BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – The federal government has received $7.1 million in forfeited funds that were unlawfully obtained from Medicare by a Mississippi man who was convicted in 2021 of health care fraud and conspiracy to commit health care fraud, announced U.S. Attorney Prim F. Escalona and Tamala E. Miles, Special Agent in Charge with the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General.

 

In August 2021, Phillip Anthony Minga pleaded guilty to four counts of health care fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit health care fraud. In December 2021, Chief U.S. District Court Judge L. Scott Coogler sentenced Minga to 78 months in prison. At that time, the Court ordered Minga to repay more than $16.1 million in restitution and ordered him to forfeit $7.1 million. After filing a motion to forfeit certain property, the United States last week confirmed the receipt of $7.1 million from Minga. The U.S. Attorney’s Office will seek to restore these funds to the Medicare Program.

“It is always a goal of the justice system to make the victim whole following wrongdoing. When public agencies like Medicare are defrauded for personal gain, it harms all American taxpayers,” said United States Attorney Prim F. Escalona. “I’m grateful that the collaborative work of federal law enforcement agencies and state partners in Alabama and Mississippi have restored taxpayer dollars to an agency purposed to serve some of the most vulnerable in our communities,” added Escalona.

“Healthcare fraud is not a victimless crime. Defrauding federal healthcare programs not only wastes valuable taxpayer dollars, it also takes resources away from individuals in need of medical care,” said Tamala E. Miles, Special Agent in Charge with the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG). “HHS-OIG is proud to work with our law enforcement partners to return these funds to the Medicare program.”

 

Minga failed to report a 2010 wire fraud conviction to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Consequently, on October 17, 2016, Minga was excluded from the Medicare Program for 10 years. The exclusion provided that Medicare would not pay claims submitted by anyone who employed Minga in a management or administrative role. Nevertheless, from 2016 until 2021, Minga committed health care fraud by continuing to manage and control pharmacies that submitted claims for payment to Medicare. In order to avoid detection, Minga ensured that those submitting Medicare enrollment/revalidation paperwork for these pharmacies would not disclose Minga’s ownership interest or managerial role in these pharmacies. From October 17, 2016, to August 16, 2021, Medicare paid approximately $16,109,446.67 to the pharmacies in which Minga had an ownership interest or managerial role.

HHS was the lead federal investigative agency.  HHS was closely assisted by the State of Mississippi’s Office of the Attorney General and the State of Alabama’s State Board of Pharmacy. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Tom Borton, Austin Shutt, and Kristen Osborne led the forfeiture recovery proceedings, while Lloyd Peeples, Ryan Rummage, and Don Long prosecuted the criminal health care fraud case.

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

MOSCOW – Leading Russian economist Vladimir Mau has been charged with fraud “on an especially large scale”, the interior ministry said on Thursday, in a shock to Russia’s academic and economic elite.

It said he was accused of embezzling funds from the institute where is rector, as part of a larger case involving another top academic and a former deputy education minister.

Mau, 62, is an economic liberal with close links to top policymakers, and a board member of Russian energy giant Gazprom.

He frequently appeared on expert panels at the St Petersburg Forum, Russia’s annual showcase event for business and finance, and was an associate of the late Yegor Gaidar, who implemented “shock therapy” economic reforms in Russia after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.

A Moscow court placed Mau under house arrest on Thursday until August 7 over suspected embezzlement of 21 million roubles ($400,000) from the institute, the RIA news agency said.

His lawyer, Alexey Dudnik told RIA that he would appeal the house arrest.

Interfax, another news agency, quoted Mau saying that the accusations are absurd.

In a shocked post on social media, political scientist Ekaterina Shulman expressed her solidarity with Mau, writing: “Dear Vladimir Alexandrovich, what have we come to?”

The interior ministry said anti-corruption investigators had conducted searches at the homes of Mau and employees of his institute, the Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration.

The ministry said the charges were part of a wider case in which Marina Rakova, a former deputy education minister, and Sergei Zuev, who like Mau was rector of a leading academic institute, have previously been arrested.

Opposition figures have criticised the case as the latest episode in a long-running Kremlin campaign to exert control over Russia’s education sphere and quash academic freedoms.

(Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Alison Williams and Alistair Bell)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0YL-BASEIMAGE

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0YN-BASEIMAGE

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0YO-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Daniel Wiessner

(Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday turned away Alaska Airlines Inc’s challenge to being bound by the employment laws of states where their workers are based, the central issue in its legal battle with California-based flight attendants.

The justices declined to hear an appeal by Alaska Airlines of a lower court’s ruling that Virgin America, which it acquired in 2018, had to give these flight attendants meal and rest breaks required by California law. Industry groups have said the lower court’s decision will lead to canceled flights and higher ticket prices.

The court also turned away a separate case by trade group Airlines for America challenging the state of Washington’s ability to enforce state employment laws against airlines.

In a statement, Alaska Airlines said it was evaluating how it could comply with California’s strict meal and rest break laws while also following federal guidelines requiring airline crew to perform specific duties.

Airlines for America said in a statement “the lack of a definitive answer from the court does not resolve the conflict between state and federal law … and will result in a patchwork of costly and conflicting state regulations, as at least 19 states have some form of meal and rest break laws.”

Charles Cooper, a lawyer for a group of flight attendants who sued, said the Supreme Court’s action confirms that a lower court ruling against Virgin was correct.

A federal law bars states from adopting measures that affect the prices, routes and services offered by airlines. But the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last year decided that state wage laws that generally apply to all workers also cover airline employees because they have only an indirect impact on airline services.

The 9th Circuit threw out the Washington state lawsuit a few days later, citing its ruling in Virgin’s case.

Alaska Airlines in its petition to the Supreme Court to hear its appeal said federal law was designed to impose a uniform nationwide standard for airlines to follow. Forcing airlines to give California-based flight attendants breaks while in the air would interfere with takeoffs and landings, “leaving planes stranded on runways at unpredictable times and causing cascading delays at airports nationwide,” the airline said.

The Virgin flight attendants accused the airline of various violations of California law in a 2015 lawsuit.

Airlines for America told the Supreme Court in a brief last year that imposing state requirements on the industry would increases labor costs, leading to reduced services and higher prices for flights.

Alaska Airlines was also backed in its appeal by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the largest U.S. business lobby, and 19 Republican-led states.

The case is Virgin America Inc v. Bernstein, U.S. Supreme Court, No. 21-260.

(Reporting by Daniel Wiessner in Albany, New York; Editing by Will Dunham)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0RF-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Mark Trevelyan

LONDON -Russia said on Thursday it had summoned the British ambassador to voice a strong protest against “offensive” British statements, including about alleged Russian threats to use nuclear weapons.

The Russian Foreign Ministry said it issued the rebuke to Ambassador Deborah Bronnert over “the frankly boorish statements of the British leadership regarding Russia, its leader and official representatives of the authorities, as well as the Russian people”.

It said Bronnert was handed a memorandum stating that “offensive rhetoric from representatives of the UK authorities is unacceptable. In polite society, it is customary to apologise for such statements.”

The ministry said Russia had told her it objected to British statements containing “deliberately false information, in particular about alleged Russian ‘threats to use nuclear weapons'”.

No immediate comment was available from Britain’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.

British Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said in a radio interview this week that Russian President Vladimir Putin had “small man syndrome” and Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova was “like a comedy turn – she does her statement every week threatening to nuke everyone”.

Russia’s war in Ukraine has wrecked its relations with most Western countries but it often reserves special vitriol for Britain, which has positioned itself as a leading backer of Kyiv in both rhetorical support and weapons supplies.

In February, the Kremlin condemned what it called “absolutely unacceptable” remarks by British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss about the risk of conflict between Russia and NATO after Moscow invaded Ukraine.

On Thursday, Putin cited Margaret Thatcher’s 1982 dispatch of the British navy to take back the Falkland Islands from Argentina in response to comments by Prime Minister Boris Johnson that the Russian invasion of Ukraine was a “perfect example of toxic masculinity” and would not have happened if Putin were a woman.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said later that some of Johnson’s comments were “monstrous”.

(Writing by Mark Trevelyan, editing by Deepa Babington)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0V2-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

(Reuters) – Here are reactions to the U.S. Supreme Court ruling on Thursday limiting the federal government’s authority to issue sweeping regulations to reduce carbon emissions from power plants.

U.S. PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN

“Today’s decision sides with special interests that have waged a long-term campaign to strip away our right to breathe clean air. We cannot and will not ignore the danger to public health and existential threat the climate crisis poses. The science confirms what we all see with our own eyes – the wildfires, droughts, extreme heat, and intense storms are endangering our lives and livelihoods… I will take action.”

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

“We are reviewing the Supreme Court’s decision. EPA is committed to using the full scope of its existing authorities to protect public health and significantly reduce environmental pollution, which is in alignment with the growing clean energy economy.”

WEST VIRGINIA ATTORNEY GENERAL PATRICK MORRISEY

“Huge victory against federal overreach and the excesses of the administrative state. This is a HUGE win for West Virginia, our energy jobs and those who care about maintaining separation of powers in our nation.”

CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR GAVIN NEWSOM

“SCOTUS sided with the fossil fuel industry, kneecapping EPA’s basic ability to tackle climate change. CA will lead this fight with our $53.9 BILLION climate commitment. We’ll reduce pollution, protect people from extreme weather & leave the world better off than we found it.”

UNITED NATIONS SPOKESMAN STEPHANE DUJARRIC

“This is a setback in our fight against climate change, when we are already far off-track in meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement…. An emergency as global in nature as climate change requires a global response, and the actions of a single nation should not and cannot make or break whether we reach our climate objectives.”

YAMIDE DAGNET, DIRECTOR FOR CLIMATE JUSTICE, OPEN SOCIETY FOUNDATIONS

“Backsliding is now the dominant trend in the climate space. To renew confidence in its leadership, the U.S. will need to swiftly pivot and keep its targets on track, while seeking to raise ambition.”

MICHAEL BLOOMBERG, U.N. SPECIAL ENVOY FOR CLIMATE AMBITION

“This decision marks the second time in a week that the Supreme Court has turned back the clock to darker days that have dangerous implications for public health. The decision to side with polluters over the public will cost American lives and cause an enormous amount of preventable suffering, with the biggest burden falling on low-income communities and communities of color.”

JODY FREEMAN, HARVARD UNIVERSITY LAW PROFESSOR

“This is a lifeline to extending the use of coal.”

U.S. SENATOR KEVIN CRAMER, NORTH DAKOTA REPUBLICAN

“Today’s ruling reaffirms Congress never intended the federal government to regulate greenhouse gas emissions for the states.”

LEAGUE OF CONSERVATION VOTERS

“This is an outrageous decision that will jeopardize our communities and planet in favor of polluters and their far-right allies.”

JOHANNA CHAO KREILICK, PRESIDENT, UNION OF CONCERNED SCIENTISTS

“The very agency that the court has recognized is tasked with the obligation to act has been significantly curtailed in so doing. It defies logic and defies common sense… EPA has no choice. It must make do with the authority it retains to quickly advance as robust a set of power plant standards as it can.”

NANCY PELOSI, U.S. HOUSE SPEAKER AND CALIFORNIA DEMOCRAT

“This devastating decision is the latest in the efforts by extremist and partisan Republican-appointed Justices to take a wrecking ball to the health, liberty and security of the American people. In just two weeks, the Court has acted to erase reproductive health freedom, flood our public places with more deadly weapons and, now, to let our planet burn.”

SENATE MINORITY LEADER MITCH MCCONNELL, KENTUCKY REPUBLICAN

“Even as energy prices spiral out of control and experts warn of electricity blackouts, the Biden Administration has continued the Left’s war on affordable domestic energy and proposed to saddle the electric power sector with expensive regulatory requirements.”

MATTHEW SAMUDA, JAMAICAN MINISTER FOR ECONOMIC GROWTH AND JOB CREATION, WHO WORKS ON CLIMATE ACTION

“Refusal to cut these emissions, by any of the individual nations or by the collective, is sentencing the developing world to continued poverty, increased instability, homelessness and potential death…. we appeal to the greatest emitters amongst us to show common humanity.”

JUTTA PAULUS, GERMAN GREEN LAWMAKER IN EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

“The arch-conservative U.S. Supreme Court has delivered another radical ruling. This time, however, not only citizens of the USA are affected, but the consequences affect the entire world population… Three months before the UN Climate Change Conference in Egypt, this is a serious setback.”

(Reporting by Washington bureau; Editing by Howard Goller)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0PZ-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

(Reuters) -AstraZeneca said on Thursday a combination of its cancer drug, Imfinzi, and chemotherapy showed promise in a late-stage trial in patients with an aggressive form of lung cancer, when given before surgery.

Data showed the combination was more effective in removing cancer cells in tissue samples taken during surgery when compared with just chemotherapy in patients with non-small cell lung cancer, the Anglo-Swedish drugmaker said.

The interim result is a boost to the company’s oncology efforts – a major area of focus – following disappointing data for Imfinzi earlier in the year in another area of therapy. (https://reut.rs/3nq1chi)

AstraZeneca added the trial would continue as planned to assess the additional main goal of event-free survival, and the interim data would be shared with health authorities globally.

Imfinzi belongs to the immunotherapy class of treatments, which boost the body’s defences to fight cancer by using antibodies that block or bind to foreign substances in the body. The treatment generated $2.41 billion in 2021 sales.

“Engaging the immune response with Imfinzi both before and after surgery is an exciting new strategy,” said Susan Galbraith, executive vice president of oncology R&D at AstraZeneca.

Non-small cell lung cancer is the most common form of lung cancer, accounting for about 85% of the estimated 2.2 million new cases of the disease diagnosed each year worldwide, according to the World Health Organization.

(Reporting by Amna Karimi and Pushkala Aripaka in Bengaluru; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips and Anil D’Silva)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0Y5-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Stephen Nellis

(Reuters) – Apple Inc wants you to start buying gas directly from your car dashboard as early as this fall, when the newest version of its CarPlay software rolls out, accelerating the company’s push to turn your vehicle into a store for goods and services.

A new feature quietly unveiled at Apple’s developer conference this month will allow CarPlay users to tap an app to navigate to a pump and buy gas straight from a screen in the car, skipping the usual process of inserting or tapping a credit card. Details of Apple’s demo for developers have not previously been reported.

But Dallas-based HF Sinclair, which markets its gasoline at 1,600 stations in the United States, told Reuters that it plans to use the new CarPlay technology and will announce details in coming months.

“We are excited by the idea that consumers could navigate to a Sinclair station and purchase fuel from their vehicle navigation screen,” said Jack Barger, the company’s senior vice president of marketing.

Fuel apps are just the latest in a sustained push by Apple to make it possible to tap to buy from the navigation screen. It has already opened up CarPlay to apps for parking, electric vehicle charging and ordering food, and it also is adding driving task apps such as logging mileage on business trips.

Fuel is a major expense for car owners. The U.S. Energy Information Administration estimated in April that the average U.S. household will spend about $2,945 on gasoline in 2022, or about $455 more than last year.

Apple currently does not charge automakers, developers or users for CarPlay; the business interest is putting Apple at the forefront as cars transform into rolling computers, said Horace Dediu, an analyst with Asymco and founder of Micromobility Industries. The new feature will hit hundreds of car models already compatible with CarPlay when Apple releases software updates this fall.

“Forget about Apple Car – Apple CarPlay is a bigger deal,” Dediu said. “It’s very likely to scale to millions and millions of cars, if not hundreds of millions.”

To use the new CarPlay feature this fall, iPhone users will need to download a fuel company’s app to their phone and enter payment credentials to set up the app. After the app is set up, users will be able to tap on their navigation screen to activate a pump and pay.

“It’s a massive marketplace, and consumers really want to take friction out of payments,” said Donald Frieden, chief executive officer of Houston-based P97 Networks, which makes the digital plumbing that many fuel companies will use to connect their apps to cars.

Frieden said he has fielded calls from oil companies that are interested to make their apps work with CarPlay. BP, Shell and Chevron Corp did not respond to requests for comment about whether they plan to make their iPhone apps work with CarPlay.

FAILED ATTEMPTS

Apple’s latest move is likely to increase tensions with automakers that have their own ambitions for commerce in the car.

For example, vehicle makers have tried – and failed – to popularize gasoline purchasing from the car before. General Motors Co rolled out a system for doing so in 2017, but shuttered it earlier this year “due to a supplier exiting the business,” GM told Reuters in a statement.

Beyond apps for fuel and other purchases, Apple is also seeking to expand CarPlay further into the car’s driving systems by accessing speed and fuel gauge data.

But automakers are not likely to hand over that data to Apple without making demands of their own in talks that analysts believe are likely already under way.

Speaking at the Reuters Automotive Europe conference in Munich on Wednesday, Mercedes Benz CEO Ola Kaellenius said the company’s goal “is to have a complete, holistic, Mercedes experience.”

Kallenius said Mercedes would not seek to reinvent every category of app, but that “when interacting with companies that are in this digital domain … anything and everything that crosses into product liability relevance, we would be very cautious.”

(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Peter Henderson, Kenneth Li and Matthew Lewis)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0H9-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

BUDAPEST – Hungary expects to sign an agreement with the European Union by the autumn over 22 billion euros ($23 billion) of development funds under the bloc’s 2021-2027 budget, the country’s economic development minister Marton Nagy said on Thursday.

Agreement over the funds has been delayed by Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s many battles with the EU, such as over migration, human rights and his stance on Russia, but he is under growing pressure to strike a deal, with the Hungarian currency hitting new lows and inflation surging.

“We need to reel in EU funds and we must come to an agreement with the EU,” Nagy told a university forum.

He added, however, that progress in talks on money from the EU’s pandemic recovery fund – a separate pot – was still proving difficult.

The European Commission said on Wednesday it had “no updates” on granting Hungary access to 15.5 billion euros in COVID-19 economic stimulus funds. The EU executive also said it was analysing Budapest’s response to concerns it had raised over Hungary’s public procurement system.

Nagy added Orban’s government would aim to preserve full employment, which would be “very hard” over the next year and a half amid an economic slowdown and could entail further fiscal costs.

($1 = 0.9546 euros)

(Reporting by Gergely Szakacs; Editing by Gareth Jones and Mark Potter)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0VC-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

(Reuters) -Pfizer Inc said on Thursday it is seeking full U.S. approval for its oral COVID-19 antiviral treatment Paxlovid, which is currently available under an emergency use authorization (EUA).

Pfizer said it submitted a New Drug Application for Paxlovid to the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of COVID-19 in vaccinated and unvaccinated people at high risk of progression to severe illness.

That is basically consistent with the drug’s current EUA, which Pfizer said covers 50% to 60% of the U.S. population, citing estimates from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A full approval could mean the company would have the option to sell Paxlovid on the open market like other drugs, depending on whether or not the U.S. government decides to stop buying the drug and providing it for free nationwide.

Also, “the company might have more control over educating the public with commercials, or however they want, to boost uptake,” said Karen Andersen, healthcare strategist at Morningstar.

The two-drug treatment taken for five days beginning shortly after onset of COVID symptoms reduced the risk of hospitalization or death by 88% in non-hospitalized, high-risk adult patients in Pfizer’s clinical trial, which did not included vaccinated people.

Data from a study in Israel earlier this month showed Paxlovid reduced COVID-19 hospitalization and death rates in vaccinated and unvaccinated patients 65 years and older, but was not found to prevent severe illness among younger adults.

More than 1.6 million courses of Paxlovid have been administered in the United States, according to data from the Department of Health and Human Services.

(Reporting by Michael Erman and Manas MishraEditing by Bill Berkrot and Mark Potter)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0GG-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Luc Cohen

NEW YORK – A German citizen accused of defrauding investors out of $4 billion by selling a fake cryptocurrency called OneCoin has been added to the FBI’s list of its ten most-wanted fugitives, U.S. officials said on Thursday.

Ruja Ignatova, also known as “Cryptoqueen,” was charged in 2019 with eight counts including wire fraud and securities fraud for running the Bulgaria-based OneCoin Ltd as a pyramid scheme. Prosecutors say the company offered commissions for members to entice others to buy a worthless cryptocurrency.

“She timed her scheme perfectly, capitalizing on the frenzied speculation of the early days of cryptocurrency,” said Damian Williams, the top federal prosecutor in Manhattan.

Williams described OneCoin as “one of the largest Ponzi schemes in history.”

Ignatova disappeared in late 2017 after bugging an apartment belonging to her American boyfriend and learning he was cooperating with an FBI probe into OneCoin, Williams said. She boarded a flight from Bulgaria to Greece and has not been seen since, he said.

The FBI is offering a $100,000 reward for information leading to Ignatova’s capture, said Michael Driscoll, the FBI’s assistant director-in-charge in New York.

Driscoll declined to comment on any leads as to where Ignatova might be. The bureau adds fugitives to its most-wanted list when it believes the public may be able to assist with tracking suspects down.

“She left with a tremendous amount of cash,” Driscoll told reporters. “Money can buy a lot of friends, and I would imagine she’s taking advantage of that.”

Ignatova was charged alongside Mark Scott, a former corporate lawyer who prosecutors said laundered around $400 million for OneCoin. Scott was found guilty of conspiracy to commit money laundering and conspiracy to commit bank fraud following a three-week trial in Manhattan federal court.

(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0W4-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND – The Baltimore Police Department has announced that an arrest has been made in the attempted murder of a Police Sergeant that took place on Wednesday night on the vicinity of Park Heights Avenue in Northwest, D.C.

According to police, “On June 28, 2022, at approximately 8p.m., a Northwest District police Sergeant was critically injured while attempting to conduct a vehicle stop in the 5200 block of Park Heights Avenue, when the suspect intentionally struck and dragged the Sergeant for two blocks.”

The Baltimore Police Department arrested repeat violent offender 36 year-old Joseph Black, yesterday on the 1600 block of Druid Hill Avenue. Black had barricaded himself into a home in the block.

Joseph Black was brought to Central Booking Intake Facility where he was charged with attempted 1st degree murder.

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Andrew Chung

WASHINGTON -On the heels of last week’s landmark ruling expanding individual gun rights, the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday threw out several lower court rulings that had upheld gun restrictions including bans on assault-style rifles in Maryland and large-capacity ammunition magazines in New Jersey and California.

The actions by the justices sent these cases back to lower courts to reconsider in light of their June 23 ruling that declared for the first time a constitutional right to carry a handgun in public for self defense.

Last week’s 6-3 ruling, with the conservative justices in the majority and liberal justices in dissent, struck down New York state’s limits on carrying concealed handguns outside the home. The court found that the law, enacted in 1913, violated a person’s right to “keep and bear arms” under the Second Amendment.

The ruling also clarified how courts must now assess whether regulations are valid under the U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment, requiring them to be comparable with restrictions traditionally adopted throughout U.S. history. Legal experts say – and gun control advocates fear – such a standard could lead courts to invalidate more gun restrictions nationwide.

The justices’ actions on Thursday mean that lower courts that allowed gun restrictions will have to reconsider decisions including one upholding Maryland’s ban on “highly dangerous, military-style assault rifles.”

Maryland enacted its ban after a shooter used such a weapon in the 2012 mass killing of 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. Five other states also ban these weapons, Maryland said in a legal filing.

Assault-type rifles have been a recurring feature in U.S. mass shootings in recent years including the May 24 attack that killed 19 children and two teachers at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, and the May 14 attack that killed 10 people at a grocery store in Buffalo, New York.

The Maryland plaintiffs sued in 2020 despite conceding that their case was doomed under a 2017 ruling by the Richmond, Virginia-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which had upheld Maryland’s ban. The Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal of that ruling.

Contesting the term “assault weapon” as an inaccurate “political term,” the Maryland plaintiffs said that assault weapons cannot be outright banned because they are in “common use” by millions of law abiding individuals, just like the handguns at issue in the landmark 2008 Supreme Court ruling striking down a ban on the firearms in the U.S. capital.

The justices sent back to lower courts other rulings upholding bans in New Jersey and California on firearm magazines with more than 10 rounds of ammunition. The challenges in those cases were filed by state affiliates of the National Rifle Association, a gun rights group closely aligned with Republicans.

The Supreme Court also threw out a lower court decision that had upheld Hawaii’s restrictions on openly carrying firearms in public as valid under the Second Amendment.

Gun rights, cherished by many Americans and promised by the country’s 18th century founders, are a contentious issue in a nation with high levels of firearms violence.

Last week’s ruling represented the court’s most important statement on gun rights in more than a decade. The court in 2008 recognized for the first time an individual’s right to keep guns at home for self-defense in a District of Columbia case, and in 2010 applied that right to the states.

President Joe Biden, two days after the court invalidated New York’s gun measure, signed into law last Saturday the first major federal gun reform in three decades.

The new law blocks gun sales to those convicted of abusing unmarried intimate partners and cracks down on gun sales to purchasers convicted of domestic violence. It also provides new federal funding to states that administer “red flag” laws intended to remove guns from people deemed dangerous to themselves and others.

It does not ban sales of assault-style rifles or high-capacity magazines, policies Biden supports. But it does take some steps on background checks by allowing access, for the first time, to information on significant crimes committed by juveniles.

(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0R6-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Dawn Chmielewski

(Reuters) – NBCUniversal said on Thursday it completed the highest-grossing upfront advertising sales period since its acquisition by Comcast Corp with commitments exceeding $7 billion, according to a source with knowledge of the matter.

The media company said in a statement its approach of combining local, national and digital advertising sales through a single platform fueled the results.

NBCU said the pharmaceutical industry increased spending by 40%. Travel also rebounded, with spending increasing 30%.

The company also reported nearly 20% growth in spending on digital platforms and streaming. Its ad-supported Peacock service doubled its upfront commitments to more than $1 billion.

Comcast acquired NBCUniversal, which operates the NBC broadcast network and cable channels including USA Network and Bravo, in 2013.

(Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski; Editing by Richard Chang)

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Andrew Chung

WASHINGTON -The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday agreed to hear a Republican-backed appeal that could give state legislatures far more power over federal elections by limiting the ability of state courts to review their actions, taking up a North Carolina case that could have broad implications for the 2024 elections and beyond.

The justices took up the appeal by Republican state lawmakers of a February decision by North Carolina’s top court to throw out a map delineating the state’s 14 U.S. House of Representatives districts approved last year by the Republican-controlled state legislature.

The North Carolina Supreme Court determined that the boundaries for the districts were drawn by the legislature in a manner that boosted the electoral chances of Republicans at the expense of Democrats. It rejected Republican arguments seeking to shield legislature-drawn maps from legal attack in state courts.

North Carolina House Speaker Timothy Moore, a Republican, hailed the high court’s decision to hear the appeal.

“This case is not only critical to election integrity in North Carolina, but has implications for the security of elections nationwide,” Moore said.

Voting rights advocates disagreed.

“In a radical power grab, self-serving politicians want to defy our state’s highest court and impose illegal voting districts upon the people of North Carolina,” said Bob Phillips, executive director of Common Cause, a voting rights group that is among the plaintiffs challenging the legislature’s map.

In March, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a Republican request to put on hold the lower court rulings that adopted the court-drawn map, a decision seen as boosting Democratic hopes of retaining their slim House majority in the November midterm elections. Conservative Justices Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch dissented from that decision.

The Republican lawmakers said the state court impermissibly imposed its own policy determination for how much partisanship can go into crafting congressional lines. They acknowledged that the case would have an impact beyond redistricting, extending to “the whole waterfront of voting issues, from absentee voting deadlines to witness requirements, voter ID to curbside voting.”

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear the case in its next term, which begins in October, with a decision due by June 2023. The ruling is not expected to come before this November’s elections but could apply to 2024 elections including the presidential race.

Two groups of plaintiffs, including Democratic voters and an environmental group, sued after North Carolina’s legislature passed its version of the congressional map last November. The plaintiffs argued that the map violated the North Carolina state constitution’s provisions concerning free elections and freedom of assembly, among others.

The North Carolina Supreme Court struck down the map on Feb. 4, concluding that the way the districts were crafted was intentionally biased against Democrats, diluting their “fundamental right to equal voting power.”

A lower state court on Feb. 23 rejected a redrawn map submitted by the legislature and instead adopted a new map drawn by a bipartisan group of experts. According to some redistricting analysts, the new map includes seven Republican districts likely to be won by Republicans, six likely to be won by Democrats and one competitive seat.

NUMEROUS LEGAL BATTLES

The dispute is one of numerous legal battles in the United States over the composition of electoral districts, which are redrawn each decade to reflect population changes measured in a national census, last taken in 2020. In most states, such redistricting is done by the party in power, which can lead to map manipulation for partisan gain.

The Supreme Court in 2019 barred federal judges from curbing the practice, called partisan gerrymandering. Critics have said that such gerrymandering warps democracy.

The North Carolina Republicans’ defense of the legislature’s map relies on a contentious legal theory called the “independent state legislature doctrine” that is gaining traction in conservative legal circles and, if accepted, would vastly increase politicians’ control over how elections are conducted.

Under that doctrine, the U.S. Constitution gives legislatures, not state courts or other entities, authority over election rules including the drawing of electoral districts.

The doctrine is based in part on language in the Constitution stating that the “times, places and manner” of federal elections “shall be prescribed in each state by the legislature thereof.” In their appeal to the Supreme Court, the Republican lawmakers decried the “state supreme court’s usurpation of that authority.”

The state’s Department of Justice said in a legal filing that, contrary to the Republican lawmakers’ assertions, North Carolina state law specifically authorizes state courts to review redistricting efforts.

(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0QN-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

TRENTON, NJ – A 19-year-old male from Trenton has been indicted for murder in the shooting death of a 9-year-old girl in March.

According to Mercer County Prosecutor Angelo Onofri, the murder was the culmination of a feud between two people that turned deadly. A Mercer County grand jury returned a seven-count indictment this week charging Isiah Roberts with the March shooting death of 9-year-old Sequoya Bacon-Jones in Trenton.

“Roberts, 19, of Trenton, is charged with first-degree murder, three counts of second-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, second-degree aggravated assault, fourth-degree aggravated assault and second-degree unlawful possession of a handgun. He is being held in the Mercer County Correction Center pending trial,” Onofri said.

According to police, Sequoya was outside playing with her brother and other friends in the courtyard of the Kingsbury Square apartments around 7:30 p.m. on March 25, when gunfire broke out. She was shot once in the upper body as she ran for safety. She died just before midnight at a hospital in New Brunswick.

Onofri said the investigation revealed that a Facebook feud between two women led to a fight that preceded the shooting.

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Washington, D.C. Metro Police Department is investigating a shooting that left a 15 year-old dead in Northwest, D.C. . This incident took place on June 19th on the 2000 block of 14th Street.

According to investigators, “At approximately 8:48 pm, MPD ordered organizers to shut down a large event that was taking place in the listed location. While in the area, MPD officers heard the sound of gunshots and located a juvenile male, an adult female, and two adult male victims, including a Metropolitan Police Department Officer, struck from gunfire. MPD members rendered first aid to the victims until the arrival of DC Fire and EMS. The victims were subsequently transported to area hospitals for treatment. The juvenile male victim succumbed to his injuries and was pronounced deceased by medical personnel. The injuries sustained by the three additional victims were non-life threatening.”

15-year-old Chase Poole, of Northwest D.C. was identified as the victim.

A nearby camera captured the suspect.

If you have any information about this incident, please take no action but call the police at (202) 727-9099 or text 50411. This incident remains under investigation.

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

WEST NEW YORK, NJ – A West New York man has been charged for heinous acts against a 4-year-old boy in West New York.

According to police, on Tuesday, members of the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office Special Victims Unit arrested Antonio Yat Pop, 24, of West New York on charges relating to the sexual assault of a 4-year-old boy and a sex crime on a 7-year-old boy.

The victims are known to Yat Pop and two additional children were present at the time of the crimes, Prosecutor Esther Suarez said.

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

JERUSALEM -Israel on Wednesday moved closer toward its fifth election in less than four years, plunging it deeper into political uncertainty as it grapples with rising living costs amid renewed international efforts to revive a nuclear deal with Iran.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett announced he would not run in the upcoming election but would retain his position as alternate prime minister after his coalition partner Yair Lapid takes over as head of the caretaker government.

“I leave behind a thriving, strong and secure country,” he told reporters on Wednesday. “We proved this year that people with very different opinions can work together,” he added, referring to his ideologically diverse coalition.

Last week, Bennett moved to disperse parliament after a series of defections made his ruling coalition no longer tenable. The final vote on the bill to dissolve the Knesset, which was set to happen by midnight, was delayed until Thursday due to the many amendments filed, Israel’s public broadcaster Kan radio said.

Amendments were submitted by parties across the political spectrum. Israeli Finance Minister Avigdor Lieberman said his party was blocking the dispersal bill to advance a metro project, and the Arab-led Joint List party said it was hoping a holdup would lead to the expiration of regulations that extend legal protections to settlers in the occupied West Bank.

Once the calling of a snap election gets the Knesset’s final approval, Israel’s centre-left foreign minister, Yair Lapid, will take over from Bennett as prime minister of a caretaker government with limited powers.

But even with lawmakers grappling over the exact election date, either Oct. 25 or Nov. 1, the campaign has already become dominated by the possible comeback of former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Lapid and Bennett ended Netanyahu’s record 12-year reign a year ago by forming a rare, ideologically mixed alliance that included an independent Arab party for the first time. The government lasted longer than many expected but faltered in recent weeks amid infighting.

Netanyahu, now opposition leader, has been delighted by the end of what he has called the worst government in Israel’s history. He hopes to win a sixth term in office despite being on trial for corruption on charges he denies.

Surveys have shown his right-wing Likud party leading the polls but still short of a governing majority despite support of allied religious and nationalist parties.

Lawmakers from the pro-Netanyahu bloc have said they were working to form a new government before parliament dissolves. That scenario, which appears remote, would scupper an early election.

(Reporting by Maayan Lubell and Henriette Chacar; Editing by Robert Birsel and Aurora Ellis)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5S0ZU-BASEIMAGE

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5S0ZV-BASEIMAGE

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5S0ZW-BASEIMAGE

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5S0ZY-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

HOWARD COUNTY, MD – The Howard County Police Department released information about several events requiring police assistance this week.

The daily crime bulletin is posted each weekday by the department and includes the initial reporting of various crimes such as robberies, burglaries, assaults, vehicle thefts, and theft from vehicles. It is not inclusive of all police activity in a day.

Theft from vehicle/vehicle break-in
Laurel, 20723: 
9500 block of Glen Ridge Drive, June 27-28 overnight, purse

Jessup, 20794:  8300 block of Ari Court, June 28, side mirror

Columbia, 21045: 8800 block of Tamebird Court, June 28-29 overnight, wallet

Elkridge, 21075: 6700 block of Waterloo Road, June 28-29 overnight, multiple vehicles: various items

Vehicle theft
Columbia, 21044: 
5300 block of Columbia Road, June 28-29 overnight
2021 silver Volkswagen Tiguan, tags MD/3EN8891

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Andrea Shalal, Aislinn Laing and Robin Emmott

MADRID -President Joe Biden said on Thursday the United States will provide another $800 million in weapons and military aid to Ukraine, hailing the courage of Ukrainians since Russia invaded in February.

Speaking after a NATO summit that saw the alliance also agree to take in Finland and Sweden, Biden said the United States and its NATO allies were united in standing up to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“I don’t know how it’s going to end, but it will not end with Russia defeating Ukraine,” Biden told a news conference. “Ukraine has already dealt a severe blow to Russia.”

Biden, who appeared to be readying allies for a long conflict in Ukraine despite talk in March of a possible victory, added: “We are going to support Ukraine for as long as it takes.” He declined to give more details.

The pending formal announcement of more weapons would come on top of the more than $6.1 billion already announced by the United States since Russia forces rolled into Ukraine on Feb. 24 and brought full-scale war back to Europe.

The plans for fresh aid, as NATO repositions itself again on a Cold War footing with a massive forces build-up, came as Ukrainians used Howitzers to retake the strategic outpost of Snake Island.

Biden had earlier pledged more American troops, warplanes and warships for Europe as NATO agreed to strengthen its deterrents, putting more than 300,000 troops on high alert from the middle of next year.

“The U.S. is doing exactly what I said we would do if Russia invaded, enhance our force posture in Europe,” Biden said. “The United States is rallying the world to stand with Ukraine.”

RUSSIAN REPRISALS?

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said London would provide another 1 billion pounds ($1.22 billion) in military aid to Ukraine, while his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron said France would soon deliver six more CAESAR guns.

Britain’s contribution includes air defence systems and new electronic warfare equipment, taking support to more than 2.3 billion pounds since Moscow’s invasion, a financial sum the British government said was second only to U.S. aid.

Putin did not appear ready to withdraw or negotiate the terms of a peace deal, Johnson said.

“There doesn’t seem to be anything to talk about. Because it’s not only that the Ukrainian people would find it very difficult to do a deal, Putin isn’t even offering a deal,” Johnson told a news conference.

In the biggest shift in European security in decades, Finland and Sweden will sign the formal accession protocol next Tuesday to join NATO, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said, although ratification by its 30 members’ parliaments could take a year.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan however told a news conference at the close of the summit that the Nordic nations must first keep the promises in a deal for Turkey to lift its veto on their NATO membership bids.

Erdogan said Sweden had promised to extradite 73 individuals that he described as terrorists.

“First Sweden and Finland should carry out their duties and those are in the text … But if they don’t, of course it is out of the question for the ratification to be sent to our parliament,” Erdogan said.

Putin said on Wednesday that Russia would respond in kind if NATO deployed troops or infrastructure in Finland or Sweden.

Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas said the West needed to be ready, particularly in terms of possible attacks on Finnish, Sweden and NATO computer networks. “Of course, we have to expect some kind of surprises from Putin, but I doubt that he is attacking Sweden or Finland directly,” she said.

FIGHTING ON ALL FLANKS

While the three-day summit was dominated by NATO’s response to Russia’s war in Ukraine, host Spain urged allies to consider a bigger role for the alliance in North Africa and the Sahel.

NATO was created in 1949 to defend against the Soviet Union.

Western powers are concerned about a spike in violence in Mali, where the country’s ruling military junta, backed by Russian private military contractor Wagner Group, is battling an Islamist insurgency that spills into neighbouring countries in the African region known as the Sahel.

France, whose military policy has long been focused on NATO’s south, said in February that it would pull out 2,400 troops, after relations with the junta turned sour.

At Spain’s urging, with support from Italy, NATO’s new, 10-year master document, the “strategic concept” cites terrorism and migration as elements to monitor, and points to the southern flank as a new potential source of instability.

Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares said the region “is the epicentre of global terrorism”.

“If the threat were very present and very concrete, we could see a reinforcement of military deployment on the southern border as we are seeing in the east,” he said.

($1 = 0.8228 pounds)

(Additional reporting by Sabine Siebold, Humeyra Pamuk, Belen Carreno, Aislinn Laing, Andrea Shalal in Madrid, Alan Charlish in Warsaw and William James in London; Writing by Robin Emmott; Editing by Alison Williams)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0DW-BASEIMAGE

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0DX-BASEIMAGE

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0DY-BASEIMAGE

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0E0-BASEIMAGE

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0E1-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Bill Trott

, – Ralph “Sonny” Barger, the Hells Angels motorcycle club leader who became the rough-hewn face of America’s outlaw biker culture and the restlessness, hard living and criminality that came with it, has died, according to an announcement on his Facebook page. He was 83.

Barger asked that the announcement be published, “immediately after my passing.” The cause was cancer, according to the Facebook post.

Barger attained near-mythic status as a rugged hellion and a cool, charismatic leader of men who called themselves 1 percenters – apart from the straight-living 99 percent of the population. Much of that 99 percent was genuinely fearful of the Angels with their menacing appearance, rumbling Harley Davidson motorcycles, violent no-limits lifestyle and black leather wardrobe adorned with the club’s sacred winged skull patch.

The Hells Angels formed in 1948 in Southern California, and Barger helped start a chapter in Oakland, California, nine years later, drawing in the disaffected and the rebellious with its emphasis on brotherhood and freedom. The club would become a long-running target of law enforcement, which considered it a crime syndicate deeply involved in multi-million-dollar drug-dealing operations, gun running, witness intimidation and murder.

Barger himself was convicted of marijuana possession, heroin dealing, assault with a deadly weapon, kidnapping, firearms possession and conspiring to blow up the clubhouse of a rival motorcycle gang in Kentucky. But he told the Los Angeles Times the total 13 years he spent in prison was “not much, considering all the fun I’ve had.”

SNUCK INTO ARMY

Barger was born Oct. 8, 1938, in Modesto, California, and raised by his hard-drinking father and grandmother after his mother abandoned the family. He dropped out of school, joined the Army with a forged birth certificate and was discharged honorably 13 months later when it was learned that he was too young for service.

He ended up in Oakland, bought a motorcycle and joined a club called the Oakland Panthers but found its members too conventional and not as interested in “riding, drag-racing and raising hell” as he was. Then he found kindred spirits under the Hells Angels umbrella.

The Angels became the predominant biker group in California and eventually the world. Barger emerged as their chief in part thanks to Hunter S. Thompson’s 1966 book “Hell’s Angels: The Strange and Terrible Saga of the Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs.”

“In any gathering of Hell’s Angels … there is no doubt who is running the show: Ralph ‘Sonny’ Barger, the Maximum Leader … the coolest head in the lot, and a tough, quick-thinking dealer when any action starts,” Thompson wrote. “By turns he is a fanatic, a philosopher, a brawler, a shrewd compromiser and a final arbitrator … Barger’s word goes unquestioned.”

Barger, who once said he slept with a pistol under his pillow and extra ammunition under his mattress, reveled in the Angels’ outlaw image.

“The way we were depicted, we were Vikings on acid, raping our way across sunny California on motorcycles forged in the furnaces of hell,” he wrote in a 2001 autobiography. “It was sold to a lot of people and it was free publicity for us. And there ain’t anything wrong with publicity, especially when it’s followed up with money, girls and bikes.”

In the 1960s, Barger and company found themselves at odds with the hippie activist movement rooted in the San Francisco-Oakland area. He led a flock of Angels riding through an anti-war march in 1965, injuring several of the “peace creeps,” as Barger called them. He later sent a telegram to President Lyndon Johnson volunteering to take Angels to fight in Vietnam.

DEATH AT ALTAMONT

Barger’s Angels developed odd bonds with other elements of the ’60s counterculture, including the Grateful Dead rock band and writer Ken Kesey’s social circle of LSD-dropping Merry Pranksters. But in 1969 they were in the middle of one of the most infamous incidents in rock history – the Rolling Stones’ performance at the Altamont Speedway, about 50 miles east of San Francisco.

The Angels were brought in to keep spectators from climbing onstage and brawls frequently broke out. Barger said that Stones guitarist Keith Richards told him the band would not play until the violence stopped so Barger stuck a pistol in Richards’ side and ordered him to play.

In one audience fight, a spectator pulled a gun and was stabbed to death by an Angel – an incident chronicled in the documentary “Altamont.” Barger said Stones leader Mick Jagger had vilified the Angels and in 1983 a member from Cleveland told a congressional committee the gang plotted to kill Jagger in retaliation.

Barger was diagnosed with throat cancer at age 44 and smoked one last cigarette on the way to the operating room to have his vocal cords removed. Afterward he spoke in a raspy tone by putting a finger over a white patch on his neck and vibrating a muscle in his throat.

In his autobiography, Barger revealed what seemed like heresy – he would have preferred a Japanese-made motorcycle if not for the Angels’ fixation with Harleys.

He was an adviser and appeared in two 1960s movies – “Hells Angels on Wheels” and “Hell’s Angels 1969” – and his novel “Dead in 5 Heartbeats” was made into a movie in 2013. In 2010 Barger appeared on the television series “Sons of Anarchy” as a murderous biker known as Lenny the Pimp.

In 2010 he co-authored “Let’s Ride,” a guide to motorcycling ownership and safety.

Barger, who was married four times, worked out regularly in his later years to maintain a muscled physique while running a motorcycle repair shop in Arizona.

Barger is survived by his wife Zorana.

(Writing by Bill Trott; Additional reporting by Rich McKay; Editing by Diane Craft)

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

DUQUESNE, PA – One woman is in jail and another is in critical condition in the hospital after an incident Wednesday morning in Duquesne nearly turned fatal. Police responded to a call of a stabbing on Wednesday which is now being investigated by the Allegheny County Police Department’s Homicide Unit.

According to police, at approximately 11:16 am, 9-1-1 was notified of a stabbing in the 2700 block of Duquesne Place Drive.

“First responders found an adult female victim suffering from stab wounds to the trunk. An adult female actor was taken into custody on scene. Homicide detectives initiated an investigation,” ACPD reported.

Anyone with information concerning this incident is asked to call the County Police Tip Line 1-833-ALL-TIPS. Callers can remain anonymous.

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Timothy Aeppel and Lisa Baertlein

(Reuters) – People have been walking into Paul Centenari’s cardboard box factory outside Baltimore asking for jobs, something he has not seen in over a year.

“We didn’t see that a month ago,” said Centenari, the chief executive of Atlas Container Corp. He said that just six months ago Atlas turned to a social service group that places ex-convicts into jobs to help fill positions.

“Labor is still tight, but it’s loosening up a little bit.” he said.

Just how much it may be loosening remains unclear. U.S. Labor Department data on Thursday showed unemployment benefits rolls remained near their lowest in decades.

And a report from payroll provider UKG suggested the U.S. job market strengthened in the first half of this month – even as the Federal Reserve lifted interest rates and some economists began warning of a potential recession.

But other signs point toward softening, including high-profile layoff announcements in sectors like technology and housing.

This week, Tesla shed 200 employees working on its Autopilot driver-assistant system. Earlier, CEO Elon Musk told managers the electric vehicle maker needed to cut staff by about 10%. JPMorgan Chase & Co started layoffs in its mortgage business.

Unsolicited job applicants are a glimmer of hope for Atlas Container and other U.S. employers who have struggled over the past two years to fill jobs and retain staff.

“We’re always hiring because we’re always losing people,” Centenari said, noting that a lack of air conditioning at the factory makes it especially difficult to fill jobs during the summer.

“Our place gets hot in the summer,” he said, which is why he was surprised when his hiring manager told him about the recent walk-ins.

FedEx Corp CEO Raj Subramaniam last week said he believes the worst of the company’s labor problems are in its rear-view mirror. Wage inflation, employee turnover and costs tied to rerouting packages around understaffed facilities cost the global delivery firm $1.4 billion during its fiscal year ended May 31.

“Although wages remain higher than this time last year, they are stabilizing,” Subramaniam said on an earnings conference call with analysts.

Subramaniam said the company is now focused on retaining staff and using technology to manage labor more effectively.

Staff shortages became a hallmark of the U.S. employment market during the COVID-19 pandemic, with so many workers quitting or changing jobs it was dubbed the “Great Resignation.” Fed Chair Jerome Powell recently told lawmakers the current U.S. job market, with nearly two open jobs for every unemployed individual, was “sort of unsustainably hot.”

Jason Andringa, chief executive of Vermeer Corp., a machinery manufacturer in Pella, Iowa, said he expects the job market to loosen up in coming months. He said the Fed’s aggressive interest rate hikes have already cooled demand in a part of his business tied to the housing and consumer market: brush cutters sold to homeowners and their landscape servicers. Vermeer’s other sectors remain strong.

“It definitely feels as though the labor market will not be as frothy as it was just a few weeks ago,” he said.

(Reporting by Timothy Aeppel and Lisa Baertlein; Editing by Dan Burns and David Gregorio)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0V3-BASEIMAGE

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0V4-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

PHILADELPHIA, PA – A woman has been reported missing since last weekend and now the Philadelphia Police needs the public’s assistance in locating her.

Police said 29-year-old Bryonna Yates went to New York City and never returned.

“She was last seen on Saturday, June 25, 2022, at 12:00 A.M., on the 28XX block of West Montgomery Avenue by family. She was seen on Sunday, June 26, 2022, by a friend in the area of 5th Street between 11th and 14th Streets in New York City,” the department said. 

She is 5’0″, 200 lbs., medium brown complexion, brown eyes, braided black hair, birthmark on the upper right thigh, a tattoo on her chest “Gary” and a tattoo on her left forearm of “Imperfectly (with stars).”  She was last seen wearing a purple t-shirt, navy blue sweatpants, a black jacket, and carrying a brown teddy bear.

Anyone with any information on Bryonna’s whereabouts is asked to please contact Central Detectives Division at 215-686-3093 or 911.

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

By Brendan O’Brien

(Reuters) – The family of Emmett Till has unearthed a nearly 67-year-old arrest warrant for the white woman whose discredited accusations against the Black teenager led to his lynching, a brutal death that helped ignite the civil rights movement.

Last week, a team that included family members searching files in Greenwood, Mississippi, found the arrest warrant for kidnapping for Carolyn Bryant Donham, the Emmett Till Legacy Foundation said. Donham, who could not be reached on Thursday, claimed in 1955 that Till touched her and made sexual advances toward her.

“Execute the warrant!” the organization posted on Instagram with a photograph of the warrant.

Duke University Professor Timothy Tyson had alluded to the warrant in a 2017 book, writing that days after the murder the local sheriff told reporters he did not want to “bother the woman” by serving it because she was a mother of two small boys.

Last year the U.S. Justice Department said it failed to prove Donham lied about Till, though the department said there was “considerable doubt as to the credibility of her version of events.”

The Justice Department closed without charges a probe opened after the publication of Tyson’s book, in which he wrote that Donham had told him in 2008 that parts of her testimony about Till were untrue.

On Aug. 28, 1955, Till, visiting from Chicago, was beaten, shot and mutilated in Money, Mississippi, four days after Donham accused him of whistling at her. Later, Donham accused Till of grabbing her waist and making sexual remarks.

The decision by Till’s mother, Mamie Till Mobley, to hold an open-casket funeral showing her son’s tortured body was a galvanizing moment in the nation’s civil rights movement.

The Aug. 29, 1955, warrant ordered Donham, her husband at the time Roy Bryant and his half-brother, J.W. Milam, to be arrested for kidnapping.

An all-white jury later acquitted the two white men of murdering Till. The men later confessed in a paid magazine interview. Bryant died in 1994 and Milam in 1981.

(Reporting by Brendan O’Brien in Chicago; Editing by Donna Bryson and Matthew Lewis)

tagreuters.com2022binary_LYNXMPEI5T0UY-BASEIMAGE

0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

You can't access this website

Shore News Network provides free news to users. No paywalls. No subscriptions. Please support us by disabling ad blocker or using a different browser and trying again.