Bryant scores 21 points, Wizards top Thunder 97-85

admin

Bryant scores 21 points, Wizards top Thunder 97-85 Photo Credit: AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki Washington Wizards guard Bradley Beal, front, drives to the basket as Oklahoma City Thunder’s Dennis Schroeder, rear, defends during the second quarter of an NBA basketball game Friday, Oct.25, 2019, in Oklahoma City.Read More Woman plows RV into casino after being ejected…

imageBryant scores 21 points, Wizards top Thunder 97-85 Photo Credit: AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki Washington Wizards guard Bradley Beal, front, drives to the basket as Oklahoma City Thunder’s Dennis Schroeder, rear, defends during the second quarter of an NBA basketball game Friday, Oct.25, 2019, in Oklahoma City.Read More Woman plows RV into casino after being ejected Unhappy with being escorted from a Las Vegas area casino Friday morning, a woman plowed her motor home through the establishment’s front doors, critically injuring an elderly custodian.>> Read more trending news According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Jennifer Stitt had been threatened with a trespassing charge and ejected from the Cannery casino.North Las Vegas Police spokesman Eric Leavitt told the Reno Gazette Journal that Stitt, 50, was asked initially to leave the premises due to “disorderly conduct” and the trespassing allegations arose when she refused to exit.

‘She didn’t agree with the trespassing,’ Leavitt said.Although Stitt begrudgingly left the Cannery, she immediately got behind the wheel of her RV and slammed through the casino’s front door, the newspaper reported.She now faces an attempted murder charge for running over a 66-year-old custodian in her path.

Although critically injured, the man is expected to recover, and Stitt is being held on $100,000 bail, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported.“We are obviously very concerned for the welfare of our team member,” David Strow, vice president of corporate communications for Boyd Gaming, which owns the Cannery, told the newspaper, adding, “We are staying in touch with the team member and their family to make sure they get the best of care.” Tree trimmer sentenced for fatal south Tulsa home invasion Rick Davison was sentenced to life in prison without parole Friday for the shooting death of 80-year-old James Rosenlieb in June of 2018.

The defense attorney asked the jury to find his client guilty in light of all of the evidence.After the attorney asked for the guilty plea, he was allowed to plea for the minimum sentence.Police say Davison confessed to the murder after his family turned him in to authorities.Davison worked at the Rosenlieb home a few months before the murder with a tree trimming crew.Vaping-related illnesses in US still rising, but more slowly Fewer reports of vaping illnesses are coming in, but U.S.health officials say they are not sure what to make of it.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said 125 additional cases were reported in the last week, bringing the total to 1,604 in this year’s outbreak.That includes 34 deaths, one more than last week.The outbreak is still happening, but the count of new cases has dropped for three straight weeks.A CDC spokeswoman said reporting delays could be one explanation.The CDC reported the numbers Thursday.

The outbreak appears to have started in March.No single ingredient, electronic cigarette or vaping device has been linked to all the illnesses.Most who got sick said they vaped products containing THC, the high-inducing ingredient in marijuana.Facebook launches a news section – and will pay publishers Over the course of its 15 year history, Facebook has variously ignored news organizations while eating their advertising revenue, courted them for video projects it subsequently abandoned, and then largely cut their stories out of its newsfeeds .

Now it plans to pay them for news headlines — reportedly millions of dollars in some cases.Enter the ‘News Tab,’ a new section in the Facebook mobile app that will display headlines — and nothing else — from the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, BuzzFeed News, Business Insider, NBC, USA Today and the Los Angeles Times, among others.Local stories from several of the largest U.S.cities will also make the grade; headlines from smaller towns are on their way, Facebook says.Tapping on those headlines will take you directly to publisher websites or apps, if you have any installed.

Which is more or less what publishers have been requesting from Facebook for years.It’s potentially a big step for a platform that has long struggled with both stamping out misinformation and making nice with struggling purveyors of news.

Though media watchers remain skeptical that Facebook is really committed to helping sustain the news industry.Facebook declined to say who is getting paid and how much, saying only that it will be paying ‘a range of publishers for access to all of their content.’ Just last year, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said he wasn’t sure it ‘makes sense ‘ to pay news outlets for their material.But now, as Zuckerberg told The Associated Press in an interview, ‘there’s an opportunity to set up new long term, stable financial relationships with publishers.’ News executives have long been unhappy about the extent to which digital giants like Facebook make use of their stories — mostly by displaying headlines and short summaries when users post news links.

A bipartisan bill introduced in Congress this year would grant an antitrust exemption to news companies, letting them band together to negotiate payments from the big tech platforms.’It’s a good direction that they’re willing for the first time to value and pay for news content,’ said David Chavern, head of the News Media Alliance, a publisher trade group.’The trouble is that most publishers aren’t included.’ Zuckerberg said Facebook aims to set up partnerships with a ‘wide range’ of publishers.’We think that this is an opportunity to build something quite meaningful here,’ he said.’We’re going to have journalists curating this, we are really focused on provenance and branding and where the stories come from.’ In a statement, the Los Angeles Times said it expects the Facebook effort will help expand its readership and digital subscribers.

Facebook killed its previous effort to curate news, the ill-fated Trending topics, in 2018.Conservatives complained about political bias, leading Facebook to fire its human editors and automate the section until it began recycling false stories, after which the social giant shut it down entirely.

But what happens when the sprawling social network plays news editor? An approach that sends people news based on what they’ve liked before could over time elevate stories with greater ’emotional resonance’ over news that ‘allows public discourse to take place,’ said Edward Wasserman, dean of the graduate journalism program at the University of California-Berkeley.’It deepens my concern that they’ll be applying Facebook logic to news judgment,’ he added.The social network has come under criticism for its news judgment recently.

In September, it removed a fact-check from Science Feedback that called out an anti-abortion activist’s video for claiming that abortion is never medically necessary.Republican senators had complained about the fact check.Facebook says a small team of ‘seasoned’ journalists it employs will choose the headlines for the ‘Today’s Story’ section of the tab, designed to ‘catch you up’ on the day’s news.The rest of the news section will be populated with stories algorithmically based on users’ interests.

That sounds similar to the approach taken by Apple News , a free iPhone app.But Apple’s effort to contract with news organizations has been slow to take off.Apple News Plus, a $10-a-month paid version, remains primarily a hub for magazines; other news publishers have largely sat it out.Apple’s service reportedly offered publishers only half the revenue it pulled in from subscriptions, divided according to how popular publishers were with readers.Bed Bath & Beyond removes black jack-o’-lanterns over blackface concerns Bed Bath & Beyond has pulled some of its jack-o’-lanterns after getting complaints that they resemble blackface, according to one local report.News 12 reported community members in Nyack, New York, noticed three jack-o’-lanterns outside the offices of Feerick Nugent MacCartney Attorneys At Law in New York.The pumpkins were painted black and had faces on them drawn in chalk.

>> Read more trending news Two days later, the local news station reported, the jack-o’-lanterns were removed.’We purchased these Jack-0′-Lanterns from Bed, Bath & Beyond specifically for the purpose of including them in our holiday display and took them down immediately upon hearing the concerns raised,’ Mary Marzolla, a partner at the law firm, said in a statement, according to The Journal News.’We are a community law firm, work for the local community, and have championed the cause for many people who suffered improper treatment by others.We will continue to do so.’ NAACP Regional Director Wilbur Aldridge said the issue was with the color of the paint, not the color of the pumpkin.

“I could care less about the black pumpkins,’ Aldridge told The Journal News.’Whenever you take a black pumpkin and put white paint for the eyes and white mouth, that’s called blackface.That’s the objection.

Many black people find blackface offensive.

I don’t know how people don’t realize people are going to be offended by blackface.” News 12 reported Marzolla and her associate at the firm, Alak Shah, wondered why the decorations didn’t raise eyebrows at Bed Bath & Beyond, where they were purchased.A representative for Bed Bath & Beyond told USA Today the pumpkins in question, which were only available online, have been removed from the store.A similar black pumpkin is still available on the site and can be personalized with letters, but not faces.’This is a sensitive area and, though unintentional, we apologize for any offense caused,’ the representative said.

‘We immediately removed the item from sale.As depositions continue, Republicans demand House impeachment vote A day after several dozen GOP lawmakers in the House invaded a secure hearing room at the U.S.Capitol and disrupted the impeachment testimony of a Pentagon official, Republican Senators unveiled a resolution demanding that House Democrats vote first to officially authorize any such investigation.’I consider it to be out of bounds with what we have done in the past,’ said Sen.

Lindsey Graham (R-SC), who has been one of the main defenders of President Donald Trump.’It’s unfair to the President and dangerous to the Presidency,’ Graham told reporters at a Senate news conference.“There’s a right way to do it and a wrong way to do it,” Graham added, as he was part of the impeachment effort twenty years ago involving President Bill Clinton.’It is a hyper-partisan process completely void of due process,’ said Sen.Kevin Cramer (R-ND).’It is a disservice to the American people.’ House Democrats have said there is no rule which forces them to take a vote to authorize an impeachment investigation – even as they acknowledge that was done in the past for Presidents Nixon and Clinton.

While GOP lawmakers disrupted a deposition on Wednesday, the three committees involved in this process are expected to work this weekend, with testimony from a former staffer on the White House’s National Security Council.Democrats say Republicans are just trying to do everything they can to steer the debate away from the details of the Ukraine investigation, and the possible impeachment process.

It wasn’t immediately clear if GOP leaders would try to force a vote on the resolution in the Senate.Graham said some Republicans have urged him to force Rep.Adam Schiff (D-CA) to testify – as Schiff has led the impeachment effort for House Democrats.But Graham told reporters that would probably not work.

Rep.Tim Ryan drops out of Democratic race for President The size of the Democratic field for 2020 shrank on Thursday as Rep.Tim Ryan of Ohio announced that he was giving up his bid for the White House, one of a number of candidates who never were able to break out from the lower tier of a large primary field.In a video message released by his campaign, Ryan thanked his supporters, and said he had decided to run for re-election to his seat in the U.S.

House.’I wanted to give voice to the forgotten communities that have been left behind,’ Ryan said, acknowledging with a smile that his race for President ‘didn’t work out the way we had planned.’ Ryan has argued that the Democratic Party needs to slow down a big shift to the more liberal side, arguing economic issues in the Rust Belt cannot be ignored by his party.

Ryan had missed the last two debates because of a lack of fund raising and little strength in the polls – which led to him having little impact on the overall race.“I honestly didn’t realize he was still in the race,” tweeted Frank Luntz, a GOP polling expert.There are several other Democratic candidates in much the same situation as Ryan – who are not qualifying for the upcoming debates, and are far behind in the polls, like Marianne Williamson, Michael Bennet, John Delaney, and others.Trump lawyers: The President cannot be investigated, even for murder In arguments before a federal appeals court on Wednesday, lawyers for President Donald Trump argued he has sweeping immunity from any law enforcement investigation while he is office – even for something as serious as murder.The back and forth came in a case about President Trump’s tax returns, as a judge on the Second Circuit Court of Appeals panel asked about the President’s famous line in the 2016 campaign – where he said if he killed someone on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan – he wouldn’t lose any political support.

At one point, appellate judge Denny Chin pressed Mr.Trump’s lawyer, William Consovoy on that murder hypothetical.’I’m talking about while in office,’ Judge Chin said about possible investigations while Mr.

Trump is President.’Nothing could be done – that is your position?’ ‘That is correct,’ said Consovoy, who cast it as a temporary protection from investigation while Mr.Trump is President.’This is not a permanent immunity,” Consovoy added.

This was not the first time that lawyers for the President had made this type of argument, as his attorneys – and top officials in his administration – have said that Congress has no power to investigate Mr.Trump, either.

‘Article I grants Congress no express power to investigate,’ Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said back in April, as the Trump Administration refused to give Congress the President’s tax returns.’Congress’s investigative power is not unlimited,’ Mnuchin added.The legal arguments on Wednesday in a tax return case came as another federal court ordered the State Department to give Congress a series of records related to Ukraine by late November.That came as three committees in the House sent a letter to the State Department, reminding officials of a request for documents related to the Ukraine investigation.

‘The Department has not produced any documents,’ the Democrats wrote, ‘in response to the subpoena issued…on September 27, 2019.’ So far, the State Department and White House have not complied with a variety of subpoenas, along with multiple requests by Democrats in Congress for documents and other materials.’President Trump has tried to obstruct the impeachment investigation by refusing to comply with doc requests, subpoenas & demanding administration officials not appear before Congress,’ tweeted Rep.Ed Perlmutter (D-CO).The lack of cooperation by the White House and State Department has been undermined by a series of individual officials who have testified in recent weeks in closed door depositions.

Wednesday was another example, as a Pentagon official ignored orders not to testify, and cooperated with the investigation.A series of State Department officials also ignored similar orders in order to give their testimony to lawmakers.GOP lawmakers invade hearing room, delay impeachment testimony Denouncing the impeachment investigation of President Donald Trump undertaken by Democrats in the House, several dozen GOP lawmakers stormed into a secure hearing room in the bowels of the Capitol on Wednesday, demanding that the proceedings be made public, and delaying a scheduled deposition involving a Pentagon official for a little over five hours.

‘We’re going to go, and see if we can get inside,’ said Rep.Matt Gaetz (R-FL), as a group of several dozen Republicans pushed their way into the room, unhappy with how Democrats are handling this investigation.’This is very unfair to the President,’ said Rep.Debbie Lesko (R-AZ).

‘The American people deserve a public and open process,’ said Rep.

Mo Brooks (R-AL), as Republicans prevented three different committees from moving ahead with Wednesday’s hearing.Those interrupting the proceedings included Republican lawmakers who are allowed into the secure hearing room – because they are on one of the three committees involved in these closed door depositions – Intelligence, Oversight, and Foreign Affairs.Democrats labeled the sit-in a political stunt that smacked of desperation.’Trump wanted a foreign government to investigate his political opponent,’ said Rep.

Tim Ryan (D-OH).’That is a crime.’ “Today’s circus-like stunt will delay but it will not prevent our search for the truth about the president’s stunning misconduct,” said Rep.Val Demings (D-FL).’GOP ‘storming’ a classified deposition was a ridiculous stunt,’ said Rep.

Carolyn Maloney (D-NY).Democrats also criticized the GOP effort for violating rules on security, as a number of Republican lawmakers brought cell phones into the secure facility, which is prohibited.It resulted in officials having to conduct a sweep of the rooms, to make sure no electronic devices had been left behind.’You may wonder why is it happening now?” asked Rep.

Ted Lieu (D-CA).“Because Bill Taylor gave a devastating opening statement yesterday.They’re freaked out.They’re trying to stop this investigation.” Taylor is the top U.S.diplomat in Ukraine – he testified Tuesday before investigators, making the case that President Trump was withholding military aid for Ukraine in a bid to get the Ukraine government to publicly announce investigations which might help Mr.Trump’s re-election bid.

In a tweet on Wednesday afternoon, the President took direct aim at Taylor.Reports indicated the President may have been told by allies in the U.S.House of their Wednesday plans.“This looks awfully like obstruction,” said Rep.Don Beyer (D-VA).After ordering some pizza and refusing to leave the room known as a SCIF – Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility – GOP lawmakers moved on after about five hours, as Laura Cooper, a deputy assistant Secretary of Defense began her testimony around 3:15 pm.

Facebook chief grilled over political ads, cryptocurrency plan Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg tangled with lawmakers at a House hearing on Wednesday, as Democrats pressed the Facebook chief to block false political advertising on his site, while Republicans urged him not to censor ads from President Donald Trump and the GOP.’Our policy is that we do not fact check politician’s speech,’ Zuckerberg told the House Financial Services Committee, as Democrats pressed him to crack down on false advertising carried by the social media giant.’Your claim to promote freedom of speech does not ring true, Mr.

Zuckerberg,’ said panel chair Rep.Maxine Waters (D-CA).’You announced a new ad policy that gives politicians a license to lie so you can earn more money off this division, I suppose,’ Waters added.

Democrats argued the refusal of Facebook to fact check political ads will make into a hotbed of misleading and false attacks, which could skew future elections.“Could I run ads targeting Republicans in primaries saying that they voted for the Green New Deal?” asked Rep.Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), pressing Zuckerberg to see where he would draw the line on false advertising on Facebook.“I don’t know the answer to that off the top of my head,” Zuckerberg said, as Ocasio-Cortez pressed him for an answer.“So you don’t know if I will be able to do that,” Ocasio-Cortez continued.

“I think, probably,” Zuckerberg answered.

While Democrats complained about a lack of fact checking on political ads, most Republicans said there should be no limits on the freedom of speech through Facebook.’I don’t want you to be bullied by politicians who want to censor politically incorrect speech,’ Rep.Andy Barr (R-KY) told Zuckerberg at one point.At the hearing – which stretched over six hours – Zuckerberg also took flak again over Facebook’s plan to develop a new cryptocurrency, known as Libra.As in previous appearances before Congress, Zuckerberg said his company will go ahead with the Libra cryptocurrency plan only after U.S.

regulators give it a green light.So far, that has not happened.’Is it a currency? Are you a bank?’ asked Rep.Ed Perlmutter (D-CO), as both parties questioned why Zuckerberg was going to base his Libra currency in Switzerland – and not in the United States.’Do you consider Libra to be money? Perlmutter asked.’I consider Libra to be a payment system,’ Zuckerberg replied, as lawmakers expressed concern that it could be used for money laundering and by terrorist groups.’We have to regulate this,’ Perlmutter concluded..

Leave a Reply

Next Post

White House moves to halt Times, Post subscriptions

White House moves to halt Times, Post subscriptions Photo Credit: AP Photo/Evan Vucci President Donald Trump speaks at the 9th annual Shale Insight Conference at the David L.Lawrence Convention Center, Wednesday, Oct.23, 2019, in Pittsburgh.(AP Photo/Evan Vucci) White House moves to halt Times, Post subscriptions By: The Associated Press October 24 2019 2:35 PM Updated:…
White House moves to halt Times, Post subscriptions

Subscribe US Now