Authorities on Friday said they are still investigating why a Colorado man drove 20 miles from his house and fatally shot 10 people at a Boulder supermarket Monday, but a motive has so far eluded more than two dozen law enforcement agencies.

“Like the rest of the community, we too want to know why. Why the King Soopers Why Boulder? Why Monday?” Boulder Police Chief Maris Herold said in a press conference Friday. “It’ll be something haunting for all of us until we figure that out. Sometimes you just don’t figure these things out, but I am hoping that we will.”

Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, a 21-year-old resident of the Denver suburb of Arvada, faces 10 counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder in the first degree. He was ordered held without bail Thursday, pending an assessment “to address his mental illness.”

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/03/26/boulder-shooting-police-confirm-suspect-used-ar-15-style-pistol/7012734002/

QUINCY (CBS) — Police shot an armed robbery suspect in a stolen Rockland police car in Quincy Friday morning after a tense standoff and chase through several towns. The suspect, identified by I-Team sources as 36-year-old Eric Leach, has died.

It all started around 7 a.m. when Leach allegedly robbed a 7-11 convenience store in Rockland with a reported handgun and ran off with $334.

Rockland officers responded to the 7-11 and then a neighborhood about a half a mile away where two people had called to report the man had tried to get into their homes.

“Unfortunately, the officer in the heat of the moment, attempting to catch an armed robbery suspect, left the car unlocked,” said Rockland Police Chief John Llewellyn.

Llewellyn said the suspect ran off and officers followed. At this time, he got into one of the police cars and drove at officers who were able to jump out of the way.

The stolen cruiser later stopped on the Burgin Parkway in Quincy and was quickly surrounded by heavily armed police, but the suspect refused to get out. After an hour, he managed to get away again, driving around all of the police vehicles.

Stop sticks were deployed to flatten the cruiser’s tires and it stopped near the BJ’s Gas Station on the parkway and negotiations began.

Police surround a stolen cruiser in Quincy (Photo credit: David G. Curran/Satellite News Service)

“During the verbal negotiations, the police observed the suspect in control of a police patrol rifle. Despite the numerous requests to surrender, this suspect started to come out of the passenger door with the patrol rifle. The State Police Stop Team member discharged a weapon and shot the suspect,” said Morrissey.

“It is unfortunate that anybody got shot by anyone. The last thing a police officer wants to do is be involved in a police related shooting.”

While that was going on, commuters were forced to find alternative routes as the MBTA’s Red Line and Commuter Rail in the area were shut down.

Officers were told not to communicate through the police radio since the man had access to it in the stolen cruiser, according to I-Team sources.

Llewellyn confirmed the cruiser did not have a so-called kill switch that disables the SUV remotely if necessary.

Massachusetts State Police said the situation was over around 9:45 a.m. The man was taken to the hospital and pronounced dead at 10:15 a.m.

The Norfolk District Attorney’s Office is handling the investigation.

Weymouth Police also confirmed to WBZ-TV that one of their cruisers was damaged during the chase. They said their officer is OK but did not provide any other details about the crash.

An Abington police officer was hurt after his cruiser hit a utility pole and rolled over during the chase. He is recovering and expected to be released from the hospital soon.

Witnesses who were forced to leave their cars at the gas station and run to safety were able to pick them up after the suspect was taken away.

“The SWAT team just plowed right into him to hold him still and that was it. They told us to get out, get out of the area as fast as we could. We were hiding around the corner the whole time,” said Jason Dove.

Mark Fernandes said, “When I pulled up I heard the police officers down here on the SWAT vehicle and everything telling him the orders like ‘get out of the car’ and stuff like that.

Source Article from https://boston.cbslocal.com/2021/03/26/eric-leach-rockland-stolen-cruiser-police-car-quincy-crash-burgin-parkway-route-3/

ROBESON COUNTY, N.C. (WMBF) – A woman was killed in a road rage shooting Thursday morning in Robeson County, authorities said.

Robeson County Sheriff Burnis Wilkins said the shooting happened at approximately 11:40 a.m. on Interstate 95 South near the weigh station just north of the city limits of Lumberton.

According to Wilkins, 47-year-old Julie Eberly, of Manheim, Pennsylvania, was shot through a passenger door and later died at UNC Southeastern Hospital. Her husband was not injured in the shooting, the sheriff said.

“Prayers are needed for the victims involved,” Wilkins said.

Authorities said the investigation revealed the road rage encounter developed after the victims’ vehicle came close to the suspect vehicle while merging into a lane.

The suspect vehicle then came alongside the victim’s passenger side before the suspect rolled down his window and fired multiple shots into the door, one of which fatally struck Eberly.

Witnesses said the suspect then sped off and exited at Exit 22 before crossing over the bridge coming into Lumberton.

The sheriff added the couple was on their way to Hilton Head Island, S.C. on vacation.

“This was an innocent family from Pennsylvania headed to the beach for a vacation,” said Wilkins. “Thankfully they had left their six children at home with grandparents but now these kids have to live with the thought of their mother being murdered in such a cowardly and senseless way. My heart goes out to this family and I ask that everyone reading this stop and pray for this entire family.”

Wilkins said his investigators are looking for any video footage to help with the investigation.

He’s asking anyone with a surveillance system on Fayetteville Road to Exit 22 on I-95 to check their video around the 11:30 a.m. and noon mark and see if there is anything that can help investigators find the suspect vehicle, which is described as a possible 2010 model Chevrolet Malibu or Impala, silver or grey in color with tinted windows and possibly with chrome around the window frame.

The sheriff added that Lumberton police and the North Carolina State Highway Patrol are assisting.

Wilkins said Robeson Community College was on lockdown but he advised administrators to lift it around 1 p.m.

Anyone with information related to the shooting is asked to call (910) 671-3170 or 911.

Copyright 2021 WMBF. All rights reserved.

Source Article from https://www.ky3.com/2021/03/26/sheriff-mother-of-6-killed-in-road-rage-shooting-on-i-95-south-in-nc/

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is including rivals Vladimir Putin of Russia and Xi Jinping of China among the invitees to the first big climate talks of his administration, an event the U.S. hopes will help shape, speed up and deepen global efforts to cut climate-wrecking fossil fuel pollution, administration officials told The Associated Press.

The president is seeking to revive a U.S.-convened forum of the world’s major economies on climate that George W. Bush and Barack Obama both used and Donald Trump let languish. Leaders of some of the world’s top climate-change sufferers, do-gooders and backsliders round out the rest of the 40 invitations being delivered Friday. It will be held virtually April 22 and 23.

Hosting the summit will fulfill a campaign pledge and executive order by Biden, and the administration is timing the event to coincide with its own upcoming announcement of what will be a much tougher U.S. target for revamping the U.S. economy to sharply cut emissions from coal, natural gas and oil.

The session – and whether it’s all talk, or some progress – will test Biden’s pledge to make climate change a priority among competing political, economic, policy and pandemic problems. It also will pose a very public — and potentially embarrassing or empowering — test of whether U.S. leaders, and Biden in particular, can still drive global decision-making after the Trump administration withdrew globally and shook up longstanding alliances.

The Biden administration intentionally looked beyond its international partners for the summit, reaching out to key leaders for what it said would sometimes be tough talks on climate matters, an administration official said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss U.S. plans for the event.

Trump mocked the science underlying urgent warnings on global warming and the resulting worsening of droughts, floods, hurricanes and other natural disasters. He pulled the United States out of the 2015 U.N. Paris climate accords as one of his first actions. That makes next month’s summit the first major international climate discussions by a U.S. leader in more than four years, although leaders in Europe and elsewhere have kept up talks.

U.S. officials and some others give the Obama administration’s major-economies climate discussions some of the credit for laying the groundwork for the Paris accord. The United States and nearly 200 other governments at those talks each set targets for cutting their fossil-fuel emissions, and pledged to monitor and report their emissions. Another Biden administration official said the U.S. is still deciding how far the administration will go in setting a more ambitious U.S. emissions target.

The Biden administration hopes the stage provided by next month’s Earth Day climate summit — planned to be all virtual because of COVID-19 and publicly viewable on livestream, including breakout conversations — will encourage other international leaders to use it as a platform to announce their own countries’ tougher emission targets or other commitments, ahead of November’s U.N. global climate talks in Glasgow.

The administration hopes more broadly the session will demonstrate a commitment to cutting emissions at home and encouraging the same abroad, the official said. That includes encouraging governments to get moving on specific, politically-bearable ways to retool their transportation and power sectors and overall economies now to meet those tougher future targets, something the Biden administration is just embarking on.

Like Bush’s and Obama’s major-economies climate forums, Biden’s invite list includes leaders of the world’s biggest economies and European blocs. That includes two countries — Russia and China — that Biden and his diplomats are clashing against over election interference, cyber attacks, human rights and other issues. It’s not clear how those two countries in particular will respond to the U.S. invitations, or whether they are willing to cooperate with the U.S. on cutting emissions while sparring on other topics. China is the world’s top emitter of climate-damaging pollution. The U.S. is No. 2. Russia is No. 4.

Climate scientists and climate policy experts largely welcomed Biden’s international overture on climate negotiations, especially the outreach to China.

“China is by far the world’s largest emitter. Russia needs to do more to reduce its emissions. Not including these countries because they aren’t doing enough would be like launching an anti-smoking campaign but not directing it at smokers,” said Nigel Purvis, who worked on climate diplomacy in past Democratic and Republican administrations.

Ideally, government leaders of China and other major economies will be looking for opportunities to talk over specific matters, such as whether broad agreement is possible on setting any price on carbon emissions, said Bob Inglis, a former Republican lawmaker who works to involve conservatives and conservative approaches in climate efforts. “That’s why this kind of outreach makes sense.”

Brazil is on the list as a major economy, but it’s also a major climate backslider under President Jair Bolsonaro, who derailed preservation efforts for the carbon-sucking Amazon and joined Trump in trampling international climate commitments.

The 40 invitees also include leaders of countries facing some of the gravest immediate threats, including low-lying Bangladesh and the Marshall islands, countries seen as modeling some good climate behavior, including Bhutan and some Scandanavian countries, and African nations with big carbon sink forests or big oil reserves. Poland and some other countries on the list are seen by some as possibly open to moving faster away from dirty coal power.

Biden as a candidate pledged $2 trillion in investment to help transform the U.S. into a zero-emission economy by 2050 while building clean-energy and technology jobs. Biden and other administration officials have been stressing U.S. climate intentions during early one-on-one talks with foreign leaders, and Biden climate envoy John Kerry has focused on diplomacy abroad to galvanize climate efforts.

Biden discussed the summit in a conversation Friday with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, with both leaders agreeing on the need to keep emissions-cutting targets ambitious, the White House said.

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/joe-biden-donald-trump-climate-climate-change-xi-jinping-1135c0a543afdbb500f0a10498eb5406

Biden also said that both the White House and the Justice Department were looking into potential action related to voting rights in Georgia.

On Thursday, Biden expressed an openness to scrapping the filibuster for “certain things that are just elemental to the functioning of our democracy, like the right to vote.”

Georgia’s broad new elections law will add an ID requirement for voters requesting an absentee ballot, cut the length of runoffs, and effectively turn the election board over to the legislature. It also limits drop boxes and prohibits people from giving voters in line food or beverages. Voters in Georgia’s primaries faced several-hour lines at times, particularly near and in Atlanta, a heavily Democratic area in the closely divided state.

Vice President Kamala Harris echoed Biden’s support for Congress to pass election reform, telling reporters Friday that the recent Georgia law was intentionally designed to block “whole populations from voting.”

In a statement, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger criticized characterizations of the law as intending to restrict voter access, saying that it instead implements new security measures and expands access.

“The cries of ‘voter suppression’ from those on the left ring as hollow as the continuously debunked claims of ‘mass voter fraud’ in Georgia’s 2020 election. … Their cataclysmic predictions about the effects of this law are simply baseless. The next election will prove that, but I won’t hold my breath waiting for the left and the media to admit they were wrong,” he said.

The changes passed by Republicans in the state legislature and signed by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp Thursday come after Democrats swept a pivotal Senate runoff election in January, giving Democrats a majority in the chamber.

Republicans in and out of Georgia, especially those backing former President Donald Trump, have pushed new voting restrictions, citing “election integrity” despite no evidence of widespread voter fraud. Democrats and voting rights advocates have called the efforts “voter suppression.”

On Friday, Trump congratulated the state and its legislature for “changing their voter Rules and Regulations.”

“They learned from the travesty of the 2020 Presidential Election, which can never be allowed to happen again,” he said in a statement. “Too bad these changes could not have been done sooner!”

Biden had slammed efforts to constrain voting access at his first formal news conference Thursday, calling them “sick.”

“What I’m worried about is how un-American this whole initiative is,” Biden said.

Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) also slammed Georgia’s new voting restrictions on Friday.

“What the state Legislature did yesterday is to try to arrest the voices and the votes of the people,” Warnock said.

Benjamin Din contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/03/26/biden-congress-georgia-voting-restrictions-478170

Additional charges are expected to be filed against the suspect in the mass shooting at a grocery store in Boulder this week, including attempted first-degree murderColorado authorities announced Friday.

Boulder County District Attorney Michael Dougherty spoke on the steps of the Boulder Police Department to give an update on the next steps in the investigation and the upcoming trial of Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, who is accused of killing 10 people at the King Scoopers and injuring others. 

“It will be a lengthy court process,” Dougherty told reporters. “In every murder prosecution, the process takes at least a year for us to complete. I anticipate that will be the same in this case.” 

Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, 21, appears before Boulder District Court Judge Thomas Mulvahill at the Boulder County Justice Center in Boulder, Colo. on March 25, 2021. Three days after he was led away in handcuffs from a Boulder supermarket where 10 people were fatally shot, Alissa appeared in court for the first time and his defense lawyer asked for a mental health assessment “to address his mental illness.” (Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post via AP, Pool)

Dougherty and Boulder Police Chief Maris Herold praised the inter-agency cooperation and support in the investigation, which Herold called “complex” due to the scale of the crime scene. 

“It is heartening to see how the community supports this police department and the other victims involved in this unbelievable incident,” Herold said. “For that, I want the community to know I am very grateful.”

Alissa, 21, faces 10 counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder after he was arrested Monday.

Dougherty revealed Friday that further charges will be filed against Alissa. No timeline was provided at the news conference, but the DA said the next court date will be announced in the coming week. 

No motive has been identified in the massacre, and the FBI is currently conducting a “deep-dive” into the suspect’s background, Dougherty said. 

BOULDER SHOOTING SUSPECT AHMAD AL ALIWI ALISSA: WHAT WE KNOW

Alissa is being held without bail and was moved from Boulder County Jail to a correctional facility outside the county after jail staff learned of safety concerns and threats.

Alissa appeared during a brief hearing Thursday, only responding “yes” when asked if he understood his rights.

Defense attorneys for Alissa requested evidence and a witness list from prosecutors before asking the judge for a delay so they could assess their client’s “mental illness.”

Alissa did not enter a plea during the hearing.

BOULDER GROCERY STORE MASSACRE DESCRIBED BY WITNESSES AS CHAOS: HE JUST ‘STARTED SHOOTING’

Police responded to a call around 2:40 p.m. local time Monday for a report of an active shooter.  The suspect was described as having a black AR-15-style gun and blue jeans.

Police have since confirmed that Alissa used a Ruger AR-556 in the shooting. He also had a 9mm pistol with him, which police believe he did not use. 

Multiple people described how the suspect shot at people inside and outside the store.

Ten people were killed. Victims ranged in age from 20 to 65 and included a veteran police officer, a store manager and a former photo director for various magazines.

BOULDER SHOOTING SUSPECT YELLED TO POLICE, ‘I SURRENDER, I’M NAKED,’ WITNESS SAYS

Eric Talley of the Boulder Police Department was the first officer to respond to the shooting; he was killed. The father of seven was hailed as a hero after 10 years of service with the department.

Other victims are Denny Stong, 20; Neven Stanisic, 23; Rikki Olds, 25; Tralona Bartkowiak, 49; Suzanne Fountain, 59; Teri Leiker, 51; Kevin Mahoney, 61; Lynn Murray, 62, and Jody Waters, 65.

Prosecutors have said they are awaiting evidence from police, who were still processing the King Scoopers grocery store crime scene as of Thursday.

Boulder County District Attorney Michael Dougherty said the suspect had lived “most of his life in the United States.”

A Facebook page purported to belong to Alissa included messages criticizing former President Donald Trump’s response to immigration and refugees, along with personal gripes about not having a girlfriend.

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A former classmate described Alissa as “kind of scary to be around,” while another described him as paranoid.

Police said Alissa did not answer officers’ questions when they first arrested him but he did ask to speak to his mother.

Fox News’ Stephanie Pagones, Louis Casiano and Edmund DeMarche contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/boulder-shooting-suspect-attempted-murder-fbi-background

The last two holdouts of a homeless encampment at Echo Park Lake were reported to have been arrested Friday morning, bringing an apparent close to a more than yearlong saga that saw as many as 200 people living in one of the city’s most scenic and beloved parks, building what they said was a better community for those without homes in Los Angeles.

Organizers with the group GroundGame LA, which advocates for homeless people, said they were informed by a Los Angeles Police Department officer that the two holdouts, Ayman Ahmed and David Busch-Lilly, had been taken into custody. An LAPD spokesman said he could not immediately confirm that. An organizer with GroundGame later said the two had been released.

Earlier in the morning, Ahmed and Busch-Lilly said by phone that they believed they were the only people still there, with a third person coming in and out of the park, which has been closed to news media.

A homeless encampment that took over a large swath of Echo Park for more than a year appeared on the brink of extinction Thursday as city officials fenced off the area and police prepared to remove the relatively few remaining campers.

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The decision to close the park and clear out the encampment sparked protests Wednesday and Thursday in the Echo Park area. Protesters, journalists and legal observers were detained after police issued a dispersal order, then blocked in the crowd.

City officials posted notices on Wednesday night stating that the park would be closed the following evening so that crews could make repairs to the park. Most of the people who had been living in the vast encampment, which included a communal kitchen and garden, had left as night fell Thursday. Residents of the camp had been warned they could be arrested for remaining after 10:30 p.m. Thursday.

“We were fully prepared and expected to get arrested last night, but they never showed up,” Ahmed said in a phone interview. “So we’re just in a state of limbo right now. This is our home, so we’re not leaving til they kick us out.”

Workers from the nonprofit Urban Alchemy had walked the park, asking people if they wanted to go to hotel rooms. Since it started doing more intensive outreach in the park in February, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority said that as of Friday more than 180 people at the park had been provided some kind of shelter, including 138 placed in the Project Roomkey program that provides hotel rooms. Ground Game LA provided hotel rooms for another 10 people, according to cofounder Ashley Bennett.

Others spent the night on the streets. Zach Coughlin, who walked away from the Echo Park encampment on Thursday loaded down with a heavy pack and rolling luggage, said he had spent the night outside City Hall East.

He and Karissa DeAngelis said they had been in a hotel room through Project Roomkey before, but had to leave after their room suffered water damage from a storm. Another group has offered them help getting an apartment, but so far they said they haven’t found a landlord willing to rent them a unit they can afford.

They turned down an offer to be taken to a new hotel room through Project Roomkey because they said their caseworker told them they would have to “start all over” in the housing process if they did.

“I’ve got our house on our back,” Coughlin said Thursday. “I guess we’re going to go back to what we did before.”

Ahmed said he refused to be “evicted from our lawful shelter,” arguing that amid the COVID-19 pandemic, he and fellow campers had created something better for unhoused people than Project Roomkey or the other shelter options offered by the city.

“What we’ve built is one of the solutions to homelessness,” he said. “The city just refuses to acknowledge it.”

Before the park was fenced off, the lakeside encampment had grown to nearly 200 tents and become a polarizing issue among Echo Park residents, some of whom joined homeless people in protest, others of whom applauded the decision to close the park, complaining of trash and criminal activity in a treasured patch of green space. City Councilman Mitch O’Farrell said this week that the park had become “a dangerous, chaotic environment for all users.”

Speaking to reporters at a vaccination center in South L.A. on Friday morning, Mayor Eric Garcetti framed the operation this week to close Echo Park as a success, saying that the city along with LAHSA was able to ultimately shelter many people who had been living at the lake and give them shelter, vaccinations, medication, meals and more.

“This is the largest housing transition of an encampment ever in the city’s history,” Garcetti said,

He reiterated comments he made earlier in week that the park had become “incredibly dangerous.” On Wednesday, when asked about the park, he pointed out that a Times reporter had witnessed a knife fight in the park between two homeless people.

“We can’t wait for somebody else to die before we take action,” Garcetti said.

However, he said that he wasn’t trying to “characterize everything as successful” about the crackdown at the park, which wasn’t announced officially until 24 hours before it occurred and included the arrests of numerous protesters and several reporters just outside the park.

Times staff writer Kevin Rector contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-03-26/final-residents-reported-arrested-echo-park-homeless-camp

Some people who get federal benefits, such as Social Security, Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and veterans benefits, still haven’t received their stimulus payments from the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief plan.

The IRS has not yet announced a date, but it did update some guidance on how payments may be delivered.

The agency said it is working directly with other federal agencies to get updated 2021 information on people who receive federal benefits “to ensure that as many people as possible are sent fast, automatic payments.”

Social Security Administration Commissioner Andrew Saul said that the agency sent its files to the IRS on Thursday.

The statement came in response to a letter sent earlier this week to the IRS and Social Security by legislators, including Rep. Bill Pascrell, Jr, D-9th Dist., who expressed concern that some beneficiaries were still waiting for their payments.

“We were alarmed to learn recently that most Social Security, SSI, RRB (Railroad Retirement Benefits), and VA beneficiaries who are not required to file a tax return have not yet received their payments and that the IRS is unable to provide an expected timeline for these payments,” the letter said.

If you did not file a tax return and you receive Social Security, SSI, Railroad Retirement Benefits or VA benefits, and you currently get your payments on a Direct Express card, then your third stimulus payment will be deposited on that same card, the IRS said in updated guidance on its website.

“The bank information shown in Get My Payment will be a number associated with your Direct Express card and may be a number you don’t recognize,” it said.

For people who don’t have direct deposit information on file with the IRS, “the IRS will use federal records of recent payments to or from the government, where available, to make the payment as a direct deposit. This helps to expedite payment delivery,” it said.

If you don’t receive a direct deposit, you may receive the payment by paper check or prepaid debit card.

The debit card will come in a white envelope displaying the seal of the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the IRS said. The card has the Visa name on the front and the issuing bank, MetaBank, N.A. on the back.

Paper checks come in a white envelope from the U.S. Department of the Treasury. For those taxpayers who received their tax refund by mail, this paper check will look similar but will be labeled as an “Economic Impact Payment” in the memo field, the IRS said.

You can check the Get My Payment tool to see if your payment has been scheduled.

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Karin Price Mueller may be reached at KPriceMueller@NJAdvanceMedia.com.

Source Article from https://www.nj.com/coronavirus/2021/03/stimulus-check-update-what-should-social-security-ssi-recipients-know-about-their-payments.html

Supply-chain woes have mounted world-wide for makers of everything from cars to clothing. Here is what you need to know about the situation.

What are some of the supply-chain problems?

An imbalance in semiconductor supplies and demand, a freeze in Texas in February, a ship blocking the Suez Canal and other problems collectively have limited availability of key materials to manufacturers around the world. The disruptions have created cost increases and delays for numerous industries, potentially leading to higher prices for consumers.

What products have been affected by the supply-chain crisis?

Semiconductors have been in short supply for months after makers of cars, smartphones, PCs, tablets and TVs underestimated expectations during the pandemic, before ramping up orders that caught chip manufacturers unprepared. Meanwhile, a fire at an automotive-chip factory in Japan further snarled the chip supply chain.

The production of plastics has been disrupted by the February freeze in Texas. The state is home to the world’s largest petrochemical complex, which turns oil and gas and their byproducts into plastics. The cold weather triggered mass blackouts that closed plants for weeks, causing a shortage of the raw materials needed for things including medical face shields and smartphones.

How has the ship stuck in the Suez Canal affected supply chains?

The transportation of many different goods and products has been delayed by clogged California ports and the blocked Suez Canal, one of the world’s busiest shipping arteries.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/whats-wrong-with-global-supply-chains-and-how-it-affects-you-11616763749

From November 2020 to January 2021, the story of the state of Georgia was pro-Democratic: Democratic candidates for president and the U.S. Senate all won. But more importantly, it was pro-democratic. Joe Biden, Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock won in part because of aggressive efforts by grassroots groups in the state to increase the number of people who voted compared with past Georgia elections. Two of the state’s top Republican elected officials, Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, rejected a major push from then-President Trump and other Republicans to effectively overturn the results of the state’s presidential election because Biden had won. The events in Georgia, along with a similar rejection of Trump’s false fraud claims in Arizona by Republican Gov. Doug Ducey, were perhaps the clearest examples of how America’s democratic systems had held firm and prevented Trump from cheating his way to a second term.

A lot has changed since then.

What are pollster ratings? | Polling 101 from FiveThirtyEight

Now, Georgia’s democratic stand in 2020 looks more like a temporary victory in a broader fight over American democracy that remains very much contested. On Thursday, Kemp signed a major election law pushed through by Georgia Republicans. Among other things, the law strips some of the power to run Georgia elections from the secretary of state and local counties and transfers it to a state board that is likely to be dominated by conservative Republicans. It includes a ban on providing food and water to people waiting in line to vote. And Kemp justified the new law by suggesting that there were unresolved questions about whether the election in Georgia was conducted fairly

In short, Trump lost Georgia in 2020. But his narrative about that election — that it was stolen from him — has won among state Republicans and has now effectively been codified in state law.

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In America’s ‘Uncivil War,’ Republicans Are The Aggressors Read more. »

Republicans are trying to enact laws making it harder to vote across the country, and it’s not clear that Georgia’s will be among the most aggressive when all of them are finalized. But considering what happened in Georgia from November to January, the enactment of this law in that state is a particularly alarming sign that the Republican Party’s attacks on democratic norms and values are continuing and in some ways accelerating. 

Democrats flipped a swing state, and the Republican Party in that state has responded by enacting a law designed to make it harder for Democratic-leaning voters to cast ballots and have them counted. A state from the former Confederacy changed its election laws after a heavily Black coalition of voters played a big role in electing their preferred candidates for president and the U.S. Senate, which included the historic election of an African American senator in the state. A Republican official (Raffensperger) put country over party and was then stripped of some of his authority.  

There has already been a lawsuit filed to prevent this Georgia provision from going into effect. And even if the law does take effect, it’s hard to say exactly how this would affect Republican and Democratic electoral prospects in Georgia — it seems clearly designed to make it harder for Democratic-leaning voters to exercise that right, but Democrats might still be able to win. So we don’t know exactly what this law will mean in an electoral sense. But in a democratic sense, there is already one clear result: America is a country with a declining democracy, because it has one major party that increasingly does not respect the results of elections that it loses or the right to vote of people who oppose it. 

Put another way: Georgia Republicans didn’t come out of the 2020 elections with a goal of finding new messages or policies to appeal to Georgia’s growing population of people of color. They instead opted to imply that these voters participated in the Georgia elections in improper ways that should be prevented in the future. The Washington Post suggests in its motto that “Democracy Dies in Darkness.” But based on the actions of much of today’s Republican Party, it might be more accurate to say it’s dying right out in the open daylight.

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Source Article from https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/why-georgias-new-voting-law-is-such-a-big-deal/

“I predict to you, your children and grandchildren are going to be doing their doctoral theses on the issue of, ‘Who Succeeded: Autocracy or Democracy?’ Because that is what is at stake,” said the president, speaking of other nations.

Source Article from https://www.chicagotribune.com/columns/john-kass/ct-biden-news-conference-kass-20210326-pdqly74cqbhjfe7w7i4747nr2y-story.html

Beijing — North Korea test-fired two short-range ballistic missiles on Thursday. It was Kim Jong Un’s first such launch since President Joe Biden took office, testing what Kim’s regime claimed were “new-type tactical guided projectiles” that hit their test targets off the country’s eastern coast. 

The launches came just hours before Mr. Biden’s first scheduled solo news conference as commander-in-chief, during which the president confirmed the projectiles were ballistic missiles and thus a violation of United Nations sanctions barring North Korea from testing such weapons. 

The missiles flew approximately 270 miles and landed in the East Sea. In its report on Friday claiming the missiles were a newly-developed variety, North Korea’s state-run KCNA news agency said Kim himself did not observe the launch, which he has done for some previous missile tests.    

An image from North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) shows the launch of what the Kim Jong Un regime claims was a “new-type tactical guided projectile,” on March 25, 2021.

KCNA/Reuters


Mr. Biden said he considered North Korea is his top foreign policy challenge, and one on which he was consulting continuously with America’s allies and partners as the White House seeks to craft a new policy on dealing with the threat.

“There will be responses if they choose to escalate,” Mr. Biden said. “We will respond accordingly. But I’m also prepared for some form of diplomacy, but it has to be conditioned upon the end result of denuclearization.”


North Korea launches missile

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“It is a clear statement of intimidation,” retired South Korean Lieutenant General Chun In-bum told CBS News. He said North Korea wanted to show the world they “are not bound by any outside rules. The two short range ballistic missiles could easily have been intermediate or longer-range missiles if [North] Korea intended on doing so. This is going to go on and on until North Korea goes too far, and that’s what I am afraid of.” 

North Korea has test-fired many missiles over the years, and the regime often tests new and sitting U.S. presidents in this manner to gain attention and to show anger. Thursday’s launch was the first test of a banned missile in a year, and it came just days after the Kim regime’s first test of any weapon at all system since Mr. Biden took office.

Mr. Biden played down the weekend test with a chuckle, but his remarks on Thursday showed the concern within his administration over North Korea’s calculated, escalating threats.


Worldview: North Korea warns U.S.

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The U.S. military’s Indo-Pacific Command said in a statement earlier on Thursday that it was “aware of North Korean missile launches” and would continue monitoring the situation and “consulting closely with our allies and partners.”

“This activity highlights the threat that North Korea’s illicit weapons program poses to its neighbors and the international community,” the command said. “The U.S. commitment to the defense of the Republic of Korea [South Korea] and Japan remains ironclad.”

Just last week, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin visited the capitals of both Japan and South Korea and stressed that denuclearization of the Korean peninsula remained a top priority for the new administration. 


Watchdog warns about Iran, North Korea nuclea…

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The Biden White House is currently conducting a review of its North Korea policy, with an update expected in the coming weeks. 

“It is a daunting challenge to the Biden administration,” said Won Gon Park, a professor of North Korean studies at South Korea’s Ewha Women’s University. 

“Before finalizing its review on the North Korean policy, the Biden administration is forced to answer the North Korean provocation,” he told CBS News. “The Biden administration wants to emphasize the principles and norms of international order. Since North Korea’s ballistic missile is a definite violation of U.N. Resolution 1874, they need to summon the Security Council and condemn North Korea.” 

Ri Pyong Chol, the senior leader who is overseeing the test, and other military officials applaud after the launch of a ballistic missile, which North Korea claimed was a “new-type tactical guided projectile,” on March 25, 2021, in a photo released by North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang, North Korea.

KCNA/Reuters


North Korea has a long history of leveraging missile launches to try to win concessions from Washington at the negotiating table, often demanding financial aid and other assistance. The country is one of the poorest in the world and was reportedly grappling with famine and drought even before the coronavirus pandemic struck.

“In order to halt North Korea from advancing its nuclear and missile capabilities, it is important for South Korea and the U.S. to bring North Korea back to the negotiating table through the four-party talks involving China, South Korea, the U.S. and North Korea,” said Cheong Seong-Chang, Director of the Center for North Korean Studies in South Korea. “Making North Korea give up its nuclear weapons, which the North considers vital to its security, is as close to impossible as making Israel, India and Pakistan give up their own nuclear weapons.”

CBS News’ Jen Kwon in Seoul and Tucker Reals in London contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/north-korea-missile-launch-new-type-joe-biden-challenge-kim-jong-un/

The suspect, Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, 21, faced a judge for the first time Thursday morning. He was charged with 10 counts of first-degree murder, one for each of the victims, which included Boulder Officer Eric Talley. He also faces a charge of attempted first-degree murder for attempting to kill Officer Richard Steidell, who also responded to the scene, a charging document says.

Source Article from https://www.9news.com/article/news/local/boulder-shooting/boulder-shooting-king-soopers-police-update/73-5332fc5e-acf1-4648-bced-cef42490e5a9

But while Johnson & Johnson has lagged behind the other manufacturers, its technology carries enormous promise for mass production because it can deliver many more doses per lot.

Later this year, when Merck & Company is expected to begin producing Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine, it could churn out 100 million doses a month — or as much as Pfizer and Moderna together deliver monthly. The White House hailed the deal between Johnson & Johnson and Merck, but by the time production gets up to speed, those doses may be bound for a growing surplus or for export.

One option is to ship the frozen vaccine that will be manufactured in Merck’s plant overseas, where it can be bottled much more cheaply. Of the $10 that the federal government has agreed to pay for a dose of Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine, the drug substance itself accounts for only about 30 cents, federal officials said. The rest is the so-called fill-and-finish cost.

If AstraZeneca wins emergency use authorization from U.S. regulators, that will throw still more shots into the mix. Officials expect about 50 million doses to be ready for delivery in May.

But Biden administration officials are skittish about AstraZeneca’s vaccine. It appears to be roughly as effective as Johnson & Johnson’s but requires an additional shot, meaning a more complicated rollout. Some health officials worry that if there are already enough doses in the pipeline to cover every adult who wants a shot, introducing a fourth vaccine will just confuse people.

On the other hand, if the administration decides to donate the AstraZeneca doses without offering any to its own citizens, other countries might conclude that the United States lacks confidence in the vaccine’s safety or effectiveness.

“As we gain more confidence in the doses that we have and the ability or the need or not to be boosting, then we can make a more definitive statement about what the role of the AZ product is going to be in the United States” should it gain clearance, Dr. Fauci said in an interview this week, “but right now I think it’s too premature to say anything.”

Sheryl Gay Stolberg, Benjamin Mueller and Matina Stevis-Gridneff contributed reporting. Kitty Bennett contributed research.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/26/us/biden-coronavirus-vaccine.html

“The truth matters. Lies have consequences,” the lawsuit said. “Fox sold a false story of election fraud in order to serve its own commercial purposes, severely injuring Dominion in the process. If this case does not rise to the level of defamation by a broadcaster, then nothing does.”

Some Fox News on-air reporting segments have debunked some of the claims targeting Dominion. An email sent to Fox News on Friday morning, seeking comment on the lawsuit, was not immediately returned.

There was no widespread fraud in the 2020 election, a fact that a range of election officials across the country — and even Trump’s attorney general, William Barr — have confirmed. Republican governors in Arizona and Georgia, key battleground states crucial to Biden’s victory, also vouched for the integrity of the elections in their states. Nearly all the legal challenges from Trump and his allies were dismissed by judges, including two tossed by the Supreme Court, which has three Trump-nominated justices.

Still, some Fox News employees elevated false charges that Dominion had changed votes through algorithms in its voting machines that had been created in Venezuela to rig elections for the late dictator Hugo Chavez. On-air personalities brought on Trump allies Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani, who spread the claims, and then amplified those claims on Fox News’ massive social media platforms.

Dominion said in the lawsuit that it tried repeatedly to set the record straight but was ignored by Fox News.

The company argues that Fox News, a network that features several pro-Trump personalities, pushed the false claims to explain away the former president’s loss. The cable giant lost viewers after the election and was seen by some Trump supporters as not being supportive enough of the Republican.

Attorneys for Dominion said Fox News’ behavior differs greatly from that of other media outlets that reported on the claims.

“This was a conscious, knowing business decision to endorse and repeat and broadcast these lies in order to keep its viewership,” said attorney Justin Nelson, of Susman Godfrey.

Though Dominion serves 28 states, until the 2020 election it had been largely unknown outside the election community. It is now widely targeted in conservative circles, seen by millions of people as one of the main villains in a fictional tale in which Democrats nationwide conspired to steal votes from Trump, the lawsuit said.

Dominion’s employees, from its software engineers to its founder, have been harassed. Some received death threats. And the company has suffered “enormous and irreparable economic harm,” lawyers said.

Dominion has also sued Giuliani, Powell and the CEO of Minnesota-based MyPillow over the claims. A rival technology company, Smartmatic USA, also sued Fox News over election claims. Unlike Dominion, Smartmatic’s participation in the 2020 election was restricted to Los Angeles County.

Dominion lawyers said they have not yet filed lawsuits against specific media personalities at Fox News but the door remains open. Some at Fox News knew the claims were false but their comments were drowned out, lawyers said.

“The buck stops with Fox on this,” attorney Stephen Shackelford said. “Fox chose to put this on all of its many platforms. They rebroadcast, republished it on social media and other places.”

The suit was filed in Delaware, where both companies are incorporated, though Fox News is headquartered in New York and Dominion is based in Denver.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/03/26/dominion-voting-sues-fox-478152

Vice President Harris’ message to women: ‘You are strong’

In an exclusive interview with USA TODAY’s editor in chief Nicole Carroll and columnist Suzette Hackney published Friday morning, Vice President Kamala Harris said the pandemic has been “devastating” for women, especially women of color. Women are leaving the workforce in alarming numbers. Burdened with the brunt of child care responsibilities while children are learning from home, Black and Latina women in particular are falling deeper into poverty. Harris called the regression a “national emergency.” She also expressed empathy and concern for women trying to claw their way out of the abyss, with their family members. “Know you are not alone,” Harris said. “Know that you are supported and know that your voice is strong. It’s strong, and don’t let any circumstance diminish that or take your power from you. You are powerful.”

Prefer to listen? Check out the 5 Things podcast

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2021/03/26/vice-president-kamala-harris-bidens-next-move-5-things-know-friday/4766565001/