Home Blog Page 9

Summer X Games are leaving Southern California, headed to Sacramento

0

The X Games are saying “later dude” to Southern California after years of gnarly action and heading north to Sacramento for the next three years.

The extreme sports competition will celebrate its 30th anniversary at the California State Fairgrounds from Aug. 22 to 24 next year, X Games organizers announced Thursday. The games, which include skateboarding, BMX and motocross, had been based in the Southland since 2021.

The X Games were last in Northern California in August 2000 when skateboarder Bob Burnquist won a gold medal and Eric Koston took the top spot in skateboard park, a competition that has largely been adopted by the Summer Olympics.

Bob Burnquist flipping in the air on a skateboard

Bob Burnquist of Brazil flips during warm-ups for the skateboard big air event at the 2012 X Games in Los Angeles.

(Grant Hindsley / Associated Press)

“Some of the biggest moments in X Games history took place in the San Francisco Bay,” X Games Chief Executive Jeremy Bloom said in a statement. “Twenty-five years later, we’re thrilled to bring X Games back to Northern California to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the brand.”

The X Games were created by ESPN to provide a TV platform for extreme sports and premiered in Rhode island in 1995. Over the years it has been where athletes such as skateboarding and BMX legends Tony Hawk and Dave Mirra have debuted new tricks, and where, in 2012, a competitor performed the first snowmobile front flip.

Los Angeles first hosted the Summer X Games in 2003 and has hosted multiple times since then, including in 2021, when COVID protocols prevented an audience from watching the games in person. The most recent games were held in Ventura County this summer. Aside from a handful of years, Southern California has hosted more Summer X Games than any other part of the country.

Next year’s games will take place at the former Raging Waters site at the Cal Expo/California State Fairgrounds in Sacramento. The games will feature music and competitions with over $1 million in prizes, according to the organizers.

“I grew up right outside of Sacramento, so this really is a dream come true for me,” five-time X Games BMX athlete Bryce Tryon said in a statement that accompanied the announcement. “X Games has always been a huge part of my life, so I’m stoked to feel like I’m playing host to a competition that has given me so much over the years and show my hometown the best that action sports have to offer.”

Source link

FBI agents search home of L.A. deputy mayor over City Hall bomb threat

0

FBI agents searched the home of a Los Angeles deputy mayor as part of an investigation into a bomb threat made against City Hall, officials said Wednesday.

The agents searched the home of Brian Williams, who is deputy mayor for public safety, on Tuesday while looking into a bomb threat Williams “allegedly made against City Hall earlier this year,” said Zach Seidl, a spokesperson for Mayor Karen Bass.

In a separate statement, also released by Seidl, the Los Angeles Police Department identified Williams as the “likely” source of the bomb threat.

“Earlier this year the LAPD responded to a bomb threat made against Los Angeles City Hall,” the department’s statement said. “Our initial investigation revealed that the source of the threat was likely from Brian Williams, Deputy Mayor for Public Safety. Due to the Department’s working relationship with Mr. Williams, the investigation was referred to the FBI. The FBI remains the investigating agency.”

Williams has been placed on administrative leave, said Seidl, who declined to provide additional details.

“The Mayor takes this matter very seriously,” he said. “When the threat was reported, LAPD investigated and determined there was no immediate danger. Following additional investigation, LAPD referred this matter to the FBI for further investigation.”

Williams could not immediately be reached for comment.

FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller declined comment, saying the agency cannot confirm or deny any investigation.

Williams has spent nearly two years as a deputy mayor in Bass’ office, working on issues such as police hiring, public safety spending and the search for a new police chief. Before that, he spent seven years as the executive director of Los Angeles County’s Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission.

Working in Bass’ office, Williams oversaw the police department, the fire department, port police, airport police and the city’s emergency management agency, according to his hiring announcement.

Source link

General Mills offering short-term price cuts on products

0

Brooks Johnson at the Star Tribune is reporting Golden Valley-based General Mills is forgoing profit growth to boost promotions and other short-term price cuts over the next six months in an effort to revive customer loyalty for the long haul.

Nicole Ki at MPR News talks with Elizer Darris, who, thanks to a new Minnesota law restoring voting rights for people on parole and probation that he lobbied for, was able to vote in his first presidential election. And on Tuesday, Darris cast a vote as a Minnesota elector in the Electoral College.

Andrew Hazzard at Sahan Journal is reporting a threat forced the Abubakar As-Saddique Islamic Center in south Minneapolis mosque to cancel most programming this past weekend, and has leaders working to enhance security measures.

Nathan O’Neal at FOX 9 reports Ramsey County is ending its controversial policy of billing people who call the crisis hotline in search of life-saving help from the mobile crisis response team.

Elliot Hughes and Louis Krauss at the Star Tribune report a Satanic holiday display was briefly removed, then returned to Minnesota State Capitol.

David Schuman at WCCO News was on hand when, thanks to the Wheels for Women program at the Newgate School in Minneapolis, a dozen single mothers got the keys to a free car.

Adam Uren at Bring Me the News reports the St. Paul Port Authority has purchased the former Kmart site at I-35E and Maryland Avenue East.

Also from Bring Me the News, Dustin Nelson has the line-up for next year’s Blue Ox Music Festival, which includes Orville Peck, Greensky Bluegrass and Pert Near Sandstone, among others.

Source link

Attorney for Diddy accusers makes wild new allegations against Jay-Z and his team

0

The legal fight between Jay-Z and Texas attorney Tony Buzbee, who is representing clients who allege they were sexually assaulted by Sean “Diddy”’ Combs, took an unusual turn Wednesday when the attorney filed a lawsuit claiming Jay-Z’s company and its agents conspired to offer money to his former clients to sue him.

The lawsuit, filed in Texas, alleges that Roc Nation is financing an effort orchestrated by two attorneys to engage “shadowy operatives” to illegally seek out more than two dozen current and former clients of Buzbee’s firm and bring what the attorney says are frivolous cases against him.

In one instance, the lawsuit alleges, the group offered a former Buzbee client $10,000 to sue the firm. In some cases, they pretended to work for the State of Texas and flashed fake badges when approaching Buzbee’s former clients, according to the lawsuit.

“These folks have stooped to a new low to try to intimidate the lawyers of the Buzbee Law Firm from doing their important work,” Buzbee said in a prepared statement. “This conduct was specifically targeted at our firm so we would not pursue cases related to the Diddy litigation. But, we will not be bullied or intimidated. The Defendants overstepped, got sloppy, and stupidly got caught in their illegal scheme on tape.”

A Roc Nation spokesperson called the lawsuit “nothing but another sham,” in a statement to The Times. “It’s a pathetic attempt to distract and deflect attention. This sideshow won’t change the ultimate outcome and true justice will be served soon.”

The attorneys named in the lawsuit did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Shawn Carter, known professionally as Jay-Z, was identified earlier this month as the mysterious celebrity accused in an anonymous civil lawsuit of raping a 13-year-old girl with Combs at a party after the MTV Video Music Awards in 2000. Jay-Z has denied any wrongdoing and has not been charged with any crimes.

In the months since Combs was charged by federal prosecutors in a salacious sex trafficking probe, numerous civil lawsuits have been filed from people claiming they were victimized by the entertainer.

In a sprawling indictment unsealed earlier this year, prosecutors allege Combs for decades used his empire to coerce his victims into sex in gatherings known as “freak-offs.” Combs, who has denied any wrongdoing, was arrested in September after nearly a year of investigation by federal authorities.

There have been suggestions that other big names will be swept into the scandal. While federal prosecutors have not named any co-conspirators they have repeatedly emphasized their investigation remains ongoing.

The war between Jay-Z and Buzbee began in October when the Texas-based attorney sent the record executive a demand letter making allegations of misconduct and suggesting a meeting. Later, Buzbee filed a lawsuit in New York on behalf of a woman, identified only as Jane Doe, who says she was 13 when she was raped by Combs and an anonymous male celebrity at an after-party following the VMAs.

After finishing one drink — a concoction of orange juice, cranberry juice and something bitter — at the celebration the woman says she began to feel lightheaded and found an empty bedroom to rest. Combs walked into the room with two celebrities, a man and a woman. He approached her “with a crazed look in his eyes, grabbed her and said ‘You are ready to party!’” the lawsuit states.

The lawsuit alleges the male celebrity — identified by Buzbee as Jay-Z— raped the girl, while Combs and an unidentified female celebrity allegedly watched. Combs then raped the girl as the other two celebrities watched, according to the lawsuit.

Jay-Z responded by filing his own anonymous lawsuit against the attorney last month alleging the lawyer tried to extort a payout in return for not identifying him as a sexual abuser tied to Combs. Attorneys representing Jay-Z said the demand letters included “wildly false horrific allegations.”

Buzbee fired back by amending his October civil complaint to add Jay-Z as a defendant.

Jay-Z has sought to have the lawsuit dismissed after the accuser recently admitted there are several inconsistencies in her recollection of the alleged incident. In an interview with NBC News, the 38-year-old woman said that she stands by her allegations overall, but has “made some mistakes” when it comes to her memory of the night.

Buzbee alleges in the lawsuit that around the time he filed the anonymous suit against Combs and the unidentified celebrities, current and former clients of his law firm began receiving solicitations from investigators asking them to join a class action lawsuit against the firm.

“Many times the investigators used fake names, or flashed badges or credentials but would not let the clients see them,” the lawsuit states. “During some of the contacts, the investigators were pushy, and in at least two, they pretended to be acting on behalf of the State of Texas.”

Gerardo Garcia, a former client, was recently contacted by two people who identified themselves as investigators at his home asking about whether he was unhappy with a settlement he received in 2020. The individuals flashed a badge and told Garcia they were from the “state,” according to the lawsuit.

They explained, according to the lawsuit, that they could connect him with a private lawyer so he could sue the Buzbee Law Firm, telling him several times that there is “money in this for you.” One of the individuals, the lawsuit alleges, was caught on tape disclosing to Garcia that they were working for a Mississippi attorney, Marcy Croft, who has been associated with Roc Nation’s philanthropic arm, Team Roc.

The investigator told Garcia that 70 people had signed onto the class action suit, according to a transcript of the recording reviewed by The Times.

Croft could not immediately be reached for comment by The Times, but told Newsweek in a statement that “Tony Buzbee has now conjured up fantastical allegations against me and my firm — well known corruption fighters — in a desperate attempt to distract from his mounting legal woes. We look forward to addressing these false allegations and having them dismissed.”

Source link

‘Blue Dog’ DFL senators say Legislature needs more wag, less bark

0

Within hours of the final unofficial 2024 election results being known, one Minnesota state senator read the handwriting on the wall and posted it on social media.

“Now that the voters have spoken, it is clear to me that Northern Minnesotans want representatives who focus on delivering for our communities and stay out of the nonsense that that distract far too many politicians from real bread-and-butter issues that matter in people’s lives,” tweeted Sen. Grant Hauschild, DFL-Hermantown.

The previous day, both House seats in Hauschild’s 3rd District had gone to the GOP. One of those, District 3B, had been expected to return to the DFL after it was lost in 2022 by just 33 votes. That victory helped Republicans hold a tie in the state House and ended the DFL trifecta that had produced a sweeping, heavily progressive, list of legislative accomplishments. Hauschild — and all other DFL senators — had voted for that agenda.

Now those same senators are less than two years from their own reelections, and many from outside the core of the DFL’s Twin Cities base are wondering how this year’s results will impact the next election.

“Each of the 67 senators, I hope, are asking ‘what did the voters tell us in November?’ ” said Sen. Nick Frentz, DFL-North Mankato. Frentz, one of the assistant leaders of the majority DFL caucus, said he thinks his constituents want the session to address cost-of-living issues and pass what he termed a “responsible budget.”

That would likely require cooperation between Republicans and Democrats, something that is a goal of the newly formed Blue Dog Coalition. The eight Senate members are DFLers from Twin Cities suburbs and from regional population centers near Mankato, Moorhead, Duluth and St. Cloud.

State Sen. Nick Frentz said Wednesday: “I think if there is a solution to the waste issue and that includes removing the current storage from Prairie Island then I don’t think we should close that door.”
State Sen. Nick Frentz , one of the assistant leaders of the majority DFL caucus, said he thinks his constituents want the session to address cost-of-living issues and pass what he termed a “responsible budget.” Credit: Minnesota Senate Media Services screen shot

“We seek to bridge divides and bring bipartisan solutions that serve all Minnesotans, regardless of political affiliation,” the group’s mission statement says.

Four of the eight Blue Dog members were among the five senators credited with securing the DFL majority in the 2022 election. All won in districts that were considered battlegrounds: one DFL district that had been trending toward the GOP (Robert Kupec of Moorhead), one in a district formed at redistricting as a combination of GOP and DFL areas (Judy Seeberger of Afton), one to replace a longtime DFL senator who had become an independent (Hauschild of Hermantown), and one who retained a seat that had been held by a Republican just two years previously (Aric Putnam of St. Cloud). 

The only so-called DFL Majority Maker from 2022 not in the Blue Dog Caucus is Sen. Heather Gustafson from Vadnais Heights, who beat a Republican incumbent and forged her own reputation as a moderate in her first two years.

The other Blue Dog members are Frentz, Matt Klein of Mendota Heights, Ann Rest of New Hope and John Hoffman of Champlin.

These are hardly back benchers in the Senate. Frentz is also the chair of the Energy, Utilities and Environment Committee, Klein is chair of Commerce, Putnam is chair of the Agriculture Committee, Hoffman is chair of Human Services and Rest is the Taxes Committee chair.

Rest said she operates under the strategy of, “if you’re not going to have a Republican (sponsor) on your bill, you should leave a blank in hopes that you will get some who support your bill.”

Before the 2024 session devolved into the chaos of the final night with only DFLers voting for the 1,400-page omnibus bill put together in Rest’s committee, the Senate had passed its version of a taxes bill with 16 GOP votes.

Klein was a leader in a last-minute, bipartisan agreement on a sports betting bill that ultimately did not reach a floor vote before the session adjourned. Ironically, the partisan rancor of the final weekend made it harder for a bipartisan agreement to get attention.

Senate Taxes Committee Chair Ann Rest
Sen. Ann Rest said she operates under the strategy of, “if you’re not going to have a Republican (sponsor) on your bill, you should leave a blank in hopes that you will get some who support your bill.” Credit: MinnPost photo by Peter Callaghan

The 2024 election results exposed some threats to some of the Blue Dog members. Both House seats in Hauschild’s and Seeberger’s districts went to the GOP. And the DFL maintained a split in Putnam’s 14th District by just 191 votes. Kupec, Frentz and Hoffman have Senate districts made up of a strong DFL half and a strong GOP half.

But both Klein and Rest represent safe DFL districts with both House seats being carried by significant margins last month.

Is there an emerging split in the Minnesota Senate majority? During the 2023 session, then-Majority Leader Kari Dziedzic was able to hold her one-vote majority together to match the work of the larger and more-progressive House DFL. The sweeping agenda included new gun safety laws, a state-run paid family leave insurance program, an expansive child tax credit for low- and moderate-income families as well as recreational marijuana higher taxes on wealthy individuals and a modest tax rebate program.

At each stage where it appeared the DFL Senate would not go along, it did. But in several key instances, it did so after legislation was amended to keep moderate members in the yes column. At the end of that session, Hauschild touted his work thwarting some fees on outdoor recreation. Kupec had concerns with a new delivery fee to raise money for transportation projects that was narrowed in scope. Seeberger pushed for modest changes to gun legislation that became law.

Still, the sweeping agenda that was termed either transformational (by DFLers) or bonkers (by Republicans) defines the current state DFL, especially after it was a centerpiece of Gov. Tim Walz’ vice presidential campaign.

Frentz doubts that any Senate DFL members regret those votes but that all benefited from the conversations among Democrats and the ideas put forward by moderates. He expects that to continue and pushed back on the criticism that the caucus was formed out of fear of defeat in 2026. He notes the history of a president’s party doing poorly in the first midterm election after his election.

“I’m optimistic that Democrats are going to take the lessons of the election, take what we have heard from the people of Minnesota and expand the DFL majority — not just in the suburbs but across the state,” he said. 

Rest said the focus of the next session will be on a budget deal with bipartisan support that can pass a tied House and win GOP votes in the Senate.

“That involves making some compromises on budget issues without having to walk away from the good things we did the past two years that we in the Democratic caucus feel improved the lives of Minnesotans,” Rest said. She cited the child tax credit, public safety funding, paid leave and universal school meals.

The Blue Dog Coalition will only formalize the more-moderate positions taken by the individual members. 

These types of caucuses are distinct from the four partisan caucuses around which the House and Senate are organized — the House Republican Caucus, the House DFL Caucus, the Senate Republican Caucus and the Senate DFL Caucus. They are more-aptly considered to be member organizations that coalesce around common interests such as the POCI Caucus (People of Color and Indigenous), the Queer Legislators Caucus and a bipartisan version of the Blue Dogs called the Purple Caucus.

The proliferation of special caucuses in St. Paul is not nearly as widespread as in the U.S. Congress where hundreds of member organizations exist — from the Bipartisan Candy Caucus to the House Recreational Vehicle Caucus. One of those is the original Blue Dog Caucus that was formed in 1995 by conservative Democrats who felt the party had moved too far to the left and was excluding their perspectives. The name has several origin stories. One version is that a member remarked that they were being left out in the cold or choked by more-liberal members and, in both cases, a dog in those circumstances might turn blue.

Most common is that the offices of Louisiana Democrats, where early organizing meetings were held, often had paintings by the Cajun artist George Rodrigue on the wall. A frequent subject of his art is the Blue Dog that was based on a Cajun legend.

It could also have been a play on the label Yellow Dog Democrats that described Southern Democrats who would sooner vote for a yellow dog than a Republican. Most of those Democrats are now Republicans. As such, the congressional caucus morphed from conservative Democrats to contain those liberal on social issues but conservative on economic and budget issues; populists who represented swing districts in suburban and rural America. The most-prominent Minnesota member was Collin Peterson, who represented the northwest corner of the state starting in 1991 before losing in 2020.

Rep. Collin Peterson
Former Rep. Collin Peterson Credit: MinnPost photo by Walker Orenstein

The membership of the U.S. House Blue Dogs peaked in 2006 at 56 members. Its most recent iteration has just 11.

Frentz said the members of the new caucus in St. Paul have districts with different demographics than urban DFL districts and are more evenly divided by party. He said his district has 2,000 family farms as well as suburbs, large parts of the city of Mankato and a major state university with 15,000 students.

“I work for everyone in the district whether they voted for me or not,” he said. “I think the people want us to work together more than we have.”

But if the Blue Dogs came bearing an olive branch, it was not immediately received by Republicans. Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson, R-East Grand Forks, was quick to bring up the 2023 session with the extensive list of new legislation and the 2024 session that ended with the hastily assembled omnibus bill passed in the closing hours. He also noted the Senate DFLs refusal to remove Sen. Nicole Mitchell, like all DFLers the potential crucial vote in a 34-33 Senate, despite being charged with felony burglary.

“They all put their party’s activist base before Minnesotans in the last session,” Johnson said in a press statement. “This is the kind of political stunt voters will see right through.”

And Jake Coleman, senior adviser to the Minnesota chapter of the conservative-libertarian Americans for Prosperity called the formation of the Blue Dog coalition “a cynical move to appear more moderate after watching the Democrats in the House lose their majority.

After the bill’s passage, Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson criticized the DFL majority for voting down several amendments offered by Republican senators during the floor debate.
Senate Minority Leader Mark Johnson: “They all put their party’s activist base before Minnesotans in the last session.” Credit: MinnPost photo by Mohamed Ibrahim

“They’re welcome to clean up all the extreme, progressive policies they passed last year, but it doesn’t mean we won’t come for their seats in 2026,” Coleman said. “Faking courage in the face of a fear isn’t the same as taking a principled stance. They had no interest in bipartisanship while they were destroying our budget surplus and raising taxes.”

Said Rest: “There are some public statements being made that are very different from the private ones we are hearing from across the aisle. I think the Republican caucus will appreciate any and all opportunities to work with us. They can say whatever they want as long as they’re willing to work with me.”

Source link

EPA OKs California EV mandate and tailpipe emission rule

0

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Wednesday signed off on two major California clean air rules designed to reduce pollution from cars and trucks, including a ban on selling new gasoline-powered cars statewide by 2035.

Under the Clean Air Act, California has the ability to adopt more stringent vehicle emission requirements than the federal government. But the state must seek a waiver from the EPA.

The EPA granted two waivers for two regulations approved by the California Air Resources Board:

  • The Advanced Clean Cars II rule, adopted in 2022, requires an increasing percentage of new cars sold by California auto dealerships to be zero-emission or plug-in hybrids. The regulation eventually culminates in a ban on selling new, gasoline-powered cars by 2035. It is slated to go into effect in 2026.
  • The Heavy-Duty Omnibus rule, adopted in 2020, establishes cleaner engine standards and requires warranties for new heavy-duty vehicles. It is scheduled to go into effect this year.

The EPA action allows the state to enforce the rules, which are collectively expected to prevent more than 3,700 premature deaths and provide $36 billion in public health benefits, state officials say.

“California has longstanding authority to request waivers from EPA to protect its residents from dangerous air pollution coming from mobile sources like cars and trucks,” EPA Administrator Michael Regan said in a statement. “Today’s actions follow through on EPA’s commitment to partner with states to reduce emissions and act on the threat of climate change.”

Environmental groups lauded the EPA decision, which will help California tackle its largest source of pollution and greenhouse gases — the transportation sector.

“This might read like checking a bureaucratic box, but EPA’s approval is a critical step forward in protecting our lungs from pollution and our wallets from the expenses of combustion fuels,” said Paul Cort, director of Earthjustice’s Right to Zero campaign. “The gradual shift in car sales to zero-emissions models will cut smog and household costs while growing California’s clean energy workforce. EPA must now approve the remaining authorization requests from California to allow the state to clean its air and protect its residents.”

California will join the 27 countries of the European Union, the United Kingdom and Canada, which have adopted policies that ban new gasoline car sales by 2035 or sooner.

Authorizing the rules ahead of President-elect Donald Trump’s arrival to the White House makes it more difficult for the incoming Trump administration and other opponents to attack them, experts say.

Source link

Wells Fargo Center sells at steep discount for $85 million

0

Bring Me the News reports the Wells Fargo Center has sold to a trio of investors for $85 million, a 70% decline in value from when it was sold in 2019 for $313.6 million. “Minnetonka-based Onward Investors on Thursday announced it had partnered with Cross Ocean Partners and Neuberger Berman on the acquisition of the city’s third-tallest building.”

Post Bulletin reports Adam Fravel has been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for the murder of Madeline Kingsbury. “Just before being sentenced, Fravel said, ‘I never caused harm to Maddi and I am innocent.’ His attorney, Zach Bauer, indicated Fravel plans to appeal the conviction.”

Via Pioneer Press: “The segment between I-35W in Roseville and Hilton Trail in Pine Springs previously was a 55 mph zone. It was increased to 60 mph last month after a routine engineering and traffic review conducted by the Minnesota Department of Transportation.”

CBS is reporting Luigi Mangione has been indicted in New York in the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. “Mangione was hit with multiple charges, including one count of murder in the first degree, in furtherance of terrorism, and two counts of murder in the second degree, one of which is charged as killing as an act of terrorism.”

WDIO reports the St. Louis County Board has approved a budget surpassing $500,000 for the first time. “About one-third of next year’s budget is funded by the property tax levy, which increased 7.23% this year. The final levy was approved at $180.310,863 million.”

Fox9 reports police in Wisconsin say the motivation behind a shooting at the Abundant Life Christian School is “a combination of factors” and “detectives are looking into whether bullying may have played a role.”

Via Star Tribune: “Wuollet’s woes continue as the landlord for its south Minneapolis bakery has sued for eviction over unpaid rent … And in October, a Chicago-based bank sued Wuollet companies and their owner, Eric Shogren, after they defaulted on two loans totaling over $1.3 million.”

Source link

Why the Biden administration is separating families at the border

0

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

In handwritten cursive, a Russian immigrant named Marina wrote out the story of the day U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents took away her 1-year-old baby while she was being held in a detention facility in southern California. “I cried and begged, kneeling, not to do this, that this was a mistake, not justice and not right,” she wrote. “She was so little that no one knew anything about her. I was very afraid for her and still am!”

This didn’t happen during the Trump administration, which separated more than 4,000 migrant children from their families under its controversial “zero tolerance” policy. Marina was separated from her baby in April of this year. The 40-year-old former restaurant manager came to the U.S.-Mexico border with her husband, mother-in-law and child to seek asylum. More than eight months later, she and her mother-in-law remain in federal immigration custody in Louisiana. Her husband is detained at a different Louisiana immigration facility. And Aleksandra is over a thousand miles away, being cared for by strangers in foster care in California.

Aleksandra is one of around 300 children the Biden administration has separated from their parents or legal guardians this year, according to two government sources who asked not to be identified because they hadn’t been authorized to speak about the separations. Most of the cases involved families crossing the southwestern border, the sources said. These numbers haven’t previously been reported.

Similarly, 298 children were separated from their parents in 2023, according to a government report to Congress published on Tuesday, even as overall migrant crossings have declined. According to the report, the average amount of time children separated between April 2018 and October 2024 have spent in federal custody before being released to a sponsor is 75 days.

The Department of Homeland Security, Customs and Border Protection, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement did not respond to multiple requests for comment on the numbers or on Marina’s case.

Those officials who did speak about the separations did so on the condition they not be identified. They said the current separations are not similar — in either character or scale — to what was happening during the Trump administration. Its zero tolerance policy directed authorities to detain and criminally prosecute all immigrants caught illegally crossing the border and to separate them from their children if they were travelling together. Biden administration officials say they have only separated families for reasons according to longstanding immigration practices, including when they have concerns about the parents or the safety of the children. Some of those concerns are related to suspicions about abuse, criminal histories or threats to national security.

The administration reports the numbers of separations to Congress and to lawyers at the American Civil Liberties Union who have been charged with providing oversight. However, those reports give few details about the reasons for the separations, especially in cases where parents have been flagged for national security reasons. Around 80 of the children separated between December 2023 and November 2024 were in that category, one of the government sources said, and some 50 of those were Russian, like Aleksandra. The second source said at least 10 of the Russian children who were separated this year are still in government custody.

In cases involving national security, the government can withhold its rationale even from the families themselves, making it hard for them and their lawyers to contest the separations or mount a defense. And some advocates have been reluctant to talk publicly about the current separations, much less call out President Joe Biden’s administration, as they press for the government to resolve their clients’ cases and fear the incoming Trump administration could apply the same standards more broadly to separate more families in the future.

Family separations at the border did not begin with the zero tolerance policy and didn’t end when it was lifted, said Talia Inlender, deputy director of the Center for Immigration Law and Policy at the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law, which wrote a report on family separations going back to the Obama years and before. She said that while Trump’s policy was unprecedented because of how expansive it was, the scant information that the government provides about separations at the border has been common practice across administrations.

“I think the lack of transparency creates a lack of accountability,” she said, “and that is by design.”

“Where there is room left for agency discretion,” Inlender said, “that’s really where we need to make sure that there are eyes on what is happening, so that these exceptions, or these grey areas, don’t become the rule.”

During telephone interviews with Marina and her husband, conducted through a translator, the couple said they hoped by breaking the silence on their case, they might get answers about why they were separated from their daughter and get her back. They asked to be identified only by their first names because of their pending deportation cases.

Marina said that she and her husband Maksim, who worked as a supplies manager at a construction company, had met at a restaurant where Marina worked in Moscow. They married in 2021 and tried for years to have a child before Alexsandra was born.

Maksim said he started going to antigovernment protests in support of opposition leader Alexei Navalny and later against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. According to an affidavit Marina gave as part of her asylum case, she said Maksim had been detained, questioned and on one occasion beaten up by police after protests. ProPublica could not independently corroborate the accounts of his political activity. They both said Marina wasn’t involved in the protests and had asked him to stop attending them. Eventually the family decided to leave the country, fearing government reprisals.

After researching the best routes into the U.S. online, they said they bought tickets to Dubai, Mexico City and Tijuana, which sits on the border with California. Once in Tijuana, Marina said they waited for six months for an appointment after using a U.S. government app known as CBP One to apply for permission to approach the border and ask for asylum. They were finally granted a slot and allowed to cross in mid-April.

But instead of being released to pursue their asylum claim, Marina said she and Aleksandra were held in a cold cell at a Border Patrol detention facility. She said she was given only formula and vegetable purees for Aleksandra. She smashed up bread from her own sandwiches to give her daughter extra food. At the time Aleksandra was learning to walk and was always moving around; she had just started to talk.

Then, after several days, Marina said she and her baby were surrounded by border officials who told her the adults would be detained and Aleksandra would be taken away. She said one of the agents handed her a note that read: “CBP has made this decision for the following reason: You are being taken into custody for presenting a public safety or national security risk.”

Recalling the desperation she felt upon seeing the note, Marina wrote: “Why would that be? I didn’t even have an interview!!!”

She said she became catatonic after a Border Patrol agent took her daughter by the hand and led her away.

“I thought I died at that moment.”

Her experience might sound familiar to anyone who followed the news about the thousands of separations carried out by the Trump administration. Its zero tolerance policy first began as a pilot program in 2017, but the administration denied its existence until spring 2018. Even then, authorities refused to make public the details of how the policy was being implemented, including where the children were being held, how many of them were in custody, or even how the separations were conducted.

In June of 2018, ProPublica obtained audio that had been recorded in a Border Patrol facility of wailing children who had been separated from their parents. Among them was a 6-year-old girl, pleading to make a phone call to her aunt. That audio triggered a bipartisan outcry that led the administration to announce the end of the policy 48 hours later. And a federal lawsuit brought by the ACLU forced the administration to reunify the children in its custody with their families.

That reunification effort continued even after Trump left office. Biden, who called zero tolerance a “a moral and national shame,” formed a task force to finish the reunifications shortly after taking office. It found that some parents had been deported without their children and remained separated years later. Biden promised going forward that his administration would not separate children from their parents “except in the most extreme circumstances where a separation is clearly necessary for the safety and well-being of the child or is required by law.”

Biden’s Justice Department negotiated a settlement with the ACLU allowing it to disperse assistance to the families that had been harmed by zero tolerance. Under the terms of the deal, signed last December, future family separations were only allowed in “limited” circumstances, including when parents are deemed a threat to the child, have an outstanding arrest warrant or need to be hospitalized.

The settlement also said separations were allowed when government officials found parents or legal guardians could pose “a public safety or national security risk to the United States,” including people suspected of terrorism or espionage. But in those cases the agreement says that the government is not required to provide documentation of the reason for its decision if it would mean disclosing sensitive information.

Such cases could include instances when migrants’ names come up on an international watch list, said a third government official, who, like the others, spoke on the condition of anonymity. In June of this year, the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned two Uzbeks and one Russian national for alleged links to an ISIS-linked human smuggling network that the State Department said facilitated travelers coming to the United States.

“If they are looking into cases more deeply and then people are let go after they found out the information they had was not correct,” the official said, “it’s still pretty difficult to say we shouldn’t go ahead and make those checks if we need to pay extra security attention in these cases.” Sometimes, the official said, authorities are able to quickly resolve any security concerns and reunite the families.

Advocates do not disagree that sometimes separations are warranted, said Lee Gelernt, an ACLU attorney and the lead lawyer in the family separation lawsuit. And they said they understand the sensitivity of sharing information that could put the country at risk.

However, when asked whether the Russian cases highlight the potential pitfalls of the agreement the ACLU made with the administration, Gelernt said that the government “cannot create a loophole and place everything in the black box of national security.”

He added that if the exceptions become “an excuse to circumvent the bar on separations, we will return to court.”

With Biden leaving office soon, it’s the incoming Trump administration that most worries the advocates. Trump made stopping border crossings and mass deportations a centerpiece of his campaign and says they are part of his Day 1 plans for when he takes office, but when asked several times in an interview over the weekend if he would revive the zero tolerance policy, he said: “We’ll send the whole family, very humanely, back to the country where they came. That way the family’s not separated.”

Inlender wasn’t convinced that Trump wouldn’t ramp up family separations. “With any loopholes that exist in policies, any loopholes that exist in the settlement agreements, I think there is always a danger when you have an incoming administration that has already both shown itself willing, and in some cases able, to inflict cruelty to separate families, that they will use any tools at their disposal,” Inlender said.

The children who were separated from their parents for national security reasons in the past year came from a range of countries, including Romania, Turkey, Ukraine, Lebanon, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, Armenia, Colombia and Venezuela, the two government sources said. The majority, however, came from Russia. In fact, only one Russian child separated from their parents this year was listed as being separated for a reason other than national security, they said.

None of the officials interviewed could say whether Russian families had been flagged for special scrutiny. The 50 Russian children separated last year represent a very small share of the overall Russian border crossings. According to CBP data for the 2024 fiscal year, which began last October and ended in September, 7,137 Russian families crossed the southwestern border, almost all of them through legal ports of entry like Marina’s family.

The secrecy surrounding Marina’s case has meant the government has not told her or her lawyer any more specific reason for her detention and prolonged separation from Aleksandra. Marina’s New York-based attorney, Elena Denevich, said in an email that while she has filed a series of parole requests for Marina since May, “the requests were denied based on unspecified ‘national security concerns.’” Denevich said DHS “has provided no evidence or explanation to substantiate this allegation.”

The Office of Refugee Resettlement, which is part of the Department of Health and Human Services and oversees migrant children, said it could not comment on individual cases and referred questions about enforcement to DHS. ORR, which earlier this month had only published data on family separations through January 2024 on its website, updated its site with nine new reports from February through October this week.

In addition to interviews, Marina shared her four-page handwritten account of the separation after translating it herself into English using a tablet provided to her in detention. ProPublica reviewed court documents and spoke to Maksim’s stepfather, who crossed the border months earlier but was released to pursue an asylum claim.

Marina’s family has joined a class-action lawsuit brought by more than 150 detained Russian-speaking asylum seekers against the government claiming they are systematically being denied parole by ICE because of their nationalities. Maksim’s stepfather says he has been working nonstop as a long-haul truck driver to pay for legal fees as he fights for the release of his family. ICE said it could not comment on pending litigation.

After their separation, Marina, stuck in detention, said she had to wait three months before she was finally allowed to speak with her daughter on the phone in July. Beginning in August, they were allowed weekly video calls. Because the family Aleksandra is staying with doesn’t speak Russian, Marina has asked them to put on Russian YouTube videos from time to time so her daughter can listen to people speaking her native language. She says Aleksandra looks healthy and like she is being well taken care of, surrounded by toys and wearing new clothes. She is grateful for the foster family, who points to the screen and says “mama” when they talk to remind her who her mother is, but she breaks down crying when talking about how the separation has affected her.

“I’m just trying to take care of myself because my little daughter needs a healthy mom. But because she is so little, I feel really bad. I am starting to fall apart, both mentally and physically,” Marina said from detention. She said she is having trouble sleeping and experiencing a series of worsening health problems.

Not knowing the reason behind their family’s separation is agonizing.

“I don’t have the slightest clue why they did this to us.”

Andrey Babitskiy contributed reporting.

Source link

The unfettered presidential pardon has no place in our legal system

0

The presidential pardon is suddenly the center of political discourse: President Biden’s pardon of his son Hunter; President-elect Trump’s vow to pardon the January 6 defendants; President Biden’s threat to pardon everybody who lies in the path of Trump’s coming crusade of retribution.

Of course, it’s easy to criticize any and all of these alleged acts of “mercy.” Biden climbed onto the high moral ground by announcing his refusal to pardon his own son — until, oops, he slid back into the ethical murk. And yet that action bears no comparison, in degree of moral squalor, to Trump’s planned pardon of January 6 defendants, who attempted to halt the transfer of power by extra-legal means.

This all makes me feel like the child who sees the obviously naked emperor and asks why he’s wearing no clothes. Why, I keep thinking, does no one notice that the entire idea of a presidential pardon is absurd in a political system founded on the rule of law?  Perhaps that’s because it’s been right there in Article II of the Constitution since 1789, and is therefore assumed to be as inevitable as gravity. 

But the fact that it’s been around for 240 years does not insulate it from examination.  And I submit that if we set aside tradition and actually think about it, we quickly see that the unfettered presidential pardon should have no place in our legal system.

The founders did not invent this idea in the late 1700s. Quite the opposite: the sovereign’s “prerogative of mercy” is a vestige of the medieval world that was supposedly left behind by the Enlightenment. Arbitrary royal power was replaced by law and process. Indeed, the young nation clinging to the eastern seaboard of North America was famously animated by these new ideas, and we’ve been patting ourselves on the back about it ever since.

Why, then, would the American colonists have inserted this divine right of kings into our bold new plan of government? Didn’t they hate monarchy, having just fought a war to release themselves from its strictures? 

Perhaps we have forgotten that the American colonists were human — and British. Much as they attempted to discard the past, they were steeped in British laws and customs. While proclaiming to abhor monarchy, the founders simply accepted as received wisdom that our new president must have a role similar to kings since the dawn of history — that is, the dispenser of mercy that supersedes all law and procedure.

It was (I’m sorry to say) Alexander Hamilton who introduced the concept at the Constitutional Convention in 1787. And in the Federalist No. 74, he articulated the most common theory, then and now, to justify this strange carry-over from the dark ages:  “The criminal code of every country partakes so much of necessary severity, that without an easy access to exceptions in favor of unfortunate guilt, justice would wear a countenance too sanguinary and cruel.” In modern language: legal processes are fallible; people make mistakes, and the consequences can be severe; so we need a safety valve to correct rank injustice that occasionally occurs despite our best efforts.

So far, so hard to argue with. But he continues: “As the sense of responsibility is always strongest, in proportion as it is undivided, it may be inferred that a single man would be most ready to attend to the force of those motives which might plead for a mitigation of the rigor of the law….” That is, the president, acting alone, is best suited to mitigate occasional injustice.

And why, you might ask, is the power best “undivided” — i.e. given to the president alone? Here, Hamilton dons his proto-pop-psychology hat to explain: “The reflection that the fate of a fellow-creature depended on his sole fiat, would naturally inspire scrupulousness and caution; the dread of being accused of weakness or connivance, would beget equal circumspection…” 

Oh, I see. The president would feel the weight of this awesome power and therefore use it only with caution. Compared with a group of men, who might “encourage each other in an act of obduracy, and might be less sensible to the apprehension of suspicion or censure for an injudicious or affected clemency.”

Seriously — that’s why this section is in our Constitution. I don’t have to recite what happened in the ensuing 240 years. Suffice it to say that “scrupulousness” and “caution” are not words one would use to describe almost any pardon granted by any president, ever.   

The most striking aspect of this history is the ease with which the founders simply abandoned faith in their own mission, which was to create a nation of laws, not men (yes, it was only men at the time). When confronted with a knotty problem — the understandable need for a system of clemency — they circled back to what they knew without even trying to find a modern solution. (I deeply admire Hamilton and Hamilton!, but nobody’s perfect.)

Perhaps that was understandable in the 18th century, though the cognitive dissonance did not go unnoticed even then. As William Blackstone observed in his famous commentaries on English common law (Volume IV, 1769): “In democracies, this power of pardon can never subsist.” Unfortunately, it subsisted all too easily. In this sense, it is something like the human appendix: a feature that functioned in an earlier era but stubbornly remains only as a locus of infection, occasionally wreaking havoc on our modern body politic.

I don’t dispute the need for some sort of pardon system. But bestowing this unlimited power on the president alone was a serious mistake. We constantly trumpet our faith in the rule of law, contrasting our system with autocracies that run on subjective power rather than process. Indeed, our criminal justice system is a labyrinth of procedure, safeguards, and layers of appeal (not to mention our entire government structure based on checks and balances).

But then, with a stroke of a pen, we bypass this carefully wrought system, and allow the president of the United States to dispense “justice” unilaterally, for any reason. It’s as bonkers as the naked emperor, but everyone is afraid to say it out loud.

Stephen Bubul
Stephen Bubul

In my view, pardons should be granted only after intense review against an established set of criteria, and only after a decision by a body that is as independent as we can make it. Yes, I hear the objections: wouldn’t another body be subject to corruption? Isn’t this just like adding another layer of appeal? My response is: sure, it would be hard, and imperfect, like everything else in a democracy. But anything we could fashion would improve on the trail of presidential pardons that gets more outlandishly arbitrary and dangerous with each new president.

The final objection is always: But it’s in the Constitution, we’re stuck with it. To which my standard reply is: tell that to the women who began fighting for what became the 19th Amendment in the 1840s and finally succeeded 70 years later. The best time to start any decades-long project was decades ago. The second-best time is now.

Stephen Bubul of Minneapolis is a retired attorney who practiced in the areas of housing and redevelopment and related public law. He has an enduring interest in Constitutional law.

Source link

Macalester exhibition is a monument to the archives in an AI era

0

I got chills as I walked into Law Warschaw Gallery at Macalester College last week to see “Mickey Smith: Morphologies.” It felt to me as if I were entering a tomb, where knowledge itself was being laid to rest. The exhibition was originally going to end Dec. 15, but it’s been extended through Friday, Dec. 20. 

Artist Mickey Smith, born and raised in Minnesota and now based in New Zealand, has been exploring the dramatic shifts happening in the world of libraries and academics for 20 years. Through photography and installation work, Smith investigates the evolution of archiving in our increasingly digital world, and in a way acts as an homage — even a monument — to past practices. 

Heather Everhart, director and curator of Law Warschaw Gallery, curated the exhibition, and also co-edited the catalog with Laura Wertheim Joseph (formerly curator at the Minnesota Museum of American Art), who is now director of curatorial affairs at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum. 

“This exhibition offers rich opportunities to explore themes of memory, permanence, and the evolving role of libraries,” Everhart wrote in an email. “Smith’s ability to celebrate the formal beauty of books while questioning their cultural permanence is especially resonant in an era of rapid digital transformation.”

One of the first pieces I encountered when I visited the exhibition was called “Platform, Vol. 1,” (2024), consisting of donated bound periodicals lined up along the floor, appearing as a kind of platform. With their brown, green, and blue covers and plain type, the periodical covers appear as a sea of uniform design. 

Some examples are the 1980 issues of the Hastings Center Report and the Journal of Experimental Botany from 2005. 

As first installed, the work was made of 3,276 bound periodicals. That number is reduced now, as visitors are encouraged to take a volume with them after they leave. 

The installation has a stately appearance. On social media, I’ve seen photographs of people walking on the volumes, but I didn’t feel comfortable enough to do that myself. There’s a reverence for books that’s been instilled in me as someone who grew up in the pre-digital age, and I couldn’t bring myself to put my weight on the installation. But it also may have felt more inviting to step on them toward the beginning of the run of the show. As people have taken books since the exhibition opened, the flooring area has become quite a bit more reduced.

In any case, Smith’s trick here is to at once show the books as foundational — powerful enough to hold those who stand on them, and also held in memorial. Usually bound periodicals are tucked away in the stacks of a library — unseen by everyday library visitors except for those who seek them out. In Smith’s “Platform,” they are given reference and a dose of awe. 

On the wall above the layer of books on the floor hangs a photographic tryptic, “Collocation No. 19 (ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE),” (2024), photographed from the stacks of Macalester’s DeWitt Wallace Library. The photographs depict a series of book covers similar to the bound periodicals on the floor but are ominously titled “Artificial Intelligence.” The photographs don’t capture the bottom of the spines of these book covers, so we don’t see the years these journals are supposed to be, and I think that’s intentional. While there is an actual peer-reviewed journal called Artificial Intelligence Journal (and others with similar names), Smith’s photographs here capture the metaphorical implications of artificial intelligence being bound and stacked in some tucked away backroom of the library. 

Other works were photographed during Smith’s residency at Macalester, including “Bound: Withdrawn From” (2024), showing a stamp marking publications marked for deaccession, and “LIT,” (2024), a photograph of a single bound periodical with that title. “LIT,” kept catching my eye as I was in the gallery. The book is tilted at just an ever so slight angle, and it looks almost sassy. Still here, literature seems to be saying. 

Another piece that struck me with a visceral jolt was Smith’s “Stack Vo.(Is this a typo?) 1.” (2024). It’s made of shredded National Geographic magazines, with issues spanning 98 years, plus donated library shelves. The magazine shreddings sit precariously on the shelf, as if they might blow away with a heavy wind. The piece reminds me of ruins of some forgotten city. 

The shredded National Geographic issues startled me for two reasons. One is that I have myself been faced with my own internal quandary about what to do with old issues of that very magazine and others like it that take up too much room in my apartment. Filled with guilt for putting them in the recycling, I sometimes take old magazines to my neighborhood Little Free Library, where they often sit for months and I have to feel guilty about that as well. The piece also serves as a reminder about the precarious market for mainstream magazines in general. Let’s not forget National Geographic made headlines in 2023 for laying off all of its staff writers. 

I remember having a conversation with an archivist many years ago about preserving books and physical documents as opposed to preserving digital content. What she told me is that we have hundreds of years of practice preserving paper — it’s a science that is well understood and studied. We don’t have as much experience preserving digital files, and even less preserving internet sites that are no longer active. How will we remember the important things in generations to come? If we don’t figure it out, Smith’s pile of rubbish serves as a warning. 

“Mickey Smith: Morphologies,” runs through Friday, Dec. 20, at Law Warschaw Gallery at Macalester College, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. After that, the exhibition travels to the Plains Art Museum in Fargo, ND, opening Jan. 18, and running through May 25, before heading to a joint showing at University of Nebraska and Fiendish Plots in Lincoln, Sept 2-26.

Note about visiting Law Warschaw: there’s a specific door you need to enter from if you are not a student. Visit this page for a picture of that door and directions for getting inside.

Source link