori’s adopted son with special needs. Police went to their home at 565 Pioneer Road in Rexburg after relatives said they hadn’t spoken to Joshua since September.

The children were not at the home during the check, and Rexburg Police Chief Shane Turman said the parents lied about their whereabouts.

“They’ve told us several stories about where the children are, but when we investigate, the children don’t exist where they say they should,” Turman said Friday. “We don’t know where they are at, but we think they are in pretty serious danger.”

The next day, Arizona authorities contacted Rexburg police regarding a cellphone ping at the same Rexburg address, according to a Madison County Sheriff’s Office log. The log states it was in relation to a missing child case. Rexburg Police Capt. Gary Hagen told EastIdahoNews.com the call also had to do with the Arizona death investigations.

Following the request, Rexburg police executed search warrants at the home. Investigators determined the Daybells abruptly left the house and city. Police do not believe the children were with them when they took off.

Hagen said investigators are unaware of how Daybell and Vallow left Rexburg – whether by car or airplane.

“We’ve been digging into that, and that’s still part of the whole investigation,” Hagen said.

Kennedy Elementary School in Rexburg Idaho where Joshua Vallow was last seen on Sept. 23. (Photo: Eric Grossarth, EastIdahoNews.com)

According to a Rexburg police news release, Joshua was last seen at Kennedy Elementary School on Sept. 23. Tylee was last seen that month as well.

Police did not comment on why the school did not report Joshua’s absence and why the children had not been reported missing to any law enforcement agency. Investigators are still searching for any information regarding the children and the Daybells.

Joshua is a 7-year-old with brown hair and brown eyes. He is 4 feet tall and weighs 50 pounds. Tylee is a 17-year-old with blond hair and blue eyes. She is 5 feet tall and weighs 160 pounds.

Lori Vallow Daybell is 46 years old and has blond hair and blue eyes. She weighs 125 pounds and is 5 feet, 6 inches tall. Chad Daybell is 51 years old and has brown hair and blue eyes. He weighs 230 pounds and is 6 feet, 3 inches tall.

The townhomes located at 565 Pioneer Road in Rexburg where police conducted a welfare check and served a search warrant in connection to the missing person cases of Joshua Vallow and Tylee Ryan. (Photo: Eric Grossarth, EastIdahoNews.com)

Anyone with information regarding the whereabouts of the children since September is asked to contact the Rexburg Police Department, at 208-359-3000, or the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), at 800-THE-LOST.

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Source Article from https://www.ksl.com/article/46695079/parents-of-missing-rexburg-children-issue-statement-attorney-says-they-are-loving-and-devoted

A CNN legal analyst tore into Nancy Pelosi’s strategy to force a fair impeachment trial in the Senate by withholding the House-passed articles from the upper chamber.

“I think she’s grasping here,” Paul Callan told CNN Newsroom on Monday when asked about the House speaker’s move. “The Republicans hold all the cards in the Senate. The trial of an impeachment is solely within the discretion of the Senate. All the prior impeachments have involved the majority of the Senate at the time of determining what the rules would be, and of course, the Republicans are in the majority now.”

He continued, “So the only thing she can do is try to threaten to withhold the documents that are necessary for the trial in order to get a fairer trial. But I think we’re coming to the end of the road on that, and the impeachment articles will have to be formally submitted.”

Callan, a British journalist and editor, added that he thinks a Senate trial could move forward even without receiving the articles from the House.

“Frankly, I think they could be tried even if they weren’t formally submitted. They’re a matter of public record. We know exactly what was voted,” he said. “But we’ll see how this plays out. And in the end, Mitch McConnell gets to call the shots, just as Pelosi called the shots on the House side. That’s because in the end, this is a political process. It’s not a court of law. It’s a political process, and it’s controlled entirely now by the Republicans.”

The House voted last week to impeach President Trump for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress following the scandal surrounding his July 25 phone call with the president of Ukraine, during which he urged the foreign leader to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden. The president was accused of conditioning military aid or a state visit on an investigation into the 2020 Democratic front-runner.

After the vote, which was nearly along party lines, Pelosi indicated that she would not immediately send the articles of impeachment to the Senate, arguing that she wants to wait until Republican leaders agree to terms for a fair Senate trial.

On Sunday, Marc Short, chief of staff for Vice President Mike Pence, called the move untenable. Hours later, another CNN analyst echoed that sentiment and warned the House speaker that the strategy could be a “double-edged sword,” calling her stance not “sustainable.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/republicans-hold-all-the-cards-cnn-legal-analyst-says-pelosi-is-grasping-by-withholding-impeachment-articles

Democrats argue that Mr. McConnell, who has said he is “taking my cues” from the White House, is effectively letting Mr. Trump plan his own trial and violating the oath that all senators take to be impartial jurors during an impeachment trial. In his letter, Mr. Schumer took a shot at Mr. McConnell.

“To oppose the admission of this evidence would be to turn a willfully blind eye to the facts, and would clearly be at odds with the obligation of senators to ‘do impartial justice’ according to the oath we will all take in the impeachment trial,” he wrote.

The letter builds on one that Mr. Schumer sent to Mr. McConnell on Dec. 15, in which he also asked for the Senate to subpoena an unspecified list of documents, along with the four witnesses. But that letter did not specify which records Mr. Schumer wanted.

In the new letter, he was specific. His request for the White House includes “email communications, messages, memoranda and other records” related to Mr. Trump’s July 25 call with Ukraine’s president, as well as White House records related to the whistle-blower complaint that spurred the House impeachment inquiry.

From the State Department, he asked for “detailed notes, emails, text and WhatsApp messages, memoranda to file, and diplomatic cables pertinent to the investigation that State Department witnesses told the House are being withheld.” The Office of Management and Budget, he wrote, “is also in possession of highly relevant documents and communications related to this case.”

Mr. Schumer’s letter comes on the heels of newly released emails that shed more light on Mr. Trump’s effort to solicit Ukraine to help him win re-election in 2020. The emails, released late Friday by the Trump administration to the Center for Public Integrity, show that Mr. Duffey, the budget agency official, asked officials to keep quiet over the suspension of military aid to Ukraine.

That request, the emails also show, came just 90 minutes after the call between Mr. Trump and President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine. During the call, Mr. Trump asked Mr. Zelensky to “do us a favor, though,” and investigate former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Mr. Biden’s son Hunter.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/23/us/politics/trump-impeachment-documents.html

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/23/business/boeing-dennis-muilenburg/index.html

As recently as Friday, the Boeing board was standing by Mr. Muilenburg. At a board meeting in Chicago last week where the production shutdown was deliberated, there was no talk of removing him, according to two people familiar with the matter. On Friday, a company spokesman said Mr. Calhoun still stood by comments he made in November, saying the board supported Mr. Muilenburg.

But over the weekend, simmering frustration with Mr. Muilenburg’s performance came to a head.

Boeing said in a statement that its board of directors “decided that a change in leadership was necessary to restore confidence in the company moving forward as it works to repair relationships with regulators, customers, and all other stakeholders.”

On Monday morning, Mr. Smith sent a note to employees saying that Boeing would “proceed with a renewed commitment to full transparency, including effective and proactive communications with the F.A.A., other global regulators and our customers.”

“This has obviously been a difficult time for our company, and our people have pulled together in extraordinary ways,” Mr. Smith added in the note, a copy of which was reviewed by The New York Times. “Over the next few weeks as we transition to new leadership, I am committed to ensuring above all that we meet the needs of our stakeholders — especially our regulators, customers and employees — with transparency and humility.”

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/23/business/Boeing-ceo-muilenburg.html

In addition to the five people who received the death penalty, three more people were sentenced to jail terms totaling 24 years, according to Shalaan, who did not name any of the convicted defendants. The death sentences must be confirmed by higher courts, he added.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/saudi-arabia-says-five-sentenced-to-death-in-killing-of-jamal-khashoggi/2019/12/23/02fc0ea4-256a-11ea-9cc9-e19cfbc87e51_story.html

WASHINGTON — Even as President Donald Trump awaits a trial in the Senate, his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani is moving full speed ahead with new allegations against former Vice President Joe Biden and the former ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, the very individuals targeted by Trump in events that triggered his impeachment.

In recent weeks, Giuliani — himself under federal investigation for his Ukraine activities — has cryptically teased what he calls new “proof” buttressing charges about Biden and purported corruption during the Obama administration, attempting to flip the script by contending that Democrats, not the president, are the ones guilty of obstruction and collusion with a foreign power to influence elections.

The allegations point to four Ukrainian would-be whistleblowers he says Yovanovitch silenced through visa denials, and include two multibillion-dollar schemes he says he’s uncovered and that Yovanovitch and the Obama administration conspired to cover up.

In tweets and interviews, the former New York City mayor has been intentionally vague about both the allegations and his newfound proof, while vowing to eventually reveal it to the Department of Justice and a trio of senators.

“All in good time,” Giuliani told NBC News via text message when asked when he’d produce the evidence.

But documents obtained by NBC News, interviews with people familiar with Giuliani’s activities and a review of his public comments show he’s relying almost entirely on assertions by Ukrainians whose credibility is questionable at best. In some cases, the allegations have already been thoroughly debunked.

Giuliani’s allegations have found a receptive audience in Trump, who says Giuliani will “make a report” to Attorney General William Barr about his “good information.” In the Senate, Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham and two other Republican chairmen are seeking interviews with Ukrainians and Americans with purported knowledge about what Giuliani alleges.

That has created the prospect that even as the Senate holds a trial on whether to remove Trump from office, Senate Republicans could counter-program the trial by carrying out their own publicized probe into Biden and his son Hunter and alleged Ukrainian meddling in 2016.

Here’s a look at what’s known and unknown about Giuliani’s new allegations:

$5.3 billion in squandered U.S. cash

Giuliani’s first allegation centers on $5.3 billion in U.S. taxpayer dollars he says were mishandled and even “laundered” during the Obama administration on Biden’s and Yovanovitch’s watch.

On Twitter, Giuliani cited documents from Ukrainian auditors he says show “much of the $5.3B in U.S. aid” was misused and “given to the embassy’s favored NGOs” — nongovernmental organizations. He says the U.S. Embassy “directed the police not to investigate.”

Former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch, right, testifies before the House Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Nov. 15, 2019, in the second public impeachment hearing of President Donald Trump’s efforts to tie U.S. aid for Ukraine to investigations of his political opponents. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)Susan Walsh / AP

The United States has never given $5.3 billion to Ukraine. Even Israel, the largest recipient of U.S. assistance, has never received more than $3.8 billion in a given year.

A 2017 report from Ukraine’s Accounts Chamber, the parliamentary auditing agency, and reviewed by NBC News does mention $5.3 billion in U.S.-funded “international technical projects” during the last full year of the Obama administration but not all the money was from the United States. Although the report concludes the funding wasn’t well-directed toward Ukraine’s top economic priorities, there’s no suggestion of intentional misconduct and no reference to laundering.

Giuliani hasn’t explained his claim that the U.S. urged Ukraine’s police not to investigate. But his reference in the same tweet to “favored NGOs” offers a window into his emerging claim.

For months, Giuliani has alleged that an anti-corruption nonprofit in Ukraine called AntAc colluded with the Democratic Party to dig up dirt on former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort. AntAc received funding both from the U.S. and from a philanthropy founded by billionaire George Soros, a fact Giuliani’s associates have used to fuel conspiracy theories.

Giuliani worked closely with John Solomon, a former columnist for The Hill newspaper, on articles about alleged Ukrainian election-meddling, including a column in March that said the U.S. Embassy pressured Ukraine to drop an investigation into AntAc.

The column included a letter from George Kent, then the No. 2 in the embassy, to the Ukrainian prosecutor’s office that said the U.S. was confident its money was being well spent on anti-corruption activities in Ukraine and that a probe into AntAc based on its receipt of U.S. funding was “misplaced.” At the time Kent sent the letter, Yovanovitch wasn’t yet the ambassador.

Kent, in his testimony in the impeachment hearings, said that the effort by the former Ukrainian Prosecutor General Yuriy Lutsenko, one of Giuliani’s key witnesses, to investigate AntAc was “completely without merit.”

$7.5 billion in laundered Ukrainian funds

Since his investigative trip to Ukraine and eastern Europe this month, Giuliani has been teasing a revelation he says is coming about another scheme, this one worth $7.5 billion.

It involves a claim that former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, who plundered the country’s assets before being ousted, had laundered $7.5 billion through an elaborate conspiracy involving Franklin Templeton, a U.S. investment firm, which purchased Ukrainian bonds nearing that amount starting a decade ago. They were later sold.

Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych looks on before signing an agreement in Kiev on February 21, 2014.Sergei Supinsky / AFP / Getty Images file

No proof has been produced publicly. A Franklin Templeton spokeswoman said the allegations are “not logical and entirely false,” pointing out that the money went from the firm to Ukraine’s government — the exact opposite of what’s alleged.

The unproven allegations have been peddled for years by Lutsenko and more recently by Ukrainian lawmaker and former journalist Oleksandr Dubinsky. Giuliani met with both men while in Europe this month.

After his meeting with Giuliani in Kyiv, Dubinsky posted a video to social media in which he said he’d told Giuliani about the alleged scheme. A spokeswoman for Lutsenko told Ukrainian media he had also told Giuliani that Yovanovitch had blocked him from investigating the stolen funds.

“She was OBSTRUCTING JUSTICE and that’s not the only thing she was doing. She at minimum enabled Ukrainian collusion,” Giuliani wrote this month on Twitter.

Yovanovitch declined through an attorney to comment on Giuliani’s allegations. But the Franklin Templeton theory dovetails with Giuliani’s repeated assertions that Yovanovitch “perjured herself” in her impeachment testimony.

Lutsenko says when he was prosecutor general, Yovanovitch impeded his efforts to obtain Justice Department help in investigating money laundering and Yanukovych’s graft. Yovanovitch testified he wasn’t serious about those aims and just wanted high-profile meetings with the U.S. attorney general and the FBI director.

Yovanovitch testified she encouraged Lutsenko to meet with the FBI’s legal attaché at the embassy, the normal process for requesting law enforcement cooperation between countries, but that Lutsenko “didn’t want to share that information.”

Not so, Lutsenko said alongside Giuliani in an interview this month with One America News Network, the far-right television outlet that traveled with Giuliani to Ukraine. He held up a letter he sent in 2017 to the legal attaché about the Franklin Templeton allegations, as evidence that Yovanovitch perjured herself by saying he never contacted the attaché.

A former senior U.S. official said the letter in question was spurious and offered no proof that any of the money was in the U.S., and that because the legal attaché works for the Justice Department, it’s possible Yovanovitch wouldn’t have even known about it.

At the same time, Giuliani has been tweeting about connections between Franklin Templeton and House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, who ran the impeachment investigation.

Giuliani has echoed suggestions by Lutsenko that Schiff stood to benefit because he had a financial interest in Franklin Templeton. Schiff’s public financial disclosure shows he owns some of the firm’s mutual funds along with other various similar investments. There’s no evidence Schiff had any involvement in or knowledge of the firm’s purchase of Ukrainian bonds years ago.

Visas blocked for Ukrainian whistleblowers

Giuliani says he has four witnesses ready to testify that Yovanovitch “personally turned down their visas because they were going to come here and give evidence either against Biden or against the Democratic Party.” He said he also now has “documentary proof.”

It’s unclear why any of the individuals would need to travel to the U.S. to provide evidence about corruption, or whether Giuliani perhaps hoped to arrange meetings between them and Trump as he sought to deliver dirt about the president’s opponents.

Giuliani hasn’t disclosed a list of the four individuals or described the proof. But the likely list can be gleaned from other assertions he and his associates have made about Ukrainians unable to get visas to come to the U.S.

The first is former Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin, who preceded Lutsenko. Trump and Giuliani allege Biden bribed Ukraine with $1 billion in U.S. aid in 2016 to fire Shokin so as to shut down investigations into Burisma, the Ukrainian natural gas company whose board Hunter Biden joined.

Prosecutor General of Ukraine Yuriy Lutsenko speaks at a trial in Kyiv in 2017.Danil Shamkin / NurPhoto via Getty Images file

While in Europe, Giuliani also interviewed Shokin, who told him and One America News that at Biden’s demand, former Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko pressured him to wind down the investigation into Burisma. But it’s never been clear that Shokin was actively investigating Burisma in the first place, and critics say Shokin was in fact leveraging the threat of opening a Burisma investigation to solicit bribes.

Yovanovitch and other U.S. officials deposed in the impeachment inquiry testified that pushing Ukraine to replace Shokin was official U.S. policy, precisely because he was seen as failing to sufficiently investigate corruption.

Documents given to Giuliani by Ukrainian lawmaker Andriy Derkach and obtained by NBC News show Giuliani has also been absorbing allegations that under Yovanovitch, the U.S. Embassy was acting as a puppet master for Ukraine’s recently formed National Anti-Corruption Bureau, or NABU.

The documents circulated by Derkach, who was trained at a KGB school in Moscow, include emails between NABU officials and U.S. embassy officials in 2017. Derkach had said they show the NABU “leaked” information to the U.S. about ongoing criminal cases, including investigations into Mykola Zlochevsky, the Ukrainian oligarch who founded Burisma.

Giuliani has acknowledged that in January he tried and failed to get the Trump administration to grant Shokin a U.S. visa.

In her impeachment testimony, Yovanovitch says she didn’t block the visa for Shokin, but concurred when State Department consular officials suggested withholding a visa because of his “known corrupt activities.” She says she notified Washington of the decision and that senior State Department officials stood behind it even as Giuliani was pressuring the White House to overrule them.

Giuliani says that’s another example of perjury by Yovanovitch. He says he now has State Department records showing the reason stated for the denial was that Shokin had undergone an operation two years earlier “and hadn’t recovered yet.”

Giuliani didn’t explain that unusual claim, which would not normally preclude a visa, and hasn’t produced the records. But Yovanovitch in her testimony suggested Shokin had lied in his visa application by saying he was coming to visit family, not provide evidence about corruption, as he now claims.

A State Department spokeswoman didn’t respond to requests for comment about Shokin’s visa application or Giuliani’s claim.

A second Ukrainian likely on Giuliani’s list is Andriy Telizhenko, the former Ukrainian diplomat who says he witnessed the Ukrainian Embassy in Washington collude with the Democratic National Committee in 2016. Telizhenko traveled to Ukraine with Giuliani on his trip and told NBC News he now can’t return because his visa is being blocked by “Soros people” with influence over the U.S. Embassy.

A third Ukrainian who says his visa was blocked is Mykhaylo Okhendovsky, who chaired Ukraine’s Central Election Commission until the Parliament fired him last year.

In an interview alongside Giuliani, Okhendovsky told One America News that Kent, the former deputy under Yovanovitch at the U.S. Embassy, tried to block his visa. He said when he appealed to Yovanovitch, she brushed him off. Okhendovsky says while he now holds a U.S. visa, he’s been told it won’t be renewed once it expires.

The fourth Ukrainian appears to be Kostiantyn Kulyk, a former prosecutor who compiled a dossier about Hunter Biden. Giuliani says in a One America News segment that Kulyk made a formal application to come to the U.S. to divulge what he knows, but that the U.S. Embassy hasn’t responded.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/trump-impeachment-inquiry/inside-giuliani-s-new-push-flip-script-trump-s-impeachment-n1106321

Good morning and welcome to Fox News First. Here’s what you need to know as you start your Monday …

US on high alert for possible ‘Christmas gift’ missile from North Korea
U.S. officials are on high alert for signs of a possible missile launch from North Korea in the coming days that officials have referred to as a “Christmas gift.”

This Dec. 15, 2019, satellite image from Planet Lab Inc., that has been analyzed by experts at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, shows the Sohae Engine Test Stand in Tongchang-ri, North Korea. This new satellite image on a North Korean missile-related site shows the construction of a new structure this month. (Planet Labs Inc, Middlebury Institute of International Studies via AP)

A significant launch or nuclear test would raise the end of North Korea’s self-imposed moratorium on missile launches and tests. It would also be a major blow to one of President Trump’s major foreign policy goals to get North Korea back to the negotiating table to eliminate its nuclear weapons.

Amid the heightened tension, John Bolton, President Trump’s former national security adviser, in an interview with Axios, criticized his old boss over the administration’s misguided “rhetorical policy” toward North Korea along with its failure to exert “maximum pressure” during the high-stakes nuclear talks.

Earlier this month, the North conducted what U.S. officials say was an engine test. Experts believe it may have involved an engine for a long-range missile. It warned of a possible “Christmas gift,” saying the Trump administration was running out of time on nuclear negotiations. Click here for more on our top story.

Trump administration believes Pelosi ‘will yield’ on impeachment tactics
The Trump administration indicated Sunday that it is not very worried about what they believe is House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s political gamesmanship and that she will ultimately have to pass on the articles of impeachment against President Trump to the Senate for trial.

“I think her position is really untenable,” Marc Short, chief of staff to Vice President Mike Pence,  told “Fox News Sunday.”

“She will yield, there’s no way she can hold this position,” he later predicted.

Pelosi and most of the other Democrats in the House approved two articles of impeachment against President Trump last week for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress, yet they have sat on those articles instead of delivering them to the Senate for a trial. Pelosi has claimed that she is waiting for the Republican-controlled Senate to set the process for the trial before she appoints impeachment managers.

Meanwhile, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., pushes for the ability to issue subpoenas for additional witnesses and documents. Click here for more.

This image released by Disney/Lucasfilm shows Daisy Ridley as Rey in a scene from “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.” (Disney/Lucasfilm Ltd.)

The Force not as strong in ‘Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker’ opening weekend box office
The Force was a little less strong with “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.” J.J. Abrams’ Skywalker finale couldn’t match its recent predecessors on opening weekend, but it still amassed a $175.5 million debut that ranked far, far away from all but a dozen films.

“The Rise of Skywalker” came in with worse reviews than any “Star Wars” movie except for 1999’s “The Phantom Menace,” which famously heralded the debut of Jar Jar Binks. “The Rise of Skywalker” has a 57 percent fresh score on Rotten Tomatoes. Audiences, too, were relatively lukewarm to the movie, giving it a B+ CinemaScore.

That response may have muted what could have been a record-setting weekend. While Disney had cautiously estimated about a $165 million opening, analysts had pegged “The Rise of Skywalker” for around $200 million.

“The Rise of Skywalker” pulled in $374 million worldwide, according to studio estimates Sunday. The film was especially lackluster in China, as all “Star Wars” films have been. It grossed $12.1 million there. Click here for more.

MAKING HEADLINES:
American service member killed in action in Afghanistan.
Nearly 200 evangelical leaders condemned Christianity Today editorial on Trump.
Person of interest ID’d in fatal stabbing of NFL player CJ Beathard’s brother and 21-year-old.

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TODAY’S MUST-READS
Bill Cosby’s publicist calls Eddie Murphy a ‘Hollywood Slave’ after ‘SNL’ jab.
Seattle sees its darkest day in recorded history: report.
ICYMI: South Carolina Democrat facing backlash after Army, Navy personnel cleared of ‘white power’ hand-signal allegations.
Teen severely brain-damaged after breast implant surgery gone wrong, family says.

THE LATEST FROM FOX BUSINESS
China to cut import tariffs, open markets
Gas prices drop 4 cents per gallon.
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#TheFlashback: CLICK HERE to find out what happened on “This Day in History.”
 
SOME PARTING WORDS

Steve Hilton urges President Trump to wear his impeachment like a “badge of honor” and “wield it like a weapon of war” on Democrats.

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Fox News First is compiled by Fox News’ Bryan Robinson. Thank you for making us your first choice in the morning! Enjoy your eve of Christmas Eve Monday! We’ll see you in your inbox first thing on Tuesday morning.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/us-north-korea-christmas-bolton-trump

New Zealand volcano death toll rises as crews search for remaining victims

Police on Monday plan to review the search area of this month’s volcanic eruption on New Zealand’s popular tourist destination White Island, Police Superintendent Andy McGregor said. They will also determine how to proceed two weeks after the Dec. 9 eruption spewed ash and steam on the island. The death toll rose to 19 as police said Monday another person died overnight Sunday from injuries related to the eruption and has not been identified. Crews have unsuccessfully searched for the bodies of the two victims who have yet to be recovered. The missing, identified as tour guide Hayden Marshall-Inman, 40, and Australian tourist Winona Langford, 17, are presumed dead in addition to the other 17 fatalities. Whether tourists should have been allowed on the island is under investigation. Two separate inquires have been opened, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said. 

Prefer to listen? Check out the 5 things podcast below and subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts: 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2019/12/23/new-zealand-volcano-holiday-gift-shipping-5-things-know-monday/2674703001/

Ah, yes, Hanukkah. The Festival of Lights. The “Jewish Christmas.” The holiday that Adam Sandler wrote a song about.

To Jewish people, however, Hanukkah isn’t actually all that religious of a holiday  —though because of its proximity to Christmas, it’s often assumed the most important Jewish holiday. It’s not. Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and Passover, for example, are more religiously observed, though Hanukkah certainly holds cultural significance.

As a child, Hanukkah meant I could get presents just like my predominantly-Christian classmates and not feel left out. It also meant nodding politely (and still doing so) when someone said “Merry Christmas” come mid-to-late December, and trying to remember to say it back.

So, if Hanukkah isn’t all that religious, what’s all the fuss about?

Disclaimer: Like any minority, I am but one of many members and my experiences don’t reflect that of all Jews. 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/12/22/hanukkah-2019-not-jewish-christmas-when-is-it/2690015001/

All the same, said Gleb Pavlovsky, a political scientist who worked for more than a decade as a Kremlin adviser, Russia under Mr. Putin still reminds him of a sci-fi movie exoskeleton: “Inside is sitting a small, weak and perhaps frightened person, but from the outside it looks terrifying.”

Russia’s economy is dwarfed by that of America’s, which is more than 10 times bigger in dollar terms; it is too small to make even a list of the top 10, and it grew by around just 1 percent this year. Nor does Russia pack much cultural punch beyond its borders, despite excelling in classical music, ballet and many other arts. South Korea, thanks to K-pop and its movies, has more reach.

Yet Russia has become a lodestar for autocrats and aspiring autocrats around the world, a pioneer of the media and other tools — known in Russia as “political technologies” — that these leaders now deploy, with or without Moscow’s help, to disrupt a world order once dominated by the United States. These include the propagation of fake or at least highly misleading news; the masking of simple facts with complicated conspiracy theories; and denunciations of political rivals as traitors or, in a term President Trump borrowed from Stalin, “enemies of the people.”

Whatever its problems, Mr. Surkov, the Kremlin adviser, said, Russia has created “the ideology of the future” by dispensing with the “illusion of choice” offered by the West and rooting itself in the will of a single leader capable of swiftly making the choices without constraint.

China, too, has advocated autocracy as the way to get results fast, but even Xi Jinping, the head of the Chinese Communist Party, can’t match the lightening speed with which Mr. Putin ordered and executed the seizure of Crimea. The decision to grab the Black Sea peninsula from Ukraine was made at a single all-night Kremlin meeting in February 2014 and then carried out just four days later with the dispatch of a few score Russian special forces officers to seize a handful of government buildings in Simferopol, the Crimean capital.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/23/world/europe/russia-putin.html

Former national security adviser John Bolton is questioning whether the Trump administration “really means it” when the president and other officials promise to denuclearize North Korea.

Speaking with Axios in an interview published Sunday, Bolton accused President Trump of bluffing on the vow to rid the hermit nation of nuclear weapons, saying the White House “would be pursuing a different course” if the pledge were true.

“The idea that we are somehow exerting maximum pressure on North Korea is just unfortunately not true,” he said, calling the Trump administration’s assertion that the country cannot have nukes a “rhetorical policy.”

If North Korea follows through on its promised “Christmas gift” for the United States, which some believe is a sign that the country could resume long-distance missile tests, Bolton believes the White House should do something “that would be very unusual.”

According to him, administration officials should admit they were wrong and say, “We’ve tried. The policy’s failed. We’re going to go back now and make it clear that in a variety of steps, together with our allies, when we say it’s unacceptable, we’re going to demonstrate we will not accept it.”

“We’re now nearly three years into the administration with no visible progress toward getting North Korea to make the strategic decision to stop pursuing deliverable nuclear weapons,” Bolton said. “Time is on the side of the proliferator. The more time there is, the more time there is to develop, test, and refine both the nuclear component and the ballistic missile component of the program.”

Trump has been working toward denuclearizing the Korean peninsula and promoting peace between North and South Korea since he took office. Over the summer, he made history as the only president to have crossed the Demilitarized Zone into North Korea. Around the same time, he left a summit with leader Kim Jong Un and declared, “There is no longer a nuclear threat from North Korea.”

However, evidence has arisen, indicating that Kim has actually expanded the country’s nuclear arsenal since. Some have estimated that there are between 20-30 nuclear warheads in North Korea. The nation has also been frequently testing missiles over the past year, something Trump has said doesn’t bother him. Bolton, however, criticized the president’s indifference.

“When the president says, ‘Well, I’m not worried about short-range missiles,’ he’s saying, ‘I’m not worried about the potential risk to American troops deployed in the region or our treaty allies, South Korea and Japan,'” he said.

North Korea has set an end-of-year deadline to conduct nuclear negotiations with the U.S. The president is expected to remain at his Mar-a-Lago club for at least two weeks after arriving there over the weekend, so it is unclear when or where the negotiations would take place.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/rhetorical-policy-bolton-says-trump-administration-is-bluffing-on-vow-to-denuclearize-north-korea

Steve Hilton appealed to President Trump on his show “The Next Revolution” Sunday, encouraging him to “make Democrats pay for what they’ve done to America” following Trump’s impeachment in the House last week.

“The Democrats should feel plenty of shame over this impeachment, but the president certainly shouldn’t, and neither should his supporters,” Hilton said.

“In fact, just the opposite. Wear impeachment like a badge of honor and wield it like a weapon of war. Turn it on the Democrats. Make them pay for what they’ve done to America.”

Hilton’s fiery commentary followed Wednesday’s House vote to impeach President Trump for “abuse of power” and “obstruction of Congress” related to his dealings with Ukraine, a vote that received no Republican support.

“They hate him [Trump], they hate the people who support him and they really hate his success,” Hilton said of House Democrats. “They fear that none of their candidates are strong enough to beat Trump in 2020. They know that the Trump record is a re-election record. Any reasonable person looking at the policy results..the substance…the facts would agree that the Trump presidency is one of the most successful in American history.”

KARL ROVE: 2020 DEMS SHOULD RECUSE THEMSELVES FROM SENATE IMPEACHMENT TRIAL

Pointing to a slew of accomplishments by the Trump administration, including reduced unemployment rates, criminal justice reform and efforts to secure the southern border, Hilton doubled down in his criticism of House Democrats, accusing them of being “addicted to their own self-indulgent political games.”

Hilton also called for an extended Senate trial, although House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has not yet transmitted the articles of impeachment to the GOP-controlled Senate.

Pelosi has indicated she wants reassurances that the Senate would hold a fair trial, likely involving certain Democrat-sought witnesses, before sending over the charges.

“Drag this process out in the Senate, every day this goes on is worse for them. Put their dirty secrets on public display, make Joe Biden testify… make them pay,” Hilton said.

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“Make them suffer. Make them regret every minute of the last three years of Trump-hating, democracy undermining, progress blocking, Russia-Ukraine conspiracy theory madness that has taken over a once sane political party.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/steve-hilton-trump-impeachment-make-democrats-pay

WASHINGTON — Even as President Donald Trump awaits a trial in the Senate, his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani is moving full speed ahead with new allegations against former Vice President Joe Biden and the former ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, the very individuals targeted by Trump in events that triggered his impeachment.

In recent weeks, Giuliani — himself under federal investigation for his Ukraine activities — has cryptically teased what he calls new “proof” buttressing charges about Biden and purported corruption during the Obama administration, attempting to flip the script by contending that Democrats — not the president — are the ones guilty of obstruction and collusion with a foreign power to influence elections.

The allegations point to four Ukrainian would-be whistleblowers he says Yovanovitch silenced through visa denials, and include two multibillion-dollar schemes he says he’s uncovered and that Yovanovitch and the Obama administration conspired to cover up.

In tweets and interviews, the former New York City mayor has been intentionally vague about both the allegations and his newfound proof, while vowing to eventually reveal it to the Department of Justice and a trio of senators.

“All in good time,” Giuliani told NBC News via text message when asked when he’d produce the evidence.

But documents obtained by NBC News, interviews with people familiar with Giuliani’s activities and a review of his public comments show he’s relying almost entirely on assertions by Ukrainians whose credibility is questionable at best. In some cases, the allegations have already been thoroughly debunked.

Giuliani’s allegations have found a receptive audience in Trump, who says Giuliani will “make a report” to Attorney General William Barr about his “good information.” In the Senate, Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham and two other Republican chairmen are seeking interviews with Ukrainians and Americans with purported knowledge about what Giuliani alleges.

That has created the prospect that even as the Senate holds a trial on whether to remove Trump from office, Senate Republicans could counter-program the trial by carrying out their own publicized probe into Biden and his son Biden and alleged Ukrainian meddling in 2016.

Here’s a look at what’s known and unknown about Giuliani’s new allegations:

$5.3 billion in squandered U.S. cash

Giuliani’s first allegation centers on $5.3 billion in U.S. taxpayer dollars he says were mishandled and even “laundered” during the Obama administration on Biden’s and Yovanovitch’s watch.

On Twitter, Giuliani cited documents from Ukrainian auditors he says show “much of the $5.3B in U.S. aid” was misused and “given to the embassy’s favored NGOs” — nongovernmental organizations. He says the U.S. Embassy “directed the police not to investigate.”

Former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch, right, testifies before the House Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Nov. 15, 2019, in the second public impeachment hearing of President Donald Trump’s efforts to tie U.S. aid for Ukraine to investigations of his political opponents. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)Susan Walsh / AP

The United States has never given $5.3 billion to Ukraine. Even Israel, the largest recipient of U.S. assistance, has never received more than $3.8 billion in a given year.

A 2017 report from Ukraine’s Accounts Chamber, the parliamentary auditing agency, and reviewed by NBC News does mention $5.3 billion in U.S.-funded “international technical projects” — during the last full year of the Obama administration — but not all the money was from the United States. Although the report concludes the funding wasn’t well-directed toward Ukraine’s top economic priorities, there’s no suggestion of intentional misconduct and no reference to laundering.

Giuliani hasn’t explained his claim that the U.S. urged Ukraine’s police not to investigate. But his reference in the same tweet to “favored NGOs” offers a window into his emerging claim.

For months, Giuliani has alleged that an anti-corruption nonprofit in Ukraine called AntAc colluded with the Democratic Party to dig up dirt on former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort. AntAc received funding both from the U.S. and from a philanthropy founded by billionaire George Soros, a fact Giuliani’s associates have used to fuel conspiracy theories.

Giuliani worked closely with John Solomon, a former columnist for The Hill newspaper, on articles about alleged Ukrainian election-meddling, including a column in March that said the U.S. Embassy pressured Ukraine to drop an investigation into AntAc.

The column included a letter from George Kent, then the No. 2 in the embassy, to the Ukrainian prosecutor’s office that said the U.S. was confident its money was being well spent on anti-corruption activities in Ukraine and that a probe into AntAc based on its receipt of U.S. funding was “misplaced.” At the time Kent sent the letter, Yovanovitch wasn’t yet the ambassador.

Kent, in his testimony in the impeachment hearings, said that the effort by the former Ukrainian Prosecutor General Yuriy Lutsenko — one of Giuliani’s key witnesses — to investigate AntAc was “completely without merit.”

$7.5 billion in laundered Ukrainian funds

Since his investigative trip to Ukraine and eastern Europe this month, Giuliani has been teasing a revelation he says is coming about another scheme, this one worth $7.5 billion.

It involves a claim that former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, who plundered the country’s assets before being ousted, had laundered $7.5 billion through an elaborate conspiracy involving Franklin Templeton, a U.S. investment firm, which purchased Ukrainian bonds nearing that amount starting a decade ago. They were later sold.

Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych looks on before signing an agreement in Kiev on February 21, 2014.Sergei Supinsky / AFP / Getty Images file

No proof has been produced publicly. A Franklin Templeton spokeswoman said the allegations are “not logical and entirely false,” pointing out that the money went from the firm to Ukraine’s government — the exact opposite of what’s alleged.

The unproven allegations have been peddled for years by Lutsenko and more recently by Ukrainian lawmaker and former journalist Oleksandr Dubinsky. Giuliani met with both men while in Europe this month.

After his meeting with Giuliani in Kyiv, Dubinsky posted a video to social media in which he said he’d told Giuliani about the alleged scheme. A spokeswoman for Lutsenko told Ukrainian media he had also told Giuliani that Yovanovitch had blocked him from investigating the stolen funds.

“She was OBSTRUCTING JUSTICE and that’s not the only thing she was doing. She at minimum enabled Ukrainian collusion,” Giuliani wrote this month on Twitter.

Yovanovitch declined through an attorney to comment on Giuliani’s allegations. But the Franklin Templeton theory dovetails with Giuliani’s repeated assertions that Yovanovitch “perjured herself” in her impeachment testimony.

Lutsenko says when he was prosecutor general, Yovanovitch impeded his efforts to obtain Justice Department help investigating money laundering and Yanukovych’s graft. Yovanovitch testified he wasn’t serious about those aims and just wanted high-profile meetings with the U.S. attorney general and the FBI director.

Yovanovitch testified she encouraged Lutsenko to meet with the FBI’s legal attaché at the embassy, the normal process for requesting law enforcement cooperation between countries, but that Lutsenko “didn’t want to share that information.”

Not so, Lutsenko said alongside Giuliani in an interview this month with One America News Network, the far-right television outlet that traveled with Giuliani to Ukraine. He held up a letter he sent in 2017 to the legal attaché about the Franklin Templeton allegations, as evidence that Yovanovitch perjured herself by saying he never contacted the attaché.

A former senior U.S. official said the letter in question was spurious and offered no proof any of the money was in the U.S., and that because the legal attaché works for the Justice Department, it’s possible Yovanovitch wouldn’t have even known about it.

At the same time, Giuliani has been tweeting about connections between Franklin Templeton and House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, who ran the impeachment investigation.

Giuliani has echoed suggestions by Lutsenko that Schiff stood to benefit because he had a financial interest in Franklin Templeton. Schiff’s public financial disclosure shows he owns some of the firm’s mutual funds along with other various similar investments. There’s no evidence Schiff had any involvement in or knowledge of the firm’s purchase of Ukrainian bonds years ago.

Visas blocked for Ukrainian whistleblowers

Giuliani says he has four witnesses ready to testify that Yovanovitch “personally turned down their visas because they were going to come here and give evidence either against Biden or against the Democratic Party.” He said he also now has “documentary proof.”

It’s unclear why any of the individuals would need to travel to the U.S. to provide evidence about corruption, or whether Giuliani perhaps hoped to arrange meetings between them and Trump as he sought to deliver dirt about the president’s opponents.

Giuliani hasn’t disclosed a list of the four individuals or described the proof. But the likely list can be gleaned from other assertions he and his associates have made about Ukrainians unable to get visas to come to the U.S.

The first is former Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin, who preceded Lutsenko. Trump and Giuliani allege Biden bribed Ukraine with $1 billion in U.S. aid in 2016 to fire Shokin so as to shut down investigations into Burisma, the Ukrainian natural gas company whose board Hunter Biden joined.

Prosecutor General of Ukraine Yuriy Lutsenko speaks at a trial in Kyiv in 2017.Danil Shamkin / NurPhoto via Getty Images file

While in Europe, Giuliani also interviewed Shokin, who told him and One America News that at Biden’s demand, former Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko pressured him to wind down the investigation into Burisma. But it’s never been clear that Shokin was actively investigating Burisma in the first place, and critics say Shokin was in fact leveraging the threat of opening a Burisma investigation to solicit bribes.

Yovanovitch and other U.S. officials deposed in the impeachment inquiry testified that pushing Ukraine to replace Shokin was official U.S. policy, precisely because he was seen as failing to sufficiently investigate corruption.

Documents given to Giuliani by Ukrainian lawmaker Andriy Derkach and obtained by NBC News show Giuliani has also been absorbing allegations that under Yovanovitch, the U.S. Embassy was acting as a puppet master for Ukraine’s recently formed National Anti-Corruption Bureau, or NABU.

The documents circulated by Derkach, who was trained at a KGB school in Moscow, include emails between NABU officials and U.S. embassy officials in 2017. Derkach had said they show the NABU “leaked” information to the U.S. about ongoing criminal cases, including investigations into Mykola Zlochevsky, the Ukrainian oligarch who founded Burisma.

Giuliani has acknowledged that in January he tried and failed to get the Trump administration to grant Shokin a U.S. visa.

In her impeachment testimony, Yovanovitch says she didn’t block the visa for Shokin, but concurred when State Department consular officials suggested withholding a visa because of his “known corrupt activities.” She says she notified Washington of the decision and that senior State Department officials stood behind it even as Giuliani was pressuring the White House to overrule them.

Giuliani says that’s another example of perjury by Yovanovitch. He says he now has State Department records showing the reason stated for the denial was that Shokin had undergone an operation two years earlier “and hadn’t recovered yet.”

Giuliani didn’t explain that unusual claim, which would not normally preclude a visa, and hasn’t produced the records. But Yovanovitch in her testimony suggested Shokin had lied in his visa application by saying he was coming to visit family, not provide evidence about corruption, as he now claims.

A State Department spokeswoman didn’t respond to requests for comment about Shokin’s visa application or Giuliani’s claim.

A second Ukrainian likely on Giuliani’s list is Andriy Telizhenko, the former Ukrainian diplomat who says he witnessed the Ukrainian Embassy in Washington collude with the Democratic National Committee in 2016. Telizhenko traveled to Ukraine with Giuliani on his trip and told NBC News he now can’t return because his visa is being blocked by “Soros people” with influence over the U.S. Embassy.

A third Ukrainian who says his visa was blocked is Mykhaylo Okhendovsky, who chaired Ukraine’s Central Election Commission until the Parliament fired him last year.

In an interview alongside Giuliani, Okhendovsky told One America News that Kent, the former deputy under Yovanovitch at the U.S. Embassy, tried to block his visa. He said when he appealed to Yovanovitch, she brushed him off. Okhendovsky says while he now holds a U.S. visa, he’s been told it won’t be renewed once it expires.

The fourth Ukrainian appears to be Kostiantyn Kulyk, a former prosecutor who compiled a dossier about Hunter Biden. Giuliani says in a One America News segment that Kulyk made a formal application to come to the U.S. to divulge what he knows, but that the U.S. Embassy hasn’t responded.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/trump-impeachment-inquiry/inside-giuliani-s-new-push-flip-script-trump-s-impeachment-n1106321

The death toll for this month’s volcanic eruption in New Zealand rose to 19 over the weekend, while crews unsuccessfully searched for the bodies of the two victims who have yet to be recovered.

Police on Monday plan to review the search area, New Zealand Police Superintendent Andy McGregor said, and determine how to proceed two weeks after the eruption spewed ash and steam on White Island, a popular tourist destination. The missing, identified as tour guide Hayden Marshall-Inman, 40, and Australian tourist Winona Langford, 17, are presumed dead in addition to other 17 fatalities

The latest person to die from injuries related to the eruption has not been identified. The victim died in New Zealand’s Middlemore Hospital on Sunday night, Police Deputy Commissioner John Tims said in a statement. 

‘Excitement turned into horror’:New cruise details emerge after New Zealand volcano eruption

While officials didn’t share additional information, a Georgia television station reported that a local woman had died Sunday from complications in treatment related to the eruption. Metro Atlanta resident Mayuri “Mary” Singh had burns on 70% of her body, a friend told WXIA-TV, and passed away in a New Zealand hospital. 

Two dozen Australians, nine Americans, five New Zealanders, four Germans, two Britons, two Chinese and a Malaysian were visiting the volcano when it erupted. Many were from a Royal Caribbean cruise ship that had left Sydney two days earlier.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2019/12/22/new-zealand-volcano-eruption-death-toll-missing/2730849001/