The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that Milley discussed the Kremlin offer with Russian Chief of General Staff Valery Gerasimov when the pair met last week in Helsinki.

The conversation stemmed from a June summit between President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva where Putin floated hosting U.S. troops at Russian bases in Central Asia. According to the report, Milley’s query was at the behest of the White House National Security Council staff, which wanted the Joint Chiefs chair to clarify whether the offer was serious.

“This is an issue that I believe came up during a conversation that the president had with President Putin where President Putin offered … to provide assistance,” Austin said.

The report was swiftly condemned by Republicans on Capitol Hill. The top Republicans on the House and Senate Armed Services committees as well as the House Foreign Affairs and Senate Foreign Relations panels dinged the administration and pressed for more information in a letter to Austin and Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

“Inviting Russia into discussions will not further vital U.S. counterterrorism goals, nor is it the path to the ‘stable and predictable’ relationship with Russia the Biden Administration claims it wants,” lawmakers wrote.

“Any attempt to coordinate military basing access or operations with the Russian Federation risks violating the legal prohibition on U.S.-Russian military cooperation,” they added.

With no troops left in Afghanistan, the Biden administration has been seeking locations from which to conduct “over-the-horizon” operations against terrorist groups there. Lawmakers have criticized the concept as unworkable.

Senators again bashed the administration for lacking a realistic plan to conduct counterterrorism operations following a withdrawal they contend will exacerbate terrorist threats against the U.S.

“What we’re seeing in the reports today about asking to use Russian bases, that’s just another example that we see of the Biden administration,” said Sen. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.), who pressed Austin about the discussions with Russia. “They’ve really left us in a terrible position, that we have to ask the Russians to be able to protect the United States from terrorists and we have to ask them to use their installations.”

Austin and Milley, along with U.S. Central Command chief Gen. Frank McKenzie, faced withering questions from senators over U.S. missteps in the withdrawal from Afghanistan. McKenzie told Senate Armed Services that he recommended keeping 2,500 troops in Afghanistan to keep the Taliban at bay, a recommendation Milley told senators he agreed with.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/09/28/austin-milley-russian-counterpart-assistance-514525

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, seen here during a Sept. 1 speech at the Pentagon, will face senators’ questions Tuesday on the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.

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Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, seen here during a Sept. 1 speech at the Pentagon, will face senators’ questions Tuesday on the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Top Pentagon officials are testifying Tuesday for the first time since the completion of the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan in what is expected to be a confrontational hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley and Commander of U.S. Central Command Gen. Kenneth McKenzie are slated to testify.

The hearing began at 9:30 a.m. ET. Watch live here.

The hearing is expected to feature rigorous questioning from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. Democratic and Republican lawmakers alike have criticized the chaotic withdrawal that saw U.S. troops try to coordinate a mammoth evacuation of Americans and Afghan allies as the Taliban quickly gained control of the country. Criticism of the administration’s actions became heightened when 13 U.S. troops were killed in an attack near Kabul airport by the terrorist group ISIS-K.

Ahead of the hearing, Republican Sen. James Inhofe of Oklahoma, who serves as the ranking member on the committee, wrote to Austin to request records and intelligence reports related to the pullout.

In his letter, Inhofe asks for a full accounting of the military equipment that was left behind after the withdrawal, along with data on how many people were evacuated from the country and intelligence on ISIS-K operations. He set Oct. 8 as the deadline.

Afghanistan is not expected to be the sole focus of Tuesday’s hearing. It’s likely Milley will be grilled about recent claims in a book by journalists Bob Woodward and Robert Costa alleging that Milley called his counterpart in the Chinese military to ease fears about then-President Donald Trump launching an attack following his defeat in the presidential election.

Milley has defended his actions, but Republican backlash has been swift. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio called for Milley to be fired in the wake of the claims, and Tennessee Sen. Marsha Blackburn, who sits on the Armed Services Committee, labeled Milley’s actions “treasonous.”

The White House has defended Milley’s actions.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/28/1040877300/austin-milley-mckenzie-senate-hearing-afghanistan

  • September 30: Government funding expires at midnight, which could trigger a shutdown.
  • Mid-October: The government reaches its borrowing limit, which could trigger a first-ever US default and a self-inflicted economic crisis if the US is unable to pay all its bills on time. It could delay federal payments, including Social Security checks and monthly child tax credit payments.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/09/28/politics/debt-limit-house-vote/index.html

During Hogan’s travels, he has also set aside time to meet with donors, a ritual for those looking to build a national political apparatus.

Hogan told POLITICO he was currently focused on the 2022 midterms rather than the 2024 race. But, in an indication of his interest, Hogan said he saw an opening in the forthcoming primary for a Trump critic, and he added that he would not be dissuaded from running for president in the event Trump waged a comeback, a position some other prospective Republican candidates have been reluctant to take.

“If I decide that I want to run for president, it certainly wouldn’t stop me that he’s in the race, that’s for sure,” Hogan said.

Within much of the Trump-dominated party, however, there is skepticism that Hogan would be a serious contender, despite his sterling electoral record in Maryland. While polling indicates a portion of Republican voters would like to see an alternative to Trump emerge, there is consensus that the nomination would be his for the taking should he run. A POLITICO/Morning Consult survey conducted Sept. 18-20 showed Trump with an 86 percent approval rating among registered Republicans.

But Hogan — who flirted with a long-shot primary challenge against Trump in 2020 and called on Trump to resign following the Jan. 6 Capitol riot — argued that the former president’s influence was diminishing. And while other potential candidates jockey to win over Trump’s supporters, Hogan said there was an opening in the 2024 GOP primary for someone unaligned with the former president.

“I believe that there’s 10 or 12 or 15 people all fishing in the same pond,” Hogan said. “They want to be the next Donald Trump, and … there’s some 30 percent of the Republican base that wants to go in a different direction.”

Other Trump critics, including Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse and Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, have been mentioned as possible candidates, though they have so far been less aggressive in positioning themselves for a national run.

Would-be Republican 2024 hopefuls are already crisscrossing the country to campaign for congressional candidates, make trips to early primary states and set up vehicles to raise money and increase their national profiles. Hogan supporters have launched An America United, a nonprofit group that’s been churning out slickly produced web videos promoting the governor as a bipartisan problem-solver.

As he travels the country, Hogan is assiduously casting himself as someone who can cure his party’s ills. Hogan offered what may be a preview of his national message during his speech at the Republican Main Street Partnership over the weekend, declaring that “successful politics is about addition and multiplication, not subtraction and division,” and that “frankly we have been doing a lot of subtracting and dividing.”

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/09/28/hogan-anti-trump-2024-514453

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — When the Taliban seized power, the operator of the only women’s shelter in a northern Afghan city ran away. Left abandoned were 20 women who had fled a variety of domestic horrors, some abused by husbands or family, others forced into early marriages with older men.

Soon after, the Taliban arrived at the shelter in the city of Pul-e-Kumri.

They gave the women two options: Return to their abusive families — some of whom had threatened them with death for leaving — or go with the Taliban, recalled one of the women, Salima, who asked only that her first name be used.

Most of the women chose to return home, fearing the Taliban more than their families. Salima said she knew of at least one who was since killed, likely by an angry family member.

But Salima decided to leave with the Taliban. She didn’t know what they would do, but she had nowhere else to go, having fled her abusive, drug-addicted husband months earlier. Now she finds herself housed in a prison — but protected and safe, she says.

Whether under Taliban rule or not, women in Afghanistan’s deeply conservative and often tribal society are often subject to archaic codes of behavior that hold them responsible for the honor of their families. They can be killed for simply marrying a man of their choice. They are often married at puberty. Fleeing even an abusive husband is considered shameful. Hundreds of women are jailed for so-called “morality crimes,” including adultery or running away from home, even though they are not officially crimes under the Afghan penal code.

Over the past two decades, activists set up dozens of women’s shelters around Afghanistan. But even before the Taliban takeover, conservative Afghans, including government officials, viewed them with suspicion, as places that help women and girls defy their families or abet “moral crimes.”

Women’s shelters are just one of a myriad of social changes that became more prevalent in the past 20 years or didn’t even exist when the Taliban last took power in 1996 — everything from social media and the internet to businesswomen and women judges. Now since overrunning Kabul and sweeping into power on Aug. 15, the hard-line militant group is wrestling with how to deal with the changes, with the Taliban leadership at times uncertain and fighters on the ground acting on their own.

Salima was taken to Kabul, along with another woman, Razia, who had lived in the shelter nearly a year after fleeing a predatory brother-in-law.

With nowhere to put them, the Taliban put them in the abandoned women’s section of Afghanistan’s main prison, called Pul-e-Charkhi. The prison was empty because when the Taliban took over Kabul, they freed all the inmates, including thousands of men, 760 women and more than 100 children, according to the prison’s new Taliban administrator, Mullah Abdullah Akhund.

The Associated Press was given rare access to the women in the prison. Now there are only six women there, including Salima and Razia.

A massive steel gate leads to the women’s prison. Rolls of barbed wire are strung atop the 20-foot-high walls. Inside, the women move freely with their children. Salima’s 5-year-old daughter Maria and son Mohammad, 6, spend most of their day in a main, large, carpeted room. There is no school and just a giant red teddy bear and a few small toys for their amusement.

“We mostly pray and read the Quran all day,” said Salima.

Salima said that she has no idea what the future holds, but for the present, with no money and no family, she said she feels safe here.

But Mujdha, another woman in the prison, said she wants her freedom. She had been pregnant by a boyfriend but her family refused to let her marry him, and instead forced her to marry a relative. She ran away. “I told them I would never stay with him” she said. The family reported her to the Taliban, who arrested her and her boyfriend.

Mujdha gave birth in prison to a baby daughter 15 days ago, soon after her arrest. She hasn’t seen her boyfriend, jailed elsewhere in the prison, and he has yet to meet his infant daughter.

“I want to leave, but they say I can’t,” she said.

Akhund said a court will decide whether to charge her, adding, “It is wrong that she left her husband. She has no right.”

Since taking power, the Taliban’s response to women’s shelters has varied. In the western city of Herat, several have been shut down, said Suraya Pakzad, a women’s rights activist from Herat who opened several shelters.

Pakzad said Friday in text messages from a place in hiding that she faces threats from all sides — from the Taliban and from the families of the women who found refuge in her shelters.

For the past several years, Pakzad and other women pressed for a voice in the negotiations between the U.S.-backed government of the time and the advancing Taliban. They hoped to ensure rights for women in any final arrangement. Now, in one fell swoop, they are scrambling for their own safety.

Pakzad shared an arrest warrant for her and seven other activists and journalists from western Afghanistan, issued by the new Taliban police chief in Herat. The warrant accuses the eight of “spreading propaganda against the Islamic Emirate” and accuses Pakzad of “involvement with Western countries to spread prostitution.”

But Mahboba Suraj, who runs a shelter for 30 women in Kabul, said the Taliban have come and investigated the shelter and let the women remain there unharmed. She said she was visited by various departments of the new Taliban government, including senior officials.

“The higher ups were absolutely the best. They want to protect us … and understand that they have problems within their own people” who may not be as supportive of women’s shelters, she said.

For now, “they want to have protection for us,” she said. “Thank God, I do believe that. I honestly do.”

Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/afghanistan-only-on-ap-kabul-taliban-c56142dc17994e1848c8fa57475cb4a5

The district attorney’s office in Shasta County, Calif., accused Alexandra Souverneva, a 30-year-old resident of Palo Alto, with “willfully, unlawfully and maliciously” setting fire to an area north of Redding, forcing thousands of residents to flee.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/09/28/fawn-fire-california-arson-alexandra-souverneva/

Jarrod Ramos, the admitted gunman in the attack on the Capital Gazette, was found criminally responsible by a jury in July. A copy of the newspaper is seen in a vending box in Annapolis, Md., on June 29, 2018, the day after the deadly shooting.

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Jarrod Ramos, the admitted gunman in the attack on the Capital Gazette, was found criminally responsible by a jury in July. A copy of the newspaper is seen in a vending box in Annapolis, Md., on June 29, 2018, the day after the deadly shooting.

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

A judge in Maryland has sentenced the gunman who killed five people in the Capital Gazette newsroom in 2018 to five life sentences without parole. A jury found Jarrod Ramos criminally responsible for the massacre in July, rejecting his insanity plea.

Gerald Fischman, Rob Hiaasen, John McNamara, Rebecca Smith and Wendi Winters died in the attack.

The punishment handed down by Anne Arundel County Circuit Court Judge Michael Wachs matches prosecutors’ request.

Sentence includes hundreds of years of prison time

“To say the defendant showed a callous and cruel disregard for the sanctity of human life is simply an understatement,” Wachs said, according to the Capital Gazette, adding, “What I impose is what the defendant deserves.”

In addition to the five life terms without parole for the killings, Wachs also sentenced Ramos to another life sentence, plus another 345 years, for other charges, Tia Lewis, spokeswoman for the Anne Arundel County state’s attorney’s office, told NPR.

The charges against Ramos, 41, included 12 felony counts of murder, attempted murder or assault, along with 11 misdemeanor counts of using a firearm during the commission of a violent crime.

The sentencing hearing included victim impact statements from survivors and people who lost loved ones in the attack, including Andrea Chamblee, widow of McNamara — who worked as a staff writer and editor.

McNamara “deserved to be here,” Chamblee said, according to the Gazette. “He deserved to enjoy seeing his recognition, to enjoy this time in his life, and I was so hoping to see it and experience it with him.”

Ramos pleaded guilty but invoked an insanity plea

Ramos pleaded guilty to the 23 criminal counts — including five charges of first-degree murder — in October 2019, but his attorneys argued that the defendant could not be held responsible due to mental illness, saying that at the time, he didn’t understand the criminality of what he was doing.

Prosecutors countered that Ramos had planned the attack carefully as an act of revenge on the Annapolis-based newspaper for its coverage of a misdemeanor crime he had admitted to years earlier. When Ramos assaulted the newsroom, he was carrying a shotgun, smoke grenades and extra ammunition.

A jury decided Ramos was criminally responsible in July after lengthy delays due to the complexity of the case and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ramos held a grudge against the newspaper

The gunman accused the Capital Gazette of ruining his reputation with its coverage of his conviction on a misdemeanor harassment charge in 2011. Ramos had admitted to harassing a woman with whom he’d gone to high school.

The newspaper ran a piece titled “Jarrod Wants To Be Your Friend,” describing Ramos as an online stalker who used Facebook, email and text messages to harass the woman, according to NPR member station WYPR.

As a result of that column, Ramos became known as a “sicko” and “predator” who was dangerous and insane, he said in court filings. He was fired from his job and became estranged from relatives.

Ramos repeatedly tried to take legal action against the newspaper, its publisher and the writer of the column, only to be turned away by the courts. When an administrative judge refused his request to assign one of Ramos’ motions to a different judge, Ramos sued the administrative judge, according to WYPR.

By the time Ramos carried out his attack against the newspaper, both the publisher and the writer of the initial column about Ramos had already stopped working at the Gazette.

Survivors quickly realized their lives had changed

The surviving staff members of the Gazette worked diligently to cover the assault on their own newsroom despite a host of physical, emotional and logistical challenges. Their professionalism and dedication won the newspaper widespread praise and a Pulitzer Prize.

“Yes, we’re putting out a damn paper tomorrow,” the Gazette said hours after the attack, echoing a statement by one of its reporters, Chase Cook.

Survivors of the shooting described to NPR this year how the attack had changed their lives.

“You’d walk into a place and you’d say, ‘Hi, I’m Josh from the Capital,’ and people would burst into tears,” photojournalist Joshua McKerrow said. “Like I was the walking embodiment of a mass shooting and meeting me … it would hit them all at once that this was real.”

June 28 — the date of the attack — is now commemorated in Maryland as Freedom of the Press Day. A memorial to the five people killed was also erected in Annapolis, featuring five tall stone pillars and a plaque of the First Amendment.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/09/28/1040933771/capital-gazette-shooting-sentencing-hearing

A short-term government funding bill that included language to raise the US debt ceiling failed its first test vote in the Senate Monday, leaving Congress just days to figure out a plan to avert a looming government shutdown. 

An effort to begin debate on the measure failed 50-48, with 49 Republicans voting against it. The attempt had needed 60 votes to succeed.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), initially voted “yes,” but changed his vote to “no” in order to potentially bring the issue to another vote at a later date.

Schumer had opted to bring the measure to the floor despite warnings from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) that the majority of his conference would not support the measure due to its provision increasing the federal government’s borrowing limit. 

Shortly before the vote, McConnell attempted to remove the debt ceiling provision from the bill by getting unanimous consent from his colleagues, but Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) objected.

“For more than two months now, Senate Republicans have been completely clear about how this process will play out,” McConnell said on the Senate floor earlier Monday. “So let me make it abundantly clear one more time: We will support a clean continuing resolution that will prevent a government shutdown, get disaster relief to Louisiana, help properly vetted Afghanistan refugees who put themselves on the line for America, and support the Iron Dome assistance for our ally, Israel.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had warned Democrats that Republicans would not vote to raise the debt ceiling.
Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images

“We will not provide Republican votes for raising the debt limit,” the minority leader added. “As we speak, Democrats are behind closed doors assembling a multi-trillion-dollar reckless taxing-and-spending spree. There’s no chance Republicans will help lift Democrats’ credit limit so they can immediately steamroll through a socialist binge that will hurt families and help China.”

Republicans have repeatedly called on Democrats to raise the debt limit by using the reconciliation process — a move which would not require any GOP support — arguing that the debt ceiling increase would only provide Democrats the opportunity to “recklessly spend” on their partisan priorities.

The pushback from GOP lawmakers comes as House Democratic leadership push forward this week with two bills — a Senate-passed $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure plan, and a $3.5 trillion social spending bill — aimed at accomplishing some of the Biden Administration’s top priorities.

Sen. Schumer ultimately voted “No” to bring the issue to another vote at a later date.
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Democrats have slammed Republicans for refusing to get on board with the debt ceiling increase, arguing that raising the limit has traditionally been done in a bipartisan fashion and that it is necessary to pay for spending enacted under the previous administration.

“There is a very simple step we can take today to guarantee the government won’t default and won’t shut down,” Schumer said on the floor Monday. “Both sides can come together to vote yes on today’s vote and vote to pass the continuing resolution. Just as Democrats worked in a bipartisan fashion under the Trump administration, Republicans must now step up to the plate.

“To do otherwise is the height of recklessness, irresponsibility,” Schumer added. “Republicans say they don’t want to see a government shutdown, they say they don’t want to see our government default on our debt. Then they should vote yes. It’s plain and simple. It’s very clear.”

The continuing resolution, which passed the House on Tuesday, would keep the government funded through Dec. 3, increase the debt ceiling through Dec. 16, 2022 and provide $10 billion for emergency disaster aid to “cover losses from natural disasters occurring in 2020 and 2021.”

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has repeatedly called on Congress to raise the debt ceiling, writing in a recent Wall Street Journal op-ed that “the overwhelming consensus among economists and Treasury officials of both parties is that failing to raise the debt limit would produce widespread economic catastrophe.”

Current government funding expires at 11:59 p.m. Sept. 30. It was not immediately clear Monday whether Democratic leaders would bring up a so-called “clean” measure, which would remove the debt ceiling provision.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/09/27/schumer-funding-bill-debt-ceiling-increase-test-vote-fails-in-senate/

EXCLUSIVE: Duane “Dog the Bounty Hunter” Chapman is investigating a tip that alleges Brian Laundrie, the fugitive fiancé of Gabby Petito, went into a Florida campground 75 miles away with his parents in early September — but only two of them were seen leaving.

Chapman announced Saturday he was entering the search for Laundrie, and tips quickly poured in. He told Fox News he received a tip on Monday that Laundrie’s parents spent the night in Fort De Soto Park with their son twice in early September from Sept. 1-3 and Sept. 6-8.

BRIAN LAUNDRIE’S MOTHER CALLED 911 ON ‘DOG THE BOUNTY HUNTER’

“They were registered, went through the gate. They’re on camera. They were here,” he told Fox News exclusively on Monday evening. “We think at least if he’s not here right now, we are sure he was caught on camera as he went in the gate — that he was here for sure. Not over in the swamp.”

He later added: “Allegedly, what we’re hearing, is two people left on the 8th. Three people came in on the 6th, and two people left on the 8th. I think he’s been here for sure.”

Earlier on Monday, attorney Steven Bertolino, who represents Brian’s parents, Chris and Roberta, said his clients “do not know where Brian is.”

“They are concerned about Brian and hope the FBI can locate him,” Bertolino wrote. “The speculation by the public and some in the press that the parents assisted Brian in leaving the family home or in avoiding arrest on a warrant that was issued after Brian had already been missing for several days is just wrong.”

A Fox News Digital reporter overheard a park worker say investigators had checked surveillance video on the grounds. 

GABBY PETITO SLAYING: FLORIDA LAWYER PUTS $20G BOUNTY ON BRIAN LAUNDRIE

Conditions within park are “much easier” than some others, namely the T. Mabry Carlton Reserve, where local police and sheriff’s deputies have spent days combing through the dense, swampy terrain, Chapman told Fox News. 

Fort De Soto Park is located in Pinellas County and is about 75 miles away from the Laundries’ home on Wabasso Avenue. It spans more than 1,130 acres and consists of five keys.

The tip gives renewed hope that authorities might soon reach a conclusion to what has become a costly weeks-long search for Laundrie and a quest for answers that has extended from coast to coast. The exhaustive manhunt that has extended nationwide and garnered massive attention. 

Laundrie and 22-year-old Petito embarked on a cross-country journey in mid-June in a converted white Ford Transit van with the plan to visit national parks along the way. They had begun dating years earlier after meeting at their local Long Island, N.Y. high school and had moved to North Port, Florida, to live with Laundrie’s parents. 

On Sept. 1, months after they began their trip, Laundrie returned to the North Port home in the couple’s van, but without Petito, officials said. The young woman was not reported missing until 10 days later, on Sept. 11, when her mother filed a police report in Suffolk County, N.Y. Police seized the van from the Laundries’ home on Sept. 11. 

Laundrie was subsequently named a person of interest in Petito’s disappearance, and on Thursday, the FBI issued an arrest warrant for bank card fraud. Authorities alleged he used someone’s Capital One Bank card and the personal identification number during the time when Petito was missing. Neither investigators nor a spokesperson for Petito’s family have said whether the card belonged to Petito. 

Fox News recently obtained the missing persons’ report for Petito, in which her mother, Nichole Schmidt, stated that her daughter was last seen at 7 a.m. on Aug. 30 at Grand Teton National Park. Schmidt wrote in the report that her Long Island home was a “probable destination.”  

But Laundrie also subsequently went missing, his parents claimed through their attorney. 

After the Petito’s missing persons’ report was filed on Sept. 11, Laundrie would not cooperate with the police investigation, officials said. The Laundries’ attorney released a statement on Sept. 14, in which he announced he had advised his clients to remain “in the background.” The family revealed three days later that they had not seen him since Sept. 14.

Charlene Guthrie, who lives directly across the street from the Laundrie family, told Fox News she saw Brian Laundrie mowing the lawn, riding his bike with his mother and appearing to go camping with his parents in the days after he arrived alone. Petito had previously been living with the family at their North Port, Florida, home. 

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Petito’s body was discovered near Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming on Sept. 19. A Teton County coroner ruled the death a homicide but has not yet announced the cause.

Friends, family and the public paid their respects during a Sunday ceremony on Long Island.

Speaking during the service, Petito’s father, Joseph Petito, called his daughter “the most amazing person I’ve ever met.”

“I want you to take a look at these pictures, and I want you to be inspired by Gabby,” he said at the service. “If there’s a trip you guys want to take, take it now. Do it now while you have the time. If there is a relationship you’re in that might not be the best thing for you, leave it now.”

Chapman has his own anonymous tip line at 833-TELL-DOG for people who are hesitant to call authorities directly – however anyone with information on Laundrie’s whereabouts is asked to contact the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI or 303-629-7171.

Fox News’ Paul Best contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/brian-laundrie-manhunt-dog-bounty-hunter-tipster-laundries-park-september

Congress is running out of time to prevent a shutdown and a default.

Senate Republicans on Monday blocked a bill that would fund the government and suspend the U.S. debt ceiling, leaving Democrats scrambling to avoid a possible economic calamity.

The House-passed legislation would have funded the government into December and suspended the U.S. debt ceiling into December of next year, after the midterm congressional elections.

Lawmakers need to approve government funding before Friday to avoid a shutdown. The U.S. risks default if Congress doesn’t raise the debt ceiling by a point that is likely to come in October, according to the Treasury Department.

After every House Republican opposed the measure, the Senate GOP also refused to help Democrats suspend the debt limit. In a 48-50 vote, all Republican senators opposed advancing the legislation. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., voted no as a procedural move so he can bring up the bill again later.

Democrats now have to pull off a daunting series of maneuvers to avoid a sequence of events that could ravage the economy and cost millions of Americans their jobs. The Republican opposition may force them to pass a short-term funding bill with GOP support, then approve a debt limit suspension on their own — potentially as part of their up to $3.5 trillion budget reconciliation plan.

“The Republican Party has solidified itself as the party of default, and it will be the American people who pay the price,” Schumer said after the vote.

He added that “we’ll be taking further action” this week to try to prevent a shutdown and default. He did not specify how Democrats would proceed.

Government funding will lapse if lawmakers do not pass an appropriations bill before midnight Thursday.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has told lawmakers that the U.S. will run out of ways to pay its bills sometime in October unless Congress raises the debt ceiling.

Government funding and the debt limit are separate issues. Raising or suspending the ceiling does not authorize new government spending, but allows the U.S. to borrow to cover existing obligations.

Democrats have criticized Republicans for risking economic ruin while opposing a debt ceiling suspension, which they have supported in the past. The party has also noted that the GOP voted for trillions of dollars in emergency coronavirus aid since the last time Congress suspended the limit.

Republicans have contended their counterparts should suspend the debt ceiling on their own as they move to pass an up to $3.5 trillion investment in the social safety net and climate policy without the GOP.

Speaking before the vote Monday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., reiterated that Republicans would vote for a short-term funding bill that does not raise the debt ceiling.

“We will not provide Republican votes for raising the debt limit,” he said.

He tried before the failed vote to bring up an appropriations plan that does not address the borrowing limit. Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., objected to his move.

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Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/09/27/government-shutdown-senate-republicans-block-funding-debt-ceiling-bill.html

Brian Laundrie showed telltale signs of a domestic abuser and control freak in his erratic public behavior around fiancée Gabby Petito in the weeks before her death – and he may have had help evading authorities before investigators found her body, according to an expert criminal profiler.

“I think he’s a coward on the run,” John Kelly, a longtime criminal profiler and psychotherapist, told Fox News. “Knowing that he’s a coward, where would we think he would go? Do we think he’s macho enough to go off to Mexico? I don’t know about that.”

Laundrie’s parents told police on Sept. 17 that they hadn’t seen him since three days prior – so he had a potential head start toward wherever he may be now. The FBI said search teams found Petito’s remains at the Spread Creek dispersed camping area, just north of Jackson Hole, Wyoming, on Sunday, Sept. 19. 

GABBY PETITO CASE: DISPATCH RECORDINGS SHOW UTAH POLICE WERE TOLD MALE STRUCK FEMALE

Kelly said he believes Laundrie may have flipped the switch from “asocial” to “anti-social” before Petito died by homicide in Wyoming’s Teton Range.

FILE – This Aug. 12, 2021 file photo from video provided by The Moab Police Department shows Brian Laundrie talking to a police officer after police pulled over the van he was traveling in with his girlfriend, Gabrielle “Gabby” Petito, near the entrance to Arches National Park. Laundrie, the boyfriend of Gabby Petito, whose body was found at a national park in Wyoming after a cross-country trip with him, has been charged with unauthorized use of a debit card as searchers continue looking for him in Florida swampland, federal authorities announced Thursday, Sept. 23, 2021. (The Moab Police Department via AP, File)

“Asocial is pretty much somebody that likes to be alone…they’re not hurting anybody,” John Kelly, a longtime criminal profiler and psychotherapist, told Fox News. “Antisocial is when you strike out at society and have a lot of anger and resentment.”

And the ultimate antisocial act, he said, would be killing someone.

Laundrie’s attorney, Steven Bertolino, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Laundrie has not been charged in connection with Petito’s disappearance or death. But investigators have named him a person of interest and questioned why he appeared at his parents’ Florida house in her van, without her, just days after they were last seen together in Wyoming.

DETAILS OF GABBY PETITO’S UTAH FIGHT WITH FIANCE BRIAN LAUNDRIE REVEALED IN WITNESS STATEMENT TO POLICE

Eight days after Petito’s mother reported her missing, investigators found her remains at a campsite just north of Jackson Hole. 

FILE – Gabby Petito in an undated photograph.
(North Port Police)

A string of alarming incidents preceded Petito’s disappearance.  Police responded to an alleged domestic incident in which a caller reported seeing Laundrie slapping and hitting Petito. When they arrived, the couple and another witness said nothing about that allegation, and police eventually asked them to split up for the night and let them go. Two weeks later, in Jackson Hole, Laundrie was seen arguing with wait staff at the Merry Piglets restaurant.

GABBY PETITO INVESTIGATION: 911 CALL REVEALS BRIAN LAUNDRIE SEEN HITTING, ‘SLAPPING’ HER BEFORE DISAPPEARANCE

Eyewitnesses said a distraught Petito apologized to the workers – and that contradiction of Laundrie’s rage could have set off the next fight, according to multiple experts.

And the conflicts illustrate that Laundrie couldn’t take criticism well, especially not from women, Kelly said. Taken together, these cases could paint the portrait of a domestic abuser.

Another concerning aspect Kelly saw in Laundrie’s social media postings is the artwork he shared to Instagram – images of demons, werewolves and other monstrosities.

“I see a projection of himself in his art, where he understands to some point that he has this monster inside of him, or he is a monster,” Kelly said. “And this monster may have come out.”

Kelly said he suspects that Laundrie’s entire self-worth was built around his relationship with Petito and that without her, “he’s got nothing.”

MISSING GABBY PETITO: UTAH POLICE WERE CALLED TO INCIDENT INVOLVING CROSS-COUNTRY VANNING COUPLE

But he said that documented fights involving Laundrie and Petito – a police-involved stop in Moab, Utah, and a spat with wait staff at a restaurant in Jackson Hole, Wyoming – illustrate that Laundrie couldn’t take criticism well, especially not from women.

“These guys cannot take criticism,” he said. “And usually if their issues are with the female, they cannot take criticism from a female.”

When Laundrie disappeared from his parents’ house last week, he left his phone and wallet behind when he vanished, leading Kelly to believe he’s on the run with no intention of being found. Often when people go off the harm themselves, he said, they bring their phones so their remains can be found. But for that same reason, a phone would be a liability for someone on the run.

“Usually, to me, that means somebody that wants to be on the run and travel under the radar and then if he’s stopped by the cops, he can give them a fake name,” he said. “He has no ID on him, they can’t readily know who he is.”

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Kelly has worked on a number of high-profile cases, including the Golden State Killer, the Long Island Serial Killer and the Green River Killer.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/coward-brian-laundrie-domestic-abuser-criminal-profiler

President Biden has been annoyed with the American press asking questions that are not “on point” during recent setups with foreign leaders in the White House, press secretary Jen Psaki admitted Monday. 

On Friday, questions were raised after Biden seemingly took a swipe at the US press during a meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narenda Modi, saying the India press is “much better behaved” than the US press corps. 

“I think, with your permission, you could not answer questions because they won’t ask any questions on point,” he said.

That followed Biden snubbing the American press corps when he declined to take pool reporters’ questions during the public portion of his sit-down with UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson — despite Johnson calling on two British reporters.

President Joe Biden has been frustrated with reporters not asking him “on point” questions, according to White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki.EPA/JIM LO SCALZO

After a brief conversation for the cameras between the two leaders, Johnson thanked Biden for hosting him and asked: “I think — would it be OK if we just have a couple of questions? Just a — just a couple of questions.”

“Good luck,” Biden said.

As soon as Johnson answered questions from two British reporters, White House aides — known as “wranglers” — began shouting and ushering reporters out of the Oval Office as they tried to ask more questions.

“That’s absurd,” one reporter groused as they left the executive mansion. “Two British reporters get questions and we don’t get anything.”

President Biden recently noted that the Indian press were “much better behaved” compared to the American reporters.
AP Photo/Susan Walsh

CBS News Radio White House correspondent Steven Portnoy reported that the members of the editorial pool immediately went to Psaki’s office to complain “that no American reporters were recognized for questions in the president’s Oval Office.”

During Monday’s daily press briefing, Psaki was pressed on Biden’s comments with the Indian leader and asked why he criticized US reporters. 

“I would note, first, that he took questions on Friday, and he took questions again today,” Psaki began. “And I think what he said is that they’re not always ‘on point.’”

“Now I know that isn’t something that anyone wants to hear in here, but what I think he was converting, as you know, today, he might want to talk about COVID vaccines [and] some of the questions were about that he might want to talk about, and some of the questions are not always about the topic he’s talking about in that day,” she continued. 

Psaki added that she did not believe the president’s comments were a “hard cut.”

Jen Psaki said at Monday’s press briefing that the president would prefer questions to be on topic.
AP Photo/Evan Vucci

Later in Monday’s briefing, Psaki was pushed further and asked why Biden could call the Indian press “better behaved” than the US press when India ranks 142nd in press freedoms, according to Reporters without Borders. 

Psaki sidestepped the question and instead turned to the president’s commitment to press freedom, claiming that he has spoken with the press more than 140 times. 

“He certainly respects the role of the press, the role of the freedom of press, the free press, [and] we ensure that we have press with us, of course, when we travel, that we have press with us for sprays in foreign capitals and we will continue to. And I think that speaks to his commitment to freedom of press around the world.” 

Throughout his presidency so far, Biden has snapped at members of the press, particularly regarding COVID-19 protocols for masks or vaccines.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/09/27/joe-biden-annoyed-with-us-press-asking-off-topic-questions/

Every registered California voter will get a ballot mailed to them in future elections under a bill signed Monday by Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The law makes permanent a change adopted during the pandemic for the 2020 election and the recent recall against Newsom. California, the nation’s most populous state, joins several other Western states in mailing all voters a ballot, including Utah, Colorado, Washington and Oregon. Republicans who hold a minority in the state Legislature opposed the expansion of voting by mail.

Under the new law, ballots in California must go out at least 29 days before the election. Voters still have the option to drop off their ballot or vote in person. Prior to the pandemic, many Californians were already voting by mail.

“Voters like having options for returning their ballot whether by mail, at a secure drop box, a voting center or at a traditional polling station. And the more people who participate in elections, the stronger our democracy and the more we have assurance that elections reflect the will of the people of California,” California Secretary of State Shirley Weber, a Democrat, said in a statement.

Newsom signed 10 other voting-related bills on Monday, crafting them as part of an effort to expand voting rights and access. Voting rights have become a major political flashpoint nationally. Democrat-led states are pushing legislation aimed at expanding voting access while many Republican-led states are trying to tighten it amid baseless accusations of widespread voter fraud by former President Donald Trump and other GOP leaders.

“As states across our country continue to enact undemocratic voter suppression laws, California is increasing voter access, expanding voting options and bolstering elections integrity and transparency,” Newsom, a Democrat, said in a statement.

Mail-in voting put California Republicans in a tricky spot during the recent recall election against Newsom, which he handily defeated. Many Republicans didn’t trust the process, leaving party leaders to both encourage their voters to cast ballots while promising they were closely monitoring claims of fraud. There has been no evidence of widespread fraud in the recall.

California Republican Party Chairwoman Jessica Millan Patterson didn’t state a clear position on the bill.

“The California Republican Party is committed to ensuring elections are safe, fair and secure, giving voters the confidence they need to cast a ballot,” she said in a statement.

Another proposal Newsom signed relaxes the rules around ballot signatures, giving officials more leeway to accept ballots if the signature doesn’t exactly match what’s on file. The legislation by Democratic Sen. Josh Becker bars election officials from taking a voter’s party preference into account when evaluating their signature. Republicans in the state Legislature also opposed the bill.

In order to reject a signature, two other election officials must also determine if the signature differs in obvious ways from the signature in the person’s registration record.

Other bills Newsom signed:

-Increase penalties for improper use of campaign funds.

-Ban political contributions from foreign governments or foreigners in state elections. Federal law already prohibits this, but the law gives the state’s campaign regulatory body the ability to enforce it.

-Changes a new law requiring candidates for governor to submit copies of their tax returns, giving candidates more time to provide documents and fix errors. That bill also expands the distance at which campaign activities are blocked outside of polling places.

Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/california/gov-newsom-signs-bill-making-universal-vote-by-mail-permanent-in-california/

In both positions, she is likely to find a receptive audience at the fund-raiser. The S-Corp PAC, for instance, has told its members the rate increases in the package that passed the House Ways and Means Committee “would kneecap private companies” like theirs that pay taxes through the individual tax system, not the corporate tax system.

Eric Hoplin, the chief executive of the National Association of Wholesaler-Distributors, which buy products from manufacturers at wholesale rates and distribute them to retailers, said in a statement earlier this month, “Passing the largest tax increase in U.S. history on the backs of America’s job creators as they recover from a global pandemic is the last thing Washington should be doing.”

In a lengthy message to members this month, Robert Yeakel, the director of government relations at the National Grocers Association, went over a “laundry list of tax hikes that Democrats are contemplating.”

“Even if a handful of moderates balk at many of these hikes (Senators Sinema and Manchin have already publicly opposed the $3.5 number), grocers and other industries are still going to see a jump in their tax bill,” he wrote, referring also to Senator Joe Manchin III, Democrat of West Virginia.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/27/us/politics/sinema-fund-raiser-social-climate-bill.html

The Massachusetts State Police headquarters in Framingham, Mass. The State Police Association of Massachusetts said troopers should have “reasonable alternatives” to being required to get vaccinated for COVID-19 such as wearing masks and being tested regularly.

John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images


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John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

The Massachusetts State Police headquarters in Framingham, Mass. The State Police Association of Massachusetts said troopers should have “reasonable alternatives” to being required to get vaccinated for COVID-19 such as wearing masks and being tested regularly.

John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Dozens of Massachusetts State Police troopers have put in their resignation papers following the state’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate, the State Police Association of Massachusetts said.

Under Gov. Charlie Baker’s executive order issued last month, all executive department employees are required to show proof of vaccination on or before Oct. 17, or they will be fired.

“It is unfortunate that the Governor and his team have chosen to mandate one of the most stringent vaccine mandates in the country with no reasonable alternatives,” State Police Association President Michael Cherven said in a statement.

Chervin said the troopers should have “reasonable alternatives” to being required to get vaccinated such as wearing masks and being tested regularly.

Last week, a state judge denied a request from the state’s police union to block the governor’s vaccine mandate for troopers, according to WBZ-TV. The police union’s attorneys told the local broadcaster that up to 20% of state police employees remain unvaccinated.

With the judge’s ruling, unvaccinated troopers were only given a few days to get their first vaccine dose or they could face disciplinary action, WBZ reported.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2021/09/27/1040961594/massachusetts-state-police-resign-covid-vaccine