BALTIMORE, MARYLAND – The Baltimore Police Department is investigating a shooting that took place on April 12th on the 2600 Block of Lyndale Avenue in Northeast Baltimore.

According to police, “At approximately 4:42 p.m., Northeast District patrol officers responded to the 3600 block of Lyndale Avenue, for a report of a shooting. Once there, officers located a 24-year-old male victim, in the rear of the location, suffering from apparent gunshot wounds. The victim was transported to an area hospital where his condition is unknown. Northeast District and Homicide detectives responded to the location.”

If you have any information about this incident, please call 410-396-2444 or Metro Crime Stoppers at 1-866-7Lockup.

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By Jarrett Renshaw

PHILADELPHIA – Donald Trump’s decision to endorse celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz in the Pennsylvania Senate race has divided local Republican Party officials and stunned close advisers who thought he had decided to stay out of the contest to pick a Republican candidate, two sources familiar with internal deliberations told Reuters.

Oz and David McCormick, a former hedge fund CEO who has hired many former aides to Trump to work on his campaign, are the top two candidates in the Republican nominating contest that will determine who faces a Democratic candidate in the November congressional elections. The Senate race could determine control of the Senate and the fate of Democratic President Joe Biden’s legislative agenda.

In recent months, top advisers urged Trump to stay out of the Republican primary during routine monthly meetings at his Mar-a-Largo, Florida estate where potential endorsements of candidates were reviewed, according to the sources. In the last meeting, held in March, the former president and advisers agreed to put aside the decision for now, the sources said.

A third source with knowledge of the situation said Trump’s wife Melania had encouraged him to endorse Oz.

The internal deliberations on the endorsement have not been previously reported.

While both Oz and McCormick had been vying for Trump’s support, the advisers saw no reason for Trump to endorse either of them, as both men have enthusiastically adopted the former president’s America First agenda.

“It’s not like he was knocking out a never-Trumper,” with his endorsement of Oz, said one of the sources, using a name typically used to describe moderate Republicans who reject Trump’s no-holds-barred approach to politics.

Ultimately, Trump always makes the final call and he “went with his gut,” the second source said.

Neither source was able to shed light on why Trump changed his mind and decided to back Oz.

A spokesperson for Trump did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Brittany Yanick, the communications director for the Oz campaign, said there was nothing surprising about Trump’s endorsement.

“President Trump endorsed Dr. Mehmet Oz because he’s a conservative outsider who will stand up to Joe Biden and the woke Left,” she said. 

The McCormick campaign did not respond directly to questions about the endorsement.

While the primary includes a crowded field of contenders, recent polls show Oz and McCormick as the clear frontrunners.

Oz, a Turkish American, hosts the syndicated “The Dr. Oz Show” and is a household name in the United States, but his public image took a blow in 2014 when he told lawmakers probing bogus diet product ads that some of the products promoted on his show lacked “scientific muster.”

BLOWBACK

The former president’s endorsement has confused and riled Republicans in pro-Trump regions of Pennsylvania.

Mark Hrutkay, the vice chairman of the Republican Party in Washington County in western Pennsylvania, says callers have been flooding his office phone since Trump announced the endorsement on Saturday night.

“I have not had one call from a voter who supported the endorsement. They are pissed off,” says Hrutkay. “This doesn’t mean they are abandoning Trump, because they’re not. They just don’t understand the endorsement.”

Sean Parnell, who was Trump’s first choice in the Senate race before dropping out amid spousal abuse allegations, said Oz lacks a conservative track record and will be burdened by a long list of “head scratching” moments from his years on television.

Sam DeMarco, who heads the Republican Party in Allegheny County, which includes Pittsburgh, was also surprised that Trump decided to weigh in and doesn’t expect it to have a major impact.

“Voters have a lot of questions about Oz’s conservative credentials on issues like guns and abortion.” DeMarco said. “I am not quite sure why (Trump) decided to endorse at this point in the race. He’s putting his credibility on the line.”

Chris Borick, a political science professor at Muhlenberg University in Pennsylvania, says Trump “went out a limb” with the Oz endorsement.

“It certainly carries risk for Trump, whose goal in the end is to look good and there’s a good chance he won’t when the race is over,” Borick said.

Still, some Trump loyalists in Pennsylvania fully support his endorsement of Oz and don’t understand the blowback it is generating.

“People are becoming unhinged. Oz is a great candidate,” said Lee Snover, a Trump loyalist who chairs the Republican Party in Northampton County.

“I got the same treatment when I backed Trump and people criticized me. They were wrong then and they are wrong about Oz,” Snover said.

(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw,; Additional reporting by Alexandra Ulmer,; Editing by Ross Colvin and Alistair Bell)

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RALEIGH, N.C. – A Wilson man was sentenced today to 110 months in prison after stealing a firearm, robbing a man at gunpoint, and shooting at another man all on one day.  On September 2, 2021, Gregory Antawn Joyner pled guilty to Possession of a Firearm as a Convicted Felon.  

According to court documents and other information presented in court, on the morning of September 25, 2020, the Wilson Police Department received information from an eyewitness who observed Joyner, 32, steal a loaded .40 caliber semi-automatic handgun with an extended magazine from a parked vehicle on Emory Street in Wilson, North Carolina.

That afternoon, as Wilson Police were investigating the firearm theft from Emory Street, they received a call of an armed robbery at the Jubair Mart on Tarboro Street in Wilson. After interviewing witnesses, Wilson Police reviewed the store’s surveillance footage, which showed Joyner robbing a man of $20 at gunpoint and threatening to kill him. Joyner fled the store on foot.

Several hours after the robbery, Wilson Police officers responded to a Shots Fired call on Dewey Street. When officers arrived, they observed Joyner still at the scene. Joyner was armed and again attempted to flee. Ultimately, Wilson Police officers detained Joyner and placed him into custody. On Joyner’s person, officers recovered the stolen .40 caliber handgun. The extended magazine was loaded with 20 rounds of ammunition. Officers also recovered a spent shell casing. 

Multiple witnesses on scene informed police they observed Joyner initiate an armed struggle with a male victim. During this struggle, Joyner discharged his firearm at the male victim, but did not strike him. Joyner attempted to fire a second shot, but the gun jammed and failed to eject the round. At that point, another witness joined the struggle to subdue Joyner and assisted in wrestling the gun away from Joyner. The first male victim successfully secured the firearm from Joyner and attempted to leave in his vehicle. Joyner jumped onto the victim’s vehicle and refused to let go as the victim drove off. Eventually, the victim tossed the handgun back out the window to Joyner, who let go of the vehicle and retrieved the firearm. Joyner attempted to flee the area moments before Wilson Police arrived and apprehended him.

U.S. Attorney Easley commented: “Gregory Joyner was a one-man crime wave. The sentence the Court imposed today was just and fair. Every day that Joyner spends in federal prison is a safer day for the people of Wilson. The United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of North Carolina stands ready to assist our local law enforcement partners in protecting the community from violent offenders like Joyner.”

Michael F. Easley, Jr., United States Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina made the announcement after sentencing by U.S. District Judge Terrence W. Boyle. The Wilson Police Department investigated the case and Assistant U.S. Attorney Aakash Singh  prosecuted the case.

Related court documents and information can be found on the website of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina or on PACER by searching for Case No. 5:21-CR-160-BO.

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A co-owner of a group of eight Georgia bars pleaded guilty today to tax evasion. 

According to court documents and statements made in court, William Britt engaged in a scheme to evade taxes owed to the IRS on income from bars he and others owned. Although each establishment had a nominal sole owner, in reality the bars all had a group of co-owners, including Britt, with varying percentages of ownership. Britt held an ownership interest in entities such as Chrysha Inc., which operated a bar in Statesboro, and BGRG Inc., which operated a bar and a restaurant in Milledgeville. Britt, along with the other true owners, shared in the bars’ profits in proportion to their respective ownership percentages.

Britt provided false information to an accountant for the preparation of tax returns related to some of the businesses. Specifically, Britt misrepresented the businesses’ true ownership, understated the bars’ income and omitted cash distributions to the owners. This conduct caused Britt and other owners of the bars to file false tax returns with the IRS by paying less than their actual income tax liabilities. Through his guilty plea, Britt admitted to willfully underreporting his income on his 2014 individual tax return.

Last month, James Stafford, who was nominally the sole owner of Chrysha Inc. and BGRG Inc., also pleaded guilty to tax evasion as part of the same scheme.

Britt will be sentenced at a later date and faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison. He also faces a period of supervised release, restitution and monetary penalties. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Stuart M. Goldberg of the Justice Department’s Tax Division and U.S. Attorney David Estes for the Southern District of Georgia made the announcement.

IRS-Criminal Investigation and the FBI are investigating the case.

Assistant Chief David Zisserson and Trial Attorney Casey Smith of the Tax Division, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Georgia, are prosecuting the case.

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NASHVILLE – Under the provisions of federal statutes governing the filling of vacancies for the position of United States Attorney, Mark H. Wildasin was sworn in today by Chief U.S. District Judge Waverly D. Crenshaw, Jr. as the U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee, effective April 25, 2022.  28 U.S.C. § 546, and the Vacancies Reform Act, establish provisions for filling the position of U.S. Attorney, absent a nomination by the President and a Senate-confirmed appointment.  Mr. Wildasin will remain the U.S. Attorney until the Senate confirms his successor. 

Mr. Wildasin was previously appointed by Attorney General Merrick B. Garland to be the United States Attorney on December 26, 2021, after serving as the Acting United States Attorney since November 7, 2021.  The appointment by the Attorney General expires on April 24, 2022. 

“I am honored to have the opportunity to continue to serve as the U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee,” said U.S. Attorney Wildasin.  “For the past 16 years I have had the distinct privilege of working alongside some of the nation’s most dedicated public servants and I look forward to continuing to lead this office in our mission of seeking justice for our citizens.”

Mr. Wildasin previously served as the Chief of the Civil Division in the United States Attorney’s Office since January 2006 and has been responsible for defending and prosecuting cases and managing all civil litigation in which the United States or one of its agencies is a party in the Middle District of Tennessee, including affirmative civil enforcement, defensive litigation, bankruptcy, asset forfeiture, immigration, and collections.

In addition to his work as the Civil Chief, from 2009 to 2011 and 2019 to 2021, Mr. Wildasin was appointed to the Civil Chiefs’ Working Group, which advises and reports to the Attorney General’s Advisory Committee on issues relevant to Civil Assistant United States Attorneys throughout the country.

Mr. Wildasin was a member of the Standby Component of the State Department’s Civilian Response Corps (CRC) from 2009 to 2011.  The CRC was created to implement the United States’ whole of government approach to stabilization and reconstruction missions.  As a CRC Standby member, Mr. Wildasin obtained training in stabilization and conflict resolution to support security and justice in host nations emerging from conflict.

From October 2011 through September 2012, Mr. Wildasin was detailed through the Office of the Deputy Attorney General as an Attorney Advisor in the Office of the Justice Attaché in the United States Embassy in Baghdad, Iraq, to work on Rule of Law issues, including assisting in the prosecution of terror suspects in U.S. interest cases, training Iraqi judges and police inspectors on the newly enacted anti-Human Trafficking Law, working on land reform issues, and otherwise liaising with the Iraqi Ministry of Justice, Iraqi judiciary, and European Union counterparts.

Mr. Wildasin is a graduate of Duke University and Vanderbilt University School of Law.  Immediately after law school, he was a law clerk for United States District Judge Thomas A. Higgins in the Middle District of Tennessee.  Prior to joining the United States Attorney’s Office, Mr. Wildasin practiced law in San Francisco with Coudert Brothers and in Nashville with Waller Lansden Dortch & Davis.

He previously served as the Attorney General appointed United States Attorney in 2017.

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BOSTON – The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts and the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division today filed a complaint and a proposed consent decree with the City of Springfield, Massachusetts to resolve its investigation of the Springfield Police Department’s Narcotics Bureau. This is the first pattern or practice police investigation to be resolved through a settlement under the Biden Administration.

The Settlement Agreement, in the form of a proposed consent decree, which must be approved by a Federal District Court Judge, would resolve the United States’ claim that the City and the Narcotics Bureau of the Springfield Police Department engaged in a pattern or practice of excessive force that deprived individuals of their rights under the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. 

Under the Agreement, the Springfield Police Department will improve policies and training related to officers’ use of force. These improvements will ensure that officers avoid force whenever possible through the use of de-escalation tactics; that officers know when force can and cannot be used; and that officers report all instances where force is used. In addition, the Springfield Police Department will provide better supervision to officers and improve internal investigations of complaints of officer misconduct. When officers violate use-of-force policies, the decree will ensure that the Springfield Police Department holds officers accountable. 

The Agreement also provides for the federal judge to appoint an independent monitor, with the title of Compliance Evaluator, based on the recommendation of the parties. The Compliance Evaluator will assess Springfield’s implementation of the decree’s requirements and file public reports with the court on Springfield’s progress. 

“When communities don’t trust or fear law enforcement, it undermines public safety. Some within the Springfield Police Department, through their sustained and documented constitutional violations, have tarnished the name of the many upstanding and decent police officers working in Springfield,” said U.S. Attorney Rachael Rollins for the District of Massachusetts. “Today is the first step in repairing the harm and mistrust their misconduct and violence caused. After lengthy negotiations, we are pleased to have reached an agreement that includes significant and sustainable reforms to ensure effective and constitutional policing going forward in the City of Springfield. This is the first police misconduct Settlement Agreement entered during the Biden Administration. Our U.S. Attorney’s Office will always protect the constitutional rights of Massachusetts residents.”

“The public’s trust in law enforcement is a critical component of promoting public safety. Excessive force erodes that trust and makes our communities less safe,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke for the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “This consent decree will rebuild the public’s trust by ensuring that Springfield officers who use excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment are held accountable. We look forward to working with city officials to ensure constitutional policing in every corner of the Springfield community and fostering better relationships between law enforcement and the community.”  

The Civil Rights Division and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts initiated the investigation of the Springfield Police Department in April 2018 under the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, 34 U.S.C. § 12601. This law authorizes the Attorney General to file a lawsuit to address a pattern or practice of conduct by law enforcement officers that deprives individuals of their rights under the Constitution or federal law. In July 2020, the department announced findings that officers in SPD’s Narcotics Bureau, which has since been renamed the Firearms Investigation Unit, engaged in a pattern or practice of excessive force. The department found that Narcotics Bureau officers often failed to report use of force incidents. At times officers’ reports were inconsistent with available evidence, including video and photographs. 

The investigation was conducted jointly by the Civil Rights Unit of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts and the Civil Rights Division’s Special Litigation Section. This matter is being handled by Jennifer A. Serafyn, Chief of Rollins’s Civil Rights Unit.

For more information on the U.S. Attorney’s Office’s Civil Rights Unit, please visit www.justice.gov/usao-ma/civil-rights. Additional information about the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department is available on its website at www.justice.gov/crt.

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PHILADELPHIA – United States Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams announced that Hyneef Harvey, 30, of Philadelphia, PA, was sentenced to seven years and three months in prison, and six years of supervised release by United States District Judge Gene E.K. Pratter for distributing narcotics as part of the Hilltop Drug Trafficking Group (DTG), an organization responsible for putting large amounts heroin and other narcotics including crack cocaine, oxycodone and fentanyl on the streets of West, Southwest, and Northwest Philadelphia, and Upper Darby between 2013 and 2018.

In November 2021, the defendant pleaded guilty to multiple felony narcotics charges including distribution and intent to distribute controlled substances and distribution of controlled substances near a school, stemming from his role in the Hilltop organization. The DTG operated seven days a week from approximately 9:00 am until midnight as a phone order/delivery service, through which customers called a cell phone number belonging to the leaders of the organization to place orders for illegal narcotics. The customers were then redirected to “runners,” who would meet the customers on the street, often entering the customers’ vehicles, to deliver the narcotics in exchange for payment. Hilltop was a violent group that often defended its territory and narcotics with firearms, and through distribution of narcotics is responsible for multiple overdose deaths.

“This case is an excellent example of all levels of law enforcement collaborating to dismantle a dangerous drug trafficking operation putting deadly narcotics on streets all across Philadelphia and beyond,” said U.S. Attorney Williams. “This defendant directly threatened the safety of children by conducting the business of drug dealing adjacent to schools and playgrounds, actions for which he will now spend years behind bars.”

The case was investigated by Drug Enforcement Administration and the Philadelphia Police department, and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Kelly Harrell and Everett Witherell.

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. – A Raytown, Mo., man pleaded guilty in federal court today to his role in a nearly $10 million conspiracy to distribute almost 1,000 kilograms of methamphetamine.

Michael B. Becher, 40, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Greg Kays to participating in a conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine from Sept. 1, 2018, to Nov. 5, 2019.

By pleading guilty today, Becher admitted he was responsible for the distribution of at least 185 kilograms of methamphetamine. Becher also admitted that he purchased multiple pounds of methamphetamine on a daily basis.

Becher was arrested on Nov. 5, 2019, after he met a co-conspirator who was planning to travel on a private plane the same day to purchase 40 to 50 kilograms of methamphetamine in California. Becher paid his co-conspirator $1,000 to purchase methamphetamine. Law enforcement officers were conducting surveillance of the residence when they heard noises that sounded like firearms and people screaming. Officers entered the residence and arrested Becher and others.

Becher admitted that he had purchased 11 kilograms of methamphetamine from his co-conspirator in the prior two weeks, and had purchased two kilograms from a second source a week before his arrest. Becher paid $5,000 per kilogram for the methamphetamine and sold it for $6,300 per kilogram. Becher also admitted that in the past he had purchased four to five pounds of methamphetamine daily from a third source, and had once stolen 23 to 27 pounds of methamphetamine from that source. On one occasion, Becher said, he had more than 80 pounds of illegal drugs in his car.

Officers searched Becher’s BMW 650i and found approximately a half-pound (205.01 grams) of pure methamphetamine inside a grey backpack between the front seats of the vehicle. Becher told investigators the methamphetamine came from a fourth source, co-defendant Jesus Banuelos, Jr., 23, of Kansas City, Mo. Becher purchased one pound of methamphetamine from Banuelos the night before his arrest. Officers also found two plastic bags that contained a total of 1,547.06 grams of “imitation” methamphetamine, used as a cutting agent. Banuelos also has pleaded guilty and awaits sentencing.

Officers searched a storage unit Becher rented and found two M20 Super Bazooka rockets, an Anderson Manufacturing AM-15 5.56mm semi-automatic rifle with a magazine that contained 21 rounds of ammunition, a zip-lock bag that contained .1 gram of methamphetamine, and various rounds of ammunition.

Becher is among 15 defendants who have pleaded guilty in two separate indictments that resulted from this investigation.

Under the terms of today’s plea agreement, the government and Becher agree to a sentence of 20 years in federal prison without parole. Becher must also pay a money judgment not to exceed $9,961,839, representing all of the proceeds obtained as a result of the drug-trafficking conspiracy. The forfeiture is based on a conservative street price of $2,300 for 226 grams (a half-pound) of methamphetamine and the total conspiracy distribution of nearly 979 kilograms (978,859 grams) of methamphetamine. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled after the completion of a presentence investigation by the United States Probation Office.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Bradley K. Kavanaugh and Sean T. Foley. It was investigated by the Kansas City, Mo., Police Department, the FBI, the Missouri State Highway Patrol, and the Mid-Missouri Drug Task Force.

Project Safe Neighborhoods

The U.S. Attorney’s Office is partnering with federal, state, and local law enforcement to specifically identify criminals responsible for significant violent crime in the Western District of Missouri. A centerpiece of this effort is Project Safe Neighborhoods, a program that brings together all levels of law enforcement to reduce violent crime and make neighborhoods safer for everyone. Project Safe Neighborhoods is an evidence-based program that identifies the most pressing violent crime problems in the community and develops comprehensive solutions to address them. As part of this strategy, Project Safe Neighborhoods focuses enforcement efforts on the most violent offenders and partners with locally based prevention and reentry programs for lasting reductions in crime.

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Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced today that SERGEI POLEVIKOV, a former quantitative analyst, was sentenced late yesterday to 33 months in prison by United States District Judge Lewis J. Liman.  POLEVIKOV pled guilty on December 15, 2021 for his role in a scheme to misappropriate confidential information about pending trades by his former employer, an investment adviser, on behalf of its investment company clients. 

According to the allegations in the Complaint, the Information to which POELVIKOV pled guilty, and statements made during court proceedings:

From at least in or about 2014 through in or about October 2019, SERGEI POLEVIKOV was employed as a quantitative analyst at an asset management firm with headquarters in New York, New York (the “Employer Firm”).  In his role at the Employer Firm, POLEVIKOV had regular access to information regarding contemplated securities trades on behalf of the Employer Firm’s clients, which included investment companies.  During the period charged in the Complaint, POLEVIKOV engaged in a front-running scheme to misappropriate confidential, material, nonpublic information about the securities trade orders of the Employer Firm on behalf of its clients in order to engage in short-term personal securities trading in a brokerage account opened in his wife’s name.  POLEVIKOV’s scheme was designed to profit by executing trades that take advantage of relatively small price movements in a company’s stock that follow from large securities orders executed by the Employer Firm on behalf of its clients.  In total, POLEVIKOV’s scheme yielded more than $8.5 million in illicit profits.     

*                *                *

In addition to his prison sentence, POLEVIKOV, 48, of Port Washington, New York, was ordered to pay forfeiture in the amount of $8,564,977 and a fine of $10,000.

Mr. Williams praised the outstanding work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.  Mr. Williams further thanked the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for its assistance and cooperation in this investigation. 

This case is being handled by the Office’s Securities and Commodities Fraud Task Force.  Assistant U.S. Attorney Kiersten A. Fletcher is in charge of the prosecution.

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Leonard C Boyle, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, announced that KEON COUNCIL, 44, of Waterbury, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Vanessa L. Bryant in Hartford to 18 months of imprisonment, followed by three years of supervised release, for distributing heroin.

According to court documents and statements made in court, in May 2020, the DEA New Haven Task Force and Waterbury Police Department began an investigation into a drug trafficking organization that was distributing large amounts of heroin, cocaine and crack in the Waterbury area.  The investigation included court-authorized wiretaps on multiple phones used by members of the organization, physical surveillance, controlled purchases of narcotics, and motor vehicle stops that resulted in the seizure of drugs.  In November and December 2020, Council was intercepted multiple times on a wiretap ordering distribution quantities of heroin from James Grant, also known as “Bobo,” “Bo,” and “Jimbo,”  Council then sold the drugs to his own customers.

On March 1, 2021, a federal grand jury in New Haven returned an indictment charging Council, Grant and 15 others.  On December 10, 2021, Council pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute heroin.

Council has been detained since his arrest on March 3, 2021.  On that date, law enforcement executed seven search warrants and seized approximately 40,000 bags of suspected heroin, 350 grams of cocaine and 50 grams of crack cocaine, and nine firearms

Grant pleaded guilty and awaits sentencing.

This investigation has been conducted by the Drug Enforcement Administration New Haven Task Force and the Waterbury Police Department.  The DEA New Haven Task Force includes participants from the U.S. Marshals Service, Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation Division, Connecticut State Police and the New Haven, Hamden, West Haven, North Haven, East Haven, Branford, Ansonia, Meriden, Derby, Middletown, Naugatuck and Waterbury Police Departments.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Patrick F. Caruso and Brendan Keefe through the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) Program.  OCDETF identifies, disrupts and dismantles drug traffickers, money launderers, gangs and transnational criminal organizations through a prosecutor-led and intelligence-driven approach that leverages the strengths of federal, state and local law enforcement agencies.  Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at https://www.justice.gov/OCDETF.

U.S. Attorney Boyle thanked the State’s Attorney’s Office for the Judicial District of Waterbury for its close cooperation in investigating and prosecuting this matter.

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BOISE – A Star woman pleaded guilty to making a false statement in connection with government contracts.

According to court records, between October 2012 and May 2018, Vicki Rice, 61, willfully made materially false certifications in the System for Award Management (SAM) that the business CAM Services, Inc. was a Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB). Organizing documents for CAM listed F.M. as President, with 51% ownership, and Rice as Vice President, with 49% ownership. F.M. is a service-disabled veteran.

The Government’s investigation revealed Rice, who is not a service-disabled veteran, was the actual controller of CAM. In fact, Rice had control over CAM’s finances, taxes, business records and corporate maintenance, payroll personnel matters, administration, performance under the contracts, and SAM certifications. Rice exercised both day-to-day management and administration over CAM. Rice also exercised long-term decision-making for CAM.

SAM is the primary registrant database for federal contractors that is operated by the General Services Administration. Contractors are required to make multiple certifications in SAM prior to competing for and receiving federal procurement contracts. In addition, contractors are required to submit annual certifications in SAM. In the case of government contracts available to SDVOSBs, contractors must annually certify that their business is, in fact, an SDVOSB.

On behalf of CAM, Rice submitted bids to obtain commissary contracts at two military bases. Both contracts were set aside contracts for SDVOSBs. CAM was awarded both contracts, which had a combined value of over $11 million over five years. According to Rice’s tax returns, Rice earned $480,039 from CAM between 2012 and 2019.

Rice is scheduled to be sentenced on June 28, 2022 and faces a maximum penalty of five years in federal prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

U.S. Attorney Rafael M. Gonzalez, Jr., of the District of Idaho made the announcement and commended the cooperative efforts of the General Services Administration Office of Inspector General, Department of Defense Office of Inspector General, Small Business Administration Office of Inspector General, and Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation, which led to charges.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Washington, D.C. Metro Police Department is investigating a homicide which took place on April 12th on the 2200 Block of Savannah Street in Southeast D.C.

According to investigators, “At approximately 12:22 pm, members of the Seventh District responded to the listed location for the report of a shooting. Upon arrival, the members located an adult male victim suffering from apparent gunshot wounds. DC Fire and Emergency Medical Services responded to the scene and transported the victim to a local hospital for treatment. After all life-saving efforts failed, the victim was pronounced dead. A second adult male victim was located at another local hospital receiving treatment for a gunshot wound.”

32 year-old Clayton Marshall, of Southwest, D.C. was named as the victim.

If anyone has any information about this incident, please call the police at 202-727-9099.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Washington, D.C. Metro Police Department is investigating a homicide which took place on April 11th on the 3000 Block of 13th Street in Northwest D.C.

According to police, “At approximately 10:50 pm, members of the Third District responded to the listed location for the report of a shooting. Upon arrival, the members located a juvenile male victim suffering from gunshot wounds. DC Fire and EMS responded to the scene and found that the victim displayed no signs consistent with life. The victim remained on scene until transported to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.”

The decedent has been identified as 15 year-old Malachi Jackson, of Northwest, D.C. was named as the victim.

If anyone has any information about this incident, please call the police at 202-727-9099.

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BALTIMORE, MARYLAND – The Baltimore Police Department have made an arrest in the homicide of 44-year-old Chesley Patterson.

At 12:26PM on January 24th officers responded to a shooting call at the 1700 Block of Eastern Avenue.

According to detectives, “Upon arrival, officers located 44-year-old Chesley Patterson who was suffering from a gunshot wound to his chest. Patterson was transported to Johns Hopkins Hospital where he died a short time later. Homicide detectives responded out and assumed control of the investigation. Detectives reviewed area camera footage, interviewed persons of interest, examined physical evidence and were ultimately able to identify the suspect.”

On April 12th the Warrant Task Force arrested 22-year-old Samuel Wise on the 1800 block of W. North Avenue.

Police also stated, “Wise was transported to police headquarters, where homicide detectives interviewed him. Following his interview, Wise attempted to escape from police headquarters but was quickly apprehended and transported to Central Booking, where he has been charged with 1st Degree Murder.”

Samuel Wise is currently in custody and he is waiting to see a court commissioner.

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By Kanishka Singh

WASHINGTON – Mark Meadows, who served as former Republican President Donald Trump’s chief of staff and echoed his false claims of widespread fraud in the 2020 election, has been removed from the voter roll in North Carolina as the state investigates possible irregularities in his registration.

“The Macon County Board of Elections administratively removed the voter registration of Mark Meadows … on April 11, after documentation indicated he lived in Virginia and last voted in the 2021 election there,” North Carolina State Board of Elections spokesman Patrick Gannon said in an emailed statement on Wednesday.

State authorities said last month that Meadows was being investigated in North Carolina over his voter registration. North Carolina’s State Bureau of Investigation was assigned to lead the probe after a district attorney referred the matter to the state Department of Justice Special Prosecutions Section.

The investigation was in response to claims that Meadows, who represented North Carolina in Congress from 2013 until joining the Trump administration in 2020, registered to vote in September 2020 with an address at which he did not reside, own or visit, the News & Observer newspaper had reported.

“What I found was that he was also registered in the state of Virginia. And he voted in a 2021 election. The last election he voted in Macon County was in 2020,” Macon County Board of Elections Director Melanie Thibault said in an email on Wednesday.

In North Carolina, voters must live in the county where they are registering and have resided there for at least 30 days prior to the election date, according to the state elections board website.

Meadows was also the subject of contempt charges by a congressional committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, in which Trump and his supporters sought to stop the certification of now-President Joe Biden’s election victory.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

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By Kanishka Singh

WASHINGTON -The chief executives of U.S. meatpackers Cargill, Tyson Foods, JBS and National Beef Packing have agreed to testify at a Congressional hearing discussing cattle markets and price increases for consumers, House Agriculture Committee Chairman David Scott said on Wednesday.

“It is very important, very vital, and very urgent that we hear the perspectives from the CEOs at these companies and get the full picture of why prices have gone up for consumers and down for ranchers,” Scott said in a statement.

“In addition to this panel of CEOs, we will be convening a panel of ranchers to hear what consolidation in the beef industry has done to their bottomlines and viability,” he added.

Increased prices and profits for meatpacking companies have threatened to amplify Washington’s scrutiny of the U.S. meatpacking industry, as the Biden administration has criticized a lack of competition in the sector.

U.S. President Joe Biden announced a plan in January for new rules to bolster competition and stop “exploitation” in the sector amid concerns that a small group of meat packers was capable of dictating beef, pork and poultry prices, adding to inflation pressures caused by rising labor and transportation costs and by COVID 19-related supply constraints.

In January, the chairman of the House of Representatives subcommittee on economic and consumer policy sent a letter to major U.S. meat processing companies, seeking information on rising prices and profits.

(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in WashingtonEditing by Bernadette Baum)

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(Reuters) – Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and U.S. President Joe Biden discussed additional defensive and financial aid for Kyiv as well as sanctions and alleged Russian war crimes, the Ukrainian president said on Wednesday.

“Continued constant dialogue with @POTUS. Assessed Russian war crimes. Discussed additional package of defensive and possible macro-financial aid. Agreed to enhance sanctions,” Zelenskiy tweeted.

Russia denies carrying out war crimes.

(Reporting by Natalia Zinets)

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By Aditya Kalra

NEW DELHI – Meta Platforms Inc’s WhatsApp has won regulatory approval to more double the number of users of its payments service in India to 100 million, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters on Wednesday.

WhatsApp has over the years told National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) that there should be no cap on users of its payments service in India, its biggest market.

Instead, the NPCI told the company on Wednesday it can increase the number of users to 100 million from 40 million currently, the sources said.

WhatsApp did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The NPCI confirmed the development in a statement to Reuters.

Though the relaxation will come as a relief, the new cap could still limit WhatsApp’s growth prospects given it has more than 500 million users in India.

WhatsApp has told the NPCI several times it wants to operate “without a cap”, but privately the NPCI is of the view that allowing all its users to access the payments service – integrated with the app and allowing contacts to send each other funds – could strain the country’s financial infrastructure, said one of the sources.

The NPCI gave WhatsApp approval to launch the payments service in 2020 after the company spent years trying to comply with Indian regulations, including data storage norms that require all payments-related data to be stored locally.

It started with 20 million users and the cap was increased to 40 million in November last year.

WhatsApp competes with Alphabet Inc’s Google Pay, SoftBank- and Ant Group-backed Paytm and Walmart’s PhonePe in India’s crowded digital market.

Online transactions, lending and e-wallet services have been growing rapidly in India, led by a government push to make the country’s cash-loving merchants and consumers adopt digital payments.

(Reporting by Aditya Kalra in New Delhi; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)

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TRENTON, NJ – One lucky Jersey Cash 5 lottery ticket matched all five numbers drawn winning the $323,333 Jersey Cash 5 jackpot from the Tuesday, April 12th.

The winning Jersey Cash 5 numbers were: 12, 16, 25, 39, and 40 and the XTRA number was: 02. 

The store will receive $2,000 for the winning ticket sold. The ticket was sold at Jackpocket on Warwick Turnpike, Hewitt in Passaic County.

Here are our latest stories about other lottery winners

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By Andrew Hay

(Reuters) -A wind-driven wildfire burned dozens of homes in Ruidoso, New Mexico on Tuesday and triggered evacuations of schools and neighborhoods in the mountain resort town.

As of 7 p.m. local time (0100 GMT), the fire had burned 150 houses and structures as winds gusting at up to 90 miles per hour (144 kilometres per hour) propelled flames through forested canyons filled with homes, according to the Lincoln National Forest and local officials.

Video footage showed ridge-top homes ablaze northeast of the town of around 8,000 people that is perched in the Sierra Blanca mountains some 134 miles southeast of Albuquerque.

“The fire is being driven by these really intense winds,” said Lincoln National Forest spokeswoman Laura Rabon, adding that there was zero containment of the blaze.

New Mexico and West Texas have seen an early start to fire seasons as blazes quickly spread through grassland and forests suffering from severe to extreme drought.

As smoke cleared in Ruidoso, firefighters revised down the area burned to 3,000 acres from a previously reported 15,000 acres, Rabon said.

“Many have lost homes. But we are all safe as far as I know,” tweeted Layne Holland, who said she spent her afternoon evacuating students from Ruidoso’s high school and middle school.

The blaze, known as the McBride Fire, was one of around half a dozen wildfires burning in New Mexico and West Texas.

A blaze south of Albuquerque destroyed 19 structures, including one home.

(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; Editing by Leslie Adler and Kenneth Maxwell)

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By Nate Raymond

BOSTON – The city of Springfield, Massachusetts has agreed to carry out reforms to resolve claims that its narcotics officers routinely used excessive force, the U.S. Justice Department said on Wednesday, in the first settlement of its type under President Joe Biden.

The settlement was the first court-enforced consent decree to require overhauls at a police department reached with a city since Attorney General Merrick Garland in April 2021 rescinded a policy implemented under the Democrat Biden’s Republican predecessor Donald Trump that sharply curtailed their use.

A Justice Department investigation found that officers in the Springfield Police Department’s now-disbanded Narcotics Bureau engaged in a pattern or practice of using excessive force, routinely punching people in the face and often facing no discipline.

U.S. Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke said the consent decree would help restore public trust in the city’s police and stressed that the Justice Department is pursuing similar probes in cities including Minneapolis, Louisville and Phoenix.

The Minneapolis probe was announced after a white police officer was convicted last year of murdering a Black man named George Floyd in a 2020 incident that triggered racial justice protests in many U.S. cities.

“We are not going to turn our backs on the need for policing reform and the need for constitutional policing in communities across out country,” Clarke told a news conference.

Springfield is a city of about 155,000 people located approximately 90 miles (145 km) west of Boston.

The Springfield investigation began in 2018 and resulted in 2020 in the only pattern-or-practice case of Trump’s administration.

While consent decrees had long been used to overhaul police departments, the Justice Department announced no new ones during Trump’s four years in office. The since-rescinded 2018 memo by former Attorney General Jeff Sessions curtailed their use.

The Springfield consent decree calls for a court-appointed independent monitor, requires officers to report all uses of force and calls for the creation of a team to investigate the most serious uses of force.

“We want to have the best police department,” Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno said at the news conference.

(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Will Dunham)

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NEW YORK, NY – The New York Police Department reported one man was shot after a gun battle between four people broke out in the Bronx in March. Now, police have released video footage and photos of the suspects and asked the public for help.

“On 3/11/22 at 11:38 PM, four males exchanged gunfire in front of 727 E. 213 St in the Bronx. A 31-year-old man suffered a gunshot wound to his right thigh during the shooting. Have any info? DM @NYPDTips, or anonymously call 800-577-TIPS,” the NYPD said.

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Elon Musk Sued Over Twitter Acquisition

Harry Wilmerding on April 13, 2022

A Twitter shareholder sued Elon Musk on behalf of investors Tuesday for allegedly failing to disclose his massive purchase of the company’s shares until after the required deadline.

The lawsuit, filed by Twitter shareholder Marc Rasella on behalf of other investors, claims Musk waited until after the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) mandatory deadline to disclose his stake in the company, allowing him to buy more stock at a deflated price while investors lost out on potential gains.

Musk dislcosed his purchase of a 9.2% stake in Twitter on April 4, making him the company’s largest shareholder. Twitter stock price surged 27% after Musk announced his acquisition, which was worth nearly $3 billion, according to CNBC.

Investors are required by law to disclose their purchase to the SEC within 10 days of the acquisition if buying over 5% of a company’s shares, according to CNBC. The lawsuit claims that Musk needed to file the disclosure by March 24, 10 days after he reached the 5% ownership threshold on March 14.

The delayed disclosure may have helped Musk make nearly $156 million, according to experts interviewed by the Washington Post.

“What seems crystal clear is that Elon Musk missed the applicable 10-day filing deadline under Sections 13(d) and 13(g) of the Securities Act of 1933 to report 5% ownership in a public company,” Alon Kapen, a corporate transaction lawyer with Farrell Fritz, told CNBC.

“That gave him an extra 10 days in which to buy additional shares (he increased his ownership during that time by an extra 4.1%) before the per share price spike that occurred when he finally announced his holdings on April 4,” Kapen added.

Twitter chief executive officer Parag Agrawal announced Monday that Musk would not join the company’s board of directors.

Musk did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact The Daily Caller News Foundation

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact  [email protected]. Read the full story at the Daily Caller News Foundation

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‘Strain On The Supply Chain’: Truckers Are Livid Over Texas Gov. Abbott’s Border Security Measures

Jennie Taer on April 13, 2022

  • Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s efforts to prepare for a possible surge at the border with Title 42’s end could spell a supply chain crisis, trucking leaders told the Daily Caller News Foundation.
  • Abbott’s plan includes enhanced vehicle inspections on certain international ports, which has caused a significant traffic jam.
  • “There’s emails coming in from our planners and Vice President of Operations saying, ‘What’s going on? Where’s our freight, where are our trailers?’ Unfortunately, they’re stuck,” Gerry Maldonado, director of Laredo and Mexico operations for Warren Transport Inc., told the DCNF.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s border security measures ahead of Title 42’s end have created an hours-long standstill for truckers crossing the border, and trucking leaders in the state are warning that it could further disrupt the national supply chain.

“It’s a mess … that’s most immediately felt by the motor carriers that are trying to get freight to its destination. But, ultimately, that’ll be felt around the country. From Michigan to Manhattan to Minnesota, it’s just the way it works with freight coming up through the border,” CEO and President of the Texas Trucking Association John D. Esparza told the Daily Caller News Foundation.

“I know that I’m not alone in the voice of frustration out there. From a motor carrier industry that is just trying to move,” he said.

The supply chain is already strained by regulations on the trucking industry in places like California, where the state has increased environmental requirements that are a burden to transport businesses, experts told the DCNF.

In response to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announcing that the public health order used to expel migrants will end May 23, Abbott said he would step in with state resources to address the expected influx of migrants.

The effort includes the Texas Department of Safety (DPS) conducting “enhanced safety inspections” on vehicles crossing seven ports of entry from Mexico due to cartel activity.

Most of the trucking leaders are local to the trade hub of Laredo, Texas, which accounts for hundreds of billions of dollars in international trade that they say is jeopardized by Abbott’s order.

Ernesto Gaytan, Jr., who is the general manager of Super Transport International LTD, a transport company with 40 drivers doing cross border commerce between the U.S. and Mexico, told the DCNF that the issue is being felt all the way down to the small business owner awaiting product and will put “a strain on the supply chain.”

” I’m getting calls from the other trade industries, like small businesses, I’m getting calls from banks that support the trucking industry, I’m getting calls from all kinds of associations trying to get this resolved, or at least improved,” Gaytan told the DCNF.

Gerry Maldonado, director of Laredo and Mexico operations for Warren Transport Inc., told the DCNF that what normally takes drivers about 30 minutes to cross the bridge, now takes four to five hours per load. Typically, he said, his drivers do five or six loads a day, adding that “right now they’re lucky they get to do one a day.”

Daily, Maldonado said he expects 50 trailers to cross from Nuevo Laredo to his terminal in Laredo, but on Friday he got only 17.

“Internally … there’s emails coming in from our planners and Vice President of Operations saying, ‘What’s going on? Where’s our freight, where are our trailers?’ Unfortunately, they’re stuck because … the drivers crossing our trailers cannot do five or six a day, they’re only doing two a day,” he said.

Abbott argued that the vehicle inspections will ensure that Texas drivers are protected from unsafe drivers and vehicles often associated with smuggling attempts, according to an April 6 memo he sent to Texas DPS Colonel Steven McCraw.

“The cartels that smuggle illicit contraband and people across our southern border do not care about the condition of the vehicles they send into Texas, any more than they care who overdoses from the deadly fentanyl on board,” Abbott wrote.

The trucking leaders, while they believe in border security, don’t think Abbott’s action is effective or worth the burden they’ve had to endure. The ports where DPS is checking vehicles already have several layers of security checks, including U.S. Customs, which also has a checkpoint about 30 miles north of the Laredo border, they said. 

“We disagree with what he’s [Abbott] doing here because … we’re already going through inflation as it is on probably every thing you can imagine. And this just not something that we needed right now,” Juan Jose De Leon, vice president of the Laredo Motor Carriers Association, who owns a transportation company EBT Logistics, told the DCNF.

De Leon’s company is responsible for hundreds of loads of meat exports from companies like Tyson foods, to Mexico, which is also facing the issues caused by inbound U.S. traffic jams. The company has loads from last week that they still haven’t been able to get across the border due to Abbott’s new directive, he said.

“In our particular case, we have trailers that are loaded since Thursday, Friday, and we’re just we just keep fueling them up and the meat keeps … a lot of it is fresh product that goes to Mexico, so the shelf life and the days just keep getting smaller and smaller, older and older,” he explained.

De Leon went to Nuevo Leon, Mexico, for a meeting with the Mexican state’s governor on Monday to discuss the issue. Nuevo Leon’s governor offered directly to Abbott to have a small inspection site on the Mexican side of the bridge leading to Laredo if Texas DPS lowered its inspection times, De Leon said.

Customs and Border Protection (CBP) called the additional screenings “unnecessary,” in a Tuesday statement. The agency said that when DPS enhanced inspections began, wait times at Laredo’s Colombia Solidarity Bridge went from an average wait time of 26 minutes to a peak of 300 minutes, reducing commercial traffic by 60%.

In other areas of the border in Texas, like Pharr, CBP has seen a 100% reduction in commercial traffic due to protests in Mexico reportedly concerned with the new measures.

Abbott’s office didn’t respond to requests for comment.

“We’re a big supporter of Governor Abbott, and what he’s done to help the trucking industry tremendously, however, … this was not the solution, maybe I think, talking to us and consulting with us would have been a little bit easier,” Gaytan said, adding that Abbott’s decision “kind of came out of left field for us.”

Esparza said his organization wasn’t aware of the order until Abbott announced it publicly.

“Well, we weren’t aware of it until it came out … that’s not a indictment on the governor. I mean, I absolutely respect what he’s attempting to do … what we want to do is help him reach the goals that he has, and he’s trying to attain and for us, and for our partner with the Department of Public Safety, it is all about our safer highways,” Esparza said.

“To get this better as far as the immigration part, I do agree. However, I don’t believe this is the best thing that we can do. I think there’s got to be more conversations between the trucking community and the governor’s office in the governor himself … ” Gaytan said, offering to speak directly with Abbott.

DPS has found 11,566 violations as of Sunday, inspecting 3,443 commercial vehicles, 807 of which were put out of service due to “serious safety violations” that include defective brakes, tires and lighting, it told the DCNF, adding that 79 commercial drivers were taken out of service.

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact The Daily Caller News Foundation

Content created by The Daily Caller News Foundation is available without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide a large audience. For licensing opportunities of our original content, please contact  [email protected]. Read the full story at the Daily Caller News Foundation

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