From:
Bulletin Intelligence
Subject:
(EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Public Affairs News Briefing Friday, May 07, 2021
To:
[email protected]
Sent:
May 7, 2021 6:29 AM (UTC-04:00)
Mobile version and searchable archives available at fbi.bulletinintellicience.com.
x
TO
:
THE
DIRECTOR
AND
SENIOR
STAFF
DATE
:
FRIDAY,
MAY
7
,
2021
6 : 30
AM
EDT
TODAY'S TABLE OF CONTENTS
• FBI San Francisco Pushing Back Against Anti-Asian Hate Crimes.
• Hostage Standoff At Minnesota Bank Ends.
EFTA00135950
CAPITOL RIOTS
• FBI Continues To Make Arrests In Capitol Siege.
• Democrats Seek Additional Funding For Capitol Security.
• Republicans Criticize Lofgren After Publication Of Social Media Post Compilation.
• Secret Service Director: Agency Needs More Funding To Provide Security For High-Profile Events.
• Capitol 'Zip Tie' Suspect Requests Mother's Day Conversation With Co-Defendant Mom.
• Continuing: New Jersey Man Arrested In Capitol Riot After Mother Tells Friend About Participation.
• FBI: Georgia Man Shared 'Post Victory Picture' After Capitol Riot.
• Pennsylvania Man Charged In Capitol Insurgency After Wife's Facebook Posts.
• Florida Man Convicted Of Targeting Pro-Trump Protestors For Violent Attack.
• Michigan White Supremacist Leader's Bond Revoked.
• FBI Investigating SSA Bomb Threat In Texas.
• Administration Launches "Government-Wide" Effort To Investigate "Havana Syndrome."
• Declassified Report: CIA Analysts Discovered Information Suggesting Russian Bounty Story Was
True.
• Space Force Aims To Go Fully Digital.
• Continuing: California Bar Owner Arrested For Selling Counterfeit COVID-19 Vaccination Cards.
• Idaho Police Investigate School Shooting.
• Family: Missing San Antonio Girl Found Safe.
• Georgia Meth Ring Leader Gets 20 Years.
• Colorado Man Charged With Murder Of Missing Wife.
• FBI Takes Part In Texas Manhunt Over Domestic Violence Incident.
• Man Charged In Connection To Stabbing Of Asian Women In San Francisco.
• Group: Asian Americans Report Thousands Of Cases Of Racism, Discrimination.
• Continuing: Former Maui Police Officer Pleads Guilty To Soliciting Sex In Exchange For Sabotaging
Criminal Case.
• Oregon Woman Charged With Portland Police Union Arson.
• Judge Issues New "Red Flag" Guidance After Indiana FedEx Shooting.
• In Puerto Rico, Boxer Felix Verdejo Indicted In Lover's Death.
• Maine Man Faces Child Porn Charges After Employer Contacts FBI.
• City Officials Get Two Years In California Bribery Case.
• West Virginia Man Pleads Guilty To Child Sex Trafficking.
• MS-13 Member Pleads Guilty To Violent Crimes In Maryland.
• FBI Investigating Arizona Shooting Of FBI Task Force Officer.
• FBI's Role In Missing Buffalo Student Case Noted.
• FBI Reward For Truman Artifacts Noted.
• Attorney Gets More Than 15 Years In Prison For Scheming To Defraud Drug Traffickers.
• Three Rhode Islanders Plead Guilty To Participating In Drug Distribution Conspiracy.
• Suspected Drug Dealer Arrested In Massachusetts.
• Pay-For-Play Marijuana Trial Of Former Massachusetts Mayor Continues.
• Kansas City Man Convicted For Role In Cell Phone Burglary Scheme.
• Virginia Man Gets 18 Months For Bribing FBI Official Over Data Center Contract.
CYBER DIVISION
EFTA00135951
• DHS Secretary Warns Ransomware Attacks Increasing.
• DHS Seeks To Hire 200 Cyber Pros.
• Proposed Legislation Would Bolster National Guard's Role In Cyber Response.
• Cybersecurity Incident Pushes Alaska Court System Offline.
• UK Spies Warn Local Authorities Over "Smart City" Tech Risks.
• Insurer AXA To Stop Reimbursing Ransomware Payments In France.
• Experts Say Zero Trust Should Be Foundation For Security Approaches.
• DOD Announces Expansion Of Vulnerability Disclosure Policy.
LABORATORY
• DNA, Fingerprint Evidence Lead To Arrest in 1983 Nebraska Cold Case Murder.
OTHER FBI NEWS
• Man Shot By FBI At CIA Headquarters ID'ed As Indiana Resident.
• Arizona Gathering Aims To Spotlight Cases Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls.
• George Conway: Giuliani May "Offer Prosecutors" Trump To "Save Himself."
• Former Mob Lawyer Claims Hoffa Buried At Savannah Golf Course.
• Biden Touts Infrastructure Plan In Front Of Aging Bridge In Louisiana.
• Document Details Lander's Meetings With Epstein.
• Fox News Report: Klain And Others In Administration Tied To "Dark Money" Groups.
• Cases, Hospitalizations, Deaths Continue To Fall Across US.
• Politico Report: White House Slowly Returning To Pre-Pandemic Normal.
• Cardona: Schools Should Be Fully Reopened By September.
• Jennifer Garner To Feature In Administration's Mother's Day Vaccine Campaign.
• Local Health Officials Offer Incentives To Tackle Vaccine Hesitancy.
• Judge's Action On Barr Memo Spotlights Secretive DO) Office.
• Studies Suggest Pfizer And Moderna Vaccines Protect Against Variants.
• Pfizer Can Manufacture Up To 3B Vaccine Doses This Year.
• Foreign Health Officials Pause Distribution Of 38J Vaccines Made By Emergent.
• Pritzker Targets June 11 To Fully Reopen Illinois.
• Walz To Lift Minnesota COVID Restrictions On May 28.
• Florida Theme Parks Loosen COVID Protocols.
• Families Start To Rethink Role Of Nursing Homes Following Pandemic.
• Initial Jobless Claims Fell Last Week To Lowest Point Since Pandemic Began.
• McConnell: Biden Stimulus Has Created Labor Shortage.
• House Republicans Tout Rescue Plan Spending In Their Districts.
• Kamin Says Biden Tax Increases Will Lead Wealthy To Give More To Charity.
• Rural Democrats Express Concern About Administration's Capital-Gains Tax Plan.
• Biden Seeks To Close Tax Loophole For Farmers.
• Bloomberg Analysis: IRS Funding Increase Unlikely To Quickly Boost Tax Receipts.
• Federal Judge Stays Ruling Overturning CDC Eviction Moratorium.
• One In Eight Americans Facing Food Insecurity.
• DeLauro Says House Will Move Appropriations Bills In June, July.
• Fed Warns Rising Asset Prices Could Harm Investors.
• Gensler: Rules Needed For Brokerage Apps That Turn Stock Trades Into A Game.
• Amid Skyrocketing Steel Prices, Bank Of America Analyst Warns Of A Bubble.
• National Chicken Council Downplays Talk Of Shortage.
• Stocks Finish "Broadly Higher" As Dow Posts Another Record.
• Krugman Faults Media Reaction To Yellen's Comment On Interest Rates.
EFTA00135952
• China Suspends Economic Dialogue With Australia.
• China Avoiding Trade Restraints By Purchasing Overseas Manufacturers.
• WSJournal: Europe Should Join US, Other Nations To Present Unified Trade Front To China.
• Ernst And Gillibrand Say Military Sexual Assault Bill Has Enough Votes To Pass.
• Man Charged In Connection To Stabbing Of Asian Women In San Francisco.
• Idaho Police Investigate School Shooting.
• ACA Special Enrollment Sees Nearly 1M Sign Up Through April.
• Gillibrand Promotes "Deeply Bipartisan" Package Aimed At Lowering Drug Prices.
• House Lawmakers Seek To Address Maternal Death Rate.
• Harris And Lopez Obrador To Discuss Immigration On Friday.
• Democrats Seek Additional Funding For Capitol Security.
• Administration Releases Report On Conserving Land, Combatting Climate Change.
• Media Analyses: Stefanik Echoes Trump's "False Narrative" About 2020 Election.
• Klobuchar Not Giving Up On Senate Passing Voting Rights Legislation.
• DeSantis Signs Florida Voting Law On Fox News.
• FEC Recommends Congress Ban Prechecked Boxes For Recurring Campaign Donations.
• Leaders Of GOP-Led Arizona Ballot Recount Discount DO) Concerns.
• Twitter Removes Account That Was Sharing Trump's Blog Posts.
• Tumulty Says Democrats Are Concerned About House Moderates Retiring.
• WPost Slams DeSantis For "Cynical Calculation" In Delaying FL20 Special Election.
• Candidate With Bear, 2003 Also-Rans, Among California Gubernatorial Recall Hopefuls.
• Jones Poll Shows Him Close To Kemp In Georgia GOP Gubernatorial Race.
• Atlanta Mayor Will Not Seek Second Term.
• Brazilian Police Raid Leaves 25 Dead.
• Pentagon Begins Removing Contractors From Afghanistan.
• Social Media Post By US Embassy In Beijing Creates Controversy.
• Speaker Of Maldivian Parliament Injured In Blast.
• NYTimes Analysis: Burma Has Revived Censorship And Oppressive Policing.
• Blinken Affirms Support For Ukraine While Calling For Kyiv To Address Graft.
• Blinken Says "Jury Is Out" On Whether Iran Talks Will Be Successful.
THE BIG PICTURE
• Headlines From Today's Front Pages.
WASHINGTON'S SCHEDULE
• Today's Events In Washington.
FBI San Francisco Pushing Back Against Anti-Asian Hate Crimes.
The AR (5/6, Rodriguez) reports the FBI San Francisco office has launched an ad campaign "to
encourage the victims of hate crimes to come forward," placing "an ad on a city train that reads
'Speak Up, Be Heard, Report Now. Report Hate Crimes to the FBI.'" The campaign comes "amid a
wave of attacks against Asian Americans - many of them elderly - in San Francisco and across the
country." The move coincides with a social media campaign. The AP quotes San Francisco SAC
Craig Fair saying, "I want to assure the community that the FBI works to protect all victims of
crimes, regardless of their country of national origin or immigration status. Acts of hate and racism
have no place here and will not be tolerated."
KTVU-TV San Francisco (5/6, 232K) also covers the "new strategy to combat hate crimes,"
under which "the FBI will train more special agents to conduct hate crime and civil rights
EFTA00135953
investigations, as well as conduct outreach to community groups, religious organizations, and
minority associations to strengthen trust and encourage the public to report hate crimes. To
further increase awareness and encourage the reporting of hate crimes, the FBI has launched a
public awareness campaign on social media, as well as through advertisements on Muni trains in
San Francisco."
KPIX-TV San Francisco (5/6, 110K) reports the move is meant to "counter a stunning surge in
San Francisco Bay Area hate crimes, particularly those targeting the Asian American community.
The agency's San Francisco office said the strategy would include directing new resources and
personnel toward hate crime investigations, increasing coordination and cooperation with other
law enforcement agencies, community outreach, and public awareness."
The San Maten (CA) Daily Journal (5/6, 43K) also reports.
Hostage Standoff At Minnesota Bank Ends.
The Minneapolis Star Tribune (5/6, 855K) reported employees at a Wells Fargo branch in St.
Cloud, Minnesota, were being held hostage by an alleged bank robber Thursday afternoon.
According to local police, the FBI is assisting in the response. "Law enforcement officials said that
as of late Thursday afternoon, more than 31/2 hours after the robbery was reported, that an
unspecified number of hostages remain held by a male suspect." In a subsequent article, the
Minneapolis Star Tribune (5/6, 855K) reports the "hourslong standoff ended late Thursday at a St.
Cloud bank after a fifth and final bank employee taken hostage during an early afternoon robbery
was freed." Video from the scene shows law enforcement entering after the final hostage leaves
and arresting the suspect. "Late Thursday, local law enforcement officers and the FBI said
negotiations had continued with a male suspect in the bank robbery, which was reported at 1:45
p.m."
The St. Cloud (MN) Times (5/6, 44K) reports, "After an eight-hour long standoff Thursday, a
suspect was led out of a St. Cloud Wells Fargo bank branch in handcuffs around 10:30 p.m."
LISA Today (5/6, Haecherl, Newland, 12.7M) reported earlier that local police were "trying to
negotiate" the release of the hostages "with the help of the FBI." CNN (5/6, Vera, Allen, 89.21M)
also reported.
CAPITOL RIOTS
FBI Continues To Make Arrests In Capitol Siege.
NBC Newc (5/6, 4.91M) reports, "Four months after the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol, FBI agents
maintain a steady pace of arresting people accused of taking part," calling the case "one of the
largest criminal investigations in American history." Authorities have arrested over 440 suspects,
"coming from all but five states. ... The largest number come from Texas, Pennsylvania, and
Florida, in that order." Over 60 "face some of the most serious charges, of assaulting officers with
the U.S. Capitol Police and Washington's Metropolitan Police departments. Officials said 140
officers were injured during the riot." The FBI is "sort[ing] through hundreds of thousands of public
tips."
Yahoo! News (5/6, Knowles, 10.87M) reports in the months since the insurrection, "the FBI
has fanned out across the country, arresting individuals in all but six U.S. states, NBC News
reported." The FBI has posted "hundreds of pictures of suspects" on its website "and has asked the
public for help leading to the arrests of those who took part in the riot that injured approximately
140 members of both the U.S. Capitol Police and Washington's Metropolitan Police." This article
quotes the Bureau saying on its website, "The FBI is seeking the public's assistance in identifying
individuals who made unlawful entry into the U.S. Capitol building and committed various other
alleged criminal violations, such as destruction of property, assaulting law enforcement personnel,
targeting members of the media for assault, and other unlawful conduct, on January 6, 2021, in
Washington, D.C.,"
Democrats Seek Additional Funding For Capitol Security.
EFTA00135954
CNN (5/6, Grayer, Herb, 89.21M) reports House Appropriations Chairwoman Rosa DeLauro and
congressional leaders "have started negotiating on what a funding supplemental for Capitol
security should look like, though they have not yet reached an agreement yet on what should go in
the bill - or how to address policy questions like what to do with fencing around the Capitol." They
"are preparing to move a $2 billion supplemental funding bill to address US Capitol security to the
floor later this month, despite some outstanding questions - and reservations - among
Republicans and even some Senate Democrats about the spending."
The Hill. (5/6, Elis, 5.69M) reports that Democrats "are likely to huddle on the supplemental
spending bill Monday before unveiling the legislation and sending it to the House Rules Committee
for floor consideration." The measure will "deal with issues relating to the Capitol Police and its
preparedness, beefing up the Capitol complex and providing members of Congress additional
security."
Republicans Criticize Lofgren After Publication Of Social Media Post Compilation.
The San Franricro Chronicle (5/6, Kopan, 2.44M) reports that Republicans "are firing back at Rep.
Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) over a compilation she created of their social media posts related to the 2020
election and Jan. 6 insurrection, filing a complaint against her that was made public Thursday."
Lofgren "defended herself in a reply, saying that it is part of Congress' duty to investigate any
officeholder's potential role in an insurrection." The escalation "reveals how high tensions remain
between Democrats and Republicans as the GOP continues to spread baseless doubt over
President Biden's win over Donald Trump in the November election."
Secret Service Director: Agency Needs More Funding To Provide Security For High-
Profile Events.
CBS News (5/6, Sganga, 5.39M) reports US Secret Service Director James Murray "told lawmakers
Thursday that the agency needs more money to fund coverage of high-profile functions that are
designated as National Special Security Events (NSSEs) - there were five events that were
specially designated and federally coordinated in the past year." Such an event "prompts the
federal government - led by the Secret Service in coordination with the FBI and the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) - to work together to secure large venues that may be
targeted by violent actors." CBS notes that the January 6 election result certification at the US
Capitol "was not designated an NSSE by the federal government. ... In the agency's first public
hearing since the January 6 riot, Murray called the siege of the U.S. Capitol `abhorrent' and 'an
attack on democracy."
Capitol 'Zip Tie' Suspect Requests Mother's Day Conversation With Co-Defendant Mom.
The Tennessean (5/6, 645K) reports, "Eric Munchel, dubbed 'zip tie guy' on social media after he
was photographed holding a handful of plastic restraints inside the U.S. Capitol during the failed
insurrection on Jan. 6, has asked a federal judge for permission to call to his mother on Mother's
Day." Lisa Marie Eisenhart and her son Munchel are barred from speaking because they are both
defendants in the case. "Prosecutors allege Munchel and Eisenhart were unhappy with the 2020
Presidential election results, which led them to Washington, D.C. to protest. The two brought
tactical gear, and Munchel carried a taser, according to court testimony." According to FBI
testimony, the two acted in concert when entering the Capitol.
Continuing: New Jersey Man Arrested In Capitol Riot After Mother Tells Friend About
Participation.
The AR (5/6) reports in continuing coverage that a comment made by the mother of Robert Lee
Petrosh of May's Landing, New Jersey, "may have led to his being charged for participating in the
Jan. 6 breach of the Capitol. ... According to a criminal complaint filed Wednesday, the FBI
received a tip that Petrosh had been in the Capitol building that day. The tipster's grandmother
allegedly passed on the information, which had been mentioned to her by Petrosh's mother."
The Washington Post (5/6, 10.52M) describes the two women as "dose friends," saying the
"The grandmother did not keep that news to herself. She told her grandson, who days later, court
EFTA00135955
records show, called the FBI to report Petrosh." The Post says Petrosh was already on the FBI's
radar, reporting, "On January 10, an anonymous online tipster said Petrosh 'was on the steps' of
the federal building on Jan. 6."
FBI: Georgia Man Shared 'Post Victory Picture' After Capitol Riot.
The 1 exingtnn (KY) Herald-Leader (5/6, 205K) reports Glen Mitchell Simon of Gainesville, Georgia,
"denied taking part in the U.S. Capitol insurrection on Jan. 6 - but federal authorities say
surveillance footage suggests otherwise." According to the FBI, Simon "shared a 'post victory
picture' from the steps of the U.S. Capitol after he and throngs of other rioters stormed the
building." DOJ documents show "Simon was arrested Wednesday in Gainesville, about 55 miles
northeast of Atlanta, and charged with 'knowingly entering or remaining in any restricted building
or grounds without lawful authority."
Pennsylvania Man Charged In Capitol Insurgency After Wife's Facebook Posts.
The Harrisburg (PA) Patriot-News (5/6, 567K) reports Lynn Feiler Edwards "wrote on Facebook
about her husband's role in the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, leading to his facing federal
criminal charges. Gary Edwards, 68, of Southampton, Pa., is charged with entering a restricted
building without authority, disorderly conduct, disruption of official business, violent entry and
disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds, and parading, demonstrating or picketing in a Capitol
building." Edwards is currently free on $100,000 bond. "Although the posts were removed, an
informant took screenshots and provided them to the FBI, documents show. Agents were able to
use the information from the posts to match photos of Edwards to videos taken during the Capitol
assault."
Florida Man Convicted Of Targeting Pro-Trump Protestors For Violent Attack.
The AP (5/6, Farrington) reports Daniel Alan Baker of Tallahassee, Florida, "was convicted
Thursday of trying to organize an armed response to supporters of former President Donald Trump
for an expected gathering at the state Capitol in January ahead of Joe Biden's presidential
inauguration." Baker "was convicted of two counts of transmitting a communication in interstate
commerce containing a threat to kidnap or injure another person."
Michigan White Supremacist Leader's Bond Revoked.
The Detroit News (5/6, 1.16M) reports Justen Watkins of Bad Axe, Michigan, who is "charged with
gang membership for his self-proclaimed leadership role of white supremacist group the Base has
had his bond revoked for violations of the bond conditions." Watkins had been free on "bond
conditions that included a prohibition on contact with other members of the Base, Attorney General
Dana Nessel's office said in a statement. But a member of the gang paid Watkins bond in February
and the two are accused of committing a crime the next week."
FBI Investigating SSA Bomb Threat In Texas.
KRGV-TV Harlingen, TX (5/6) reports the FBI joined local law enforcement agencies in responding
to a bomb threat against Social Security Administration offices in Harlingen, Texas. KRGV quotes
FBI Spokesperson Michelle Lee as saying "'No explosive devices were located' ... 'Law enforcement
has cleared the scene, however, the investigation is ongoing." KGBT-TV Harlingen, TX (5/6)
reports "the FBI said they have taken over the investigation of this case."
Administration Launches "Government-Wide" Effort To Investigate "Havana
Syndrome."
EFTA00135956
SRS News (5/6, Gazis, 5.39M) reports that more than a dozen CIA officers "serving in multiple
overseas locations have returned to the U.S. to seek care this year after reporting symptoms
consistent with 'Havana Syndrome,' ...according to current and former U.S. officials and people
familiar with the matter. The new suspected incidents occurred in the early months of 2021, and at
least one happened as recently as March, according to three sources." A White House
spokesperson "said the cause of the incidents is an area of 'active inquiry,' and that the National
Security Council (NSC) has been coordinating a 'government-wide effort' since the start of the
administration to determine who is responsible and ensure those affected receive medical
evaluations and proper care."
For the Washington Fxaminer (5/6, 888K), Tom Rogan writes that following the DOD's lead,
the CIA, State, and the NSA "are belatedly moving to support employees who believe they have
suffered radio frequency/microwave attacks while serving abroad." The Examiner adds that "the
CIA will imminently appoint a new chief medical officer."
Healthline (5/6, 3.62M) also runs a piece looking at what is known about the situation.
Declassified Report: CIA Analysts Discovered Information Suggesting Russian Bounty
Story Was True.
The New York Times (5/7, Savage, Schmitt, Schwirtz, 20.6M) reports that in early 2020,
"members of a Taliban-linked criminal network in Afghanistan detained in raids told interrogators
that they had heard that Russians were offering money to reward killings of American and coalition
troops." The claim "was stunning, particularly because the United States was trying at the same
time to negotiate a deal with the Taliban to end the long-running war in Afghanistan. C.I.A.
analysts set out to see whether they could corroborate or debunk the detainees' accounts."
Ultimately, "newly declassified information shows, those analysts discovered a significant reason to
believe the claim was accurate: Other members of the same Taliban-linked network had been
working closely with operatives from a notorious unit of the G.R.U.," which is "known for
assassination operations."
Pentagon Begins Removing Contractors From Afghanistan. Reuters (5/6, Ali,
Stewart) reports that Defense Secretary Austin "said on Thursday the process of removing all
contractors from Afghanistan working with the United States was under way" as part of President
Biden's withdrawal of forces. According to Reuters, Austin's remarks "are the clearest indication
yet that Biden's April order to withdraw all U.S. forces from Afghanistan by Sept. 11 extended to
US-funded contractors."
Blinken Addresses Taliban Threats In Afghanistan. Asked on MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell
Reports
(5/6, 958K) about the power of the Taliban in Afghanistan after US troops leave,
Secretary of State Blinken said, "We have trained over the years well over 300,000 Afghan
security forces. Other countries will remain engaged. Everyone has to make some new
calculations. That starts with the Taliban. It has to decide whether it wants to plunge the country
back into a civil war or whether it wants some kind of recognition to be an accepted actor in the
international community. ... We are also focused on the diplomacy, trying to see if the Taliban will
engage with the Afghanistan government to try to come to a political resolution."
NYTimes Analysis: DOD Struggles To End Afghan Dependency On US Air Support.
The New York Times (5/6, Gibbons-Neff, Cooper, Schmitt, 20.6M) reports that, despite the Biden
Administration's portrayal of Afghan security forces as "well equipped to handle the war on their
own," their country's "dependency on US pilots and warplanes" remains "unquestionable," adding
that US forces have launched "a half-dozen airstrikes" in the face of renewed Taliban aggression
amid the withdrawal of US troops. The Times says, the Pentagon "is now weighing how it will wean
Afghan security forces from their dependency." According to the Times, Austin "suggested that it
would be up to Gen. Austin S. Miller, the commander in Afghanistan, to decide when to turn off the
spigot."
US May Train Afghan Forces In Third Countries. The BE (5/6) reports Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs Gen. Milley "said the Pentagon is considering options for continued support of Afghan
government forces after the troop withdrawal is complete, including possibly training Afghan
security forces in another country." That would be in addition to "urging the Congress to authorize
EFTA00135957
continued financial assistance to the Afghan forces, which has been in the range of $4 billion a year
for many years, and possibly providing aircraft maintenance support remotely from another
country." The Hill (5/6, Kheel, 5.69M) reports, "asked at a Pentagon press briefing whether
training Afghan forces from a different country is an option, Milley said, "It's possible. There's a lot
of different options out there, and we haven't settled on one of them yet.
Space Force Aims To Go Fully Digital.
Defense News (5/6, Strout, 73K) reports Space Force released a "vision document" Thursday on
becoming fully digital. Space Force Chief of Space Operations Gen. Jay Raymond said on a media
call, "Space is a big data environment. ... And when you think about our strategic competitors and
the threats that we currently face, becoming a digital service is much more than an opportunity -
it's a necessity."
ExecutiveGov (5/6, McCormick) reports the vision document expresses "the service's desire
to be the world's first fully digital service." The Space Force Technology and Innovation Office will
lead the digital transformation and focus on "engineering, workforce, headquarters and
operations."
Breaking Defense (5/6, Hitchens) reports the Space and Missile Systems Center is "creating a
new virtual testing environment to apply digital engineering techniques to space acquisition" as a
first step toward implementing the Vision for a Digital Service. Space Force Chief Technology
Innovation Officer Maj. Gen. Kim Crider said, "This is a basically putting in place the infrastructure
and integrating the digital engineering tools - the modeling tools and the data - to support the
digital engineering process."
Continuing: California Bar Owner Arrested For Selling Counterfeit COVID-19 Vaccination
Cards.
NBC Newc (5/6, Madani, 4.91M) reports in continuing coverage that after an undercover
investigation by the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, Todd Anderson, owner of
the Old Corner Saloon in Clement, California, "was arrested Wednesday over allegations that he
was selling fake Covid-19 vaccination cards at his establishment." Clement faces charges including
"identity theft, forging government documents, and falsifying medical records, according to a
statement from San Joaquin District Attorney Tori Verber Salazar."
The Washington Post (5/6, Thebault, 10.52M) reports that "lately, state authorities allege,
patrons have visited" the Old Corner Saloon in California's Central Valley "for a service
unmentioned on its social media accounts or in its overwhelmingly positive Google reviews: to buy
a fake coronavirus vaccination card." California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control agents
"arrested Old Corner's owner on Tuesday, charging 59-year-old Todd Anderson with three felony
crimes, including identity theft, forging government documents and carrying an unregistered
firearm." Anderson "was also charged with falsifying medical records, a misdemeanor." The case
marks "the California agency's first arrest for the sale of fraudulent vaccine cards, said spokesman
John Carr."
Idaho Police Investigate School Shooting.
The CBS Evening News
(5/6, story 4, 0:15, O'Donnell, 4.04M) reported that Idaho police are
investigating a new school shooting incident in Rigby, Idaho, where a student "pulled out a gun and
opened fire, injuring two other students and a custodian." NBC Nightly News
(5/6, story 4, 0:15,
Holt, 5.2M) reported that the authorities "say a teacher disarmed the suspect, a sixth-grade girl,
and held her until police arrested her." The injuries "are described as non life-threatening."
ABC World News Tonight
(5/6, lead story, 2:55, Muir, 6.52M) reported one student said of
the shooting, "We heard one gunshot, and then we heard another. And we heard multiple kids
screaming and that - people arguing. And then people ran past our room. And all my friends and I
were freaking out, and we were hiding in the corner of our classroom with the lights off and the
EFTA00135958
doors locked."
The AP (5/6, Boone) reports that police "were called to the school around 9:15 a.m. after
students and staffers heard gunfire." Bonneville County sheriff's Sgt. Bryan Lovell "said an
investigation was underway and no additional information was immediately available." Idaho Gov.
Brad Little (R) said in a statement, "I am praying for the lives and safety of those involved in
today's tragic events."
The Washington Post (5/6, 10.52M) reports that the shooter "shot two people in a hallway
with a handgun before going outside and shooting another." Jefferson County Sheriff Steve
Anderson "did not release a name," and he "said the girl was being held at the sheriff's office."
The Idaho Statesman (5/6, 299K) reports Jefferson School District Superintendent Chad
Martin said to reporters, "Today we had the worst nightmare a school district could encounter. We
had a school shooting here at Rigby Middle School." He added, "What we know so far is the
shooter has been apprehended. There is no further threat to the students."
CNN (5/6, Andone, 89.21M) reports on its website that the Jefferson School District
announced the closure of all schools on Friday, and counselors "will be available at Rigby High
School throughout the day." BuzzFeed News (5/6, Baer) also reports.
Family: Missing San Antonio Girl Found Safe.
KENS-TV San Antonio (5/5, 185K) reports the family of a missing San Antonio, Texas, teen says
she "was found safe." Earlier, the station reported that the San Antonio Police Department was
"searching for a missing 16-year-old girl last seen on the city's northeast side."
Georgia Meth Ring Leader Gets 20 Years.
Georgia Sun (5/6, Chandler) reports Kelvin D. Carswell, "the leader of Macon's 'Get Dat Money"
meth gang, "was sentenced to serve 20 years in prison as the result of a lengthy investigation into
the network's illegal activities throughout Middle Georgia." Court documents show Carswell "was
sentenced to serve 240 months in federal prison to be followed by three years of supervised
release after he pleaded guilty to one count conspiracy to possess with the intent to distribute
methamphetamine on December 15, 2020." The FBI received a tip in June indicating that
"Carswell was orchestrating the sale of drugs while incarcerated at the Washington State Prison in
Sandersville, Georgia. A search of Carswell's prison cell uncovered a quantity of drugs and a
cellular phone with multiple SD cards, according to court records."
The Albany (GA) Herald (5/6) also covers this story, quoting acting US Attorney Peter D.
Leary saying, "Many lives have been undoubtedly damaged, even destroyed, due to the actions of
Kelvin Carswell and the members of the 'Get Dat Money' drug trafficking organization. Carswell
brazenly orchestrated a prolific meth trafficking organization from behind prison bars, and he has
now received the maximum penalty provided by law. He, along with his co-conspirators, are being
held accountable for their destructive choices. The FBI and Bibb County Sheriff's Office did an
outstanding job investigating and ultimately shutting down this stream of methamphetamine into
Middle Georgia."
Colorado Man Charged With Murder Of Missing Wife.
The Washington Post (5/6, 10.52M) reports roughly a year after the disappearance of Suzanne
Morphew, who failed to return home after a Mother's Day bike ride, her husband, Barry Morphew,
has been charged with her murder. "Although police have yet to locate Suzanne's body, Barry, 53,
was charged with first-degree murder, tampering with evidence and attempting to influence a
public servant." The investigation "involved more than 70 officers from the Chaffee County
Sheriff's office, Colorado Bureau of Investigation and the FBI, in addition to dozens of other local
law enforcement agencies, according to Chaffee County Sheriff John Spezze."
FBI Takes Part In Texas Manhunt Over Domestic Violence Incident.
KXII-TV Sherman, TX (5/7) reports tribal and municipal police in Ada, Oklahoma, along with the
FBI and other agencies, "spent Thursday afternoon searching for a man they say was armed and
dangerous. Neighbors called 911 at the Rolling Hills Apartments Thursday afternoon to report a
EFTA00135959
disturbance involving a man who lives there and a woman."
Man Charged In Connection To Stabbing Of Asian Women In San Francisco.
ABC World News Tonight
(5/6, story 9, 0:15, Muir, 6.52M) reported Patrick Thompson has been
"charged with attempted murder and two counts of inflicting injury" after he "allegedly attacked
the woman at a bus stop" in San Francisco." Yet, authorities are "still deciding whether to label this
a hate crime." The CBS Evening News (5/6, story 6, 1:50, O'Donnell, 4.04M) reported that the
rash of recent attacks on Asians on led the Alameda County, California district attorney to create a
new special response unit. District Attorney Nancy O'Malley said, "We have 78 victims that we're
working with just since we put together the unit since the end of January. FBI San Francisco
Division Special Agent In Charge Craig Fair said of the investigation, "I think in some communities,
there is this reflective resistance, and even a distrust of law enforcement, and that is a barrier that
we are trying to break down."
NBC Nightly Newq
(5/6, story 8, 1:35, Holt, 5.2M) reported that the surge in Asian-
American hate crimes is reflected in new police data, which "found a 164% increase in reports of
anti-Asian hate crimes compared to this time last year." USA Today (5/6, Yancey-Bragg, 12.7M)
reports that Stop AAPI Hate published new data on Asian-American hate crimes, and it said that
there have been more than 6,600 incidents. The uptick "was first reported in March 2020 as
COVID-19 began spreading across the nation and some politicians, including President Donald
Trump, blamed China for the pandemic."
KNSD-TV San Diego (5/6, 105K) reports Patrick Thompson of San Francisco is facing two
counts of attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon, and elder abuse after allegedly
"stabbing two elderly Asian women at a muni bus stop Tuesday. ... But the DA said he isn't filing
hate crime charges - for now." Said San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott, "There is no indication at
this point that there was any kind of hate prejudice. We do think at this point it is random but
there is more investigation to be done so I don't want to close that door."
Group: Asian Americans Report Thousands Of Cases Of Racism, Discrimination.
CNN (5/6, Chavez, 89.21M) reports the group Stop AAPI Hate, which tracks "reports of racism and
discrimination against Asian Americans says it has received 6,603 firsthand complaints since last
year." The organization "began tracking violence and harassment on March 19 last year as more
Asian Americans were verbally and physically assaulted while erroneously being blamed for the
Covid-19 pandemic. More than a year later, anti-Asian violence continues to increase nationally
with horrifying assaults reported in cities like San Francisco and New York City."
CBS News (5/6, 5.39M) reports the group released data showing that "women reported
nearly 65 percent of anti-Asian hate incidents nationally between Mardi 2020 and March 2021. ...
Stop AAPI Hate reported a total of 6, 603 hate incidents, a broad term that can indude hate crimes
such as physical assaults but also incorporates verbal and online harassment, shunning, and civil
rights violations."
Continuing: Former Maui Police Officer Pleads Guilty To Soliciting Sex In Exchange For
Sabotaging Criminal Case.
The Honolulu Star-Advertiser (5/6, 409K) reports in continuing coverage that former Maui police
officer Brandon Charles Saffeels has pleaded guilty "before a U.S. District judge in a case in which
the officer allegedly told a woman he arrested that he would lie for her in court in exchange for a
sexual relationship with each other." Saffeels "pleaded guilty to a seven-count indictment alleging
that in 2019 he engaged in a bribery scheme wherein he solicited a sexual relationship with the
woman, whom he arrested for driving under the influence, by offering to provide false testimony in
court to help her beat her case."
Oregon Woman Charged With Portland Police Union Arson.
The portland fOR) Trihione (5/6, 92K) reports Alma Raven-Guido of Beaverton, Oregon, "is facing a
federal arson charge in connection with a Portland police union building fire in April." Raven-Guido
EFTA00135960
"has been charged with one count of arson following a federal grand jury indictment, according to
the U.S. Attorney's Office. Raven-Guido was arrested by FBI agents on Wednesday, May 5, and
was arraigned on Thursday, pleading not guilty, prosecutors said in a statement."
The Oregonian (5/6, 1.02M) reports Raven-Guido "made her first appearance via video on a
one-count indictment charging her with arson in U.S. District Court in Portland Thursday
afternoon." The FBI "arrested the teen at her Beaverton home on Wednesday and she spent a
night in Portland's downtown jail." While Raven-Guido had previously been arrested on state
charges in the case, "the federal charge is based on an interpretation that unions affect interstate
commerce, according to prosecutors." The AP (5/6) also reports.
Judge Issues New "Red Flag" Guidance After Indiana FedEx Shooting.
The AP (5/6) reports, "All 'red flag' cases filed by Indianapolis police will now come before a judge
after an Indiana prosecutor was criticized for declining to use the law to pursue court hearings that
could have prevented a man from accessing the guns used to kill eight people at a FedEx facility
last month." The new guidance was issued this week by Judge Amy Jones, who oversees the filings
of red flag cases in Marion County. This comes after Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears
"decided not to bring Brandon Scott Hole before a judge for a red flag hearing, even after his
mother called police last year to say her son might try to die from 'suicide by cop." A
spokesperson for the prosecutor said Thursday that conversations about changes to the filing
process began before the shooting. WTHR-TV Indianapolis (5/6, 346K) and The Hill (5/6, Choi,
5.69M) also report.
In Puerto Rico, Boxer Felix Verdejo Indicted In Lover's Death.
In The AP (5/6, Coto) reports that, on Thursday, a federal grand jury in Puerto Rico indicted boxer
Felix Verdejo for the killing of his pregnant lover Keishla Rodriguez, "a case potentially eligible for
the death penalty." According to the AP, "an FBI complaint...accused Verdejo of punching
Rodriguez in the face, injecting her with a syringe filled with an unidentified substance bought at a
public housing complex, binding her arms and feet with wire, tying a block to her and then
throwing her off a bridge...last Thursday." In a story about the indictment, NBC' News (5/6, 4.91M)
notes "the FBI has been leading the investigation with the Puerto Rico Public Safety Department,
the Puerto Rico Police Bureau and the Puerto Rico Justice Department."
Maine Man Faces Child Porn Charges After Employer Contacts FBI.
The Portland (MF) Press Herald (5/6, Byrne, 174K) reports that Andrew Haze!ton, a former
member of a neo-Nazi group called the NSC-131, is facing a federal charges for possessing child
pornography after a Portland business owner who feared Hazelton "would commit a workplace
shooting" contacted the FBI. According to the Press Herald, "agents with the FBI were granted a
search warrant April 28 for Hazelton's cellphone and electronic devices and searched his home the
next day, taking Hazelton's phone from him. On the phone, they found a folder labeled "1488" that
contained videos of child pornography."
City Officials Get Two Years In California Bribery Case.
Former The Palm Springs (CA) Desert Sun (5/6, Damein, 220K) reports that, on Wednesday, a
federal court sentenced David Romero, a former member of the Calexico City Council, and Bruno
Suarez-Soto, a former member of the Calexico Economic Development and Financial Advisory
Commission, to two years in prison after both men pleaded guilty to accepting bribes during an FBI
sting in 2020. The Washington Examiner (5/6, Brest, 888K) says Romero and Suarez-Soto had
"accepted $35,000 in cash bribes from an undercover FBI agent in exchange for a promise to issue
a permit for a commercial cannabis dispensary." The Holtville (CA) Tribune (5/6, Brown, Morales,
7K) also reports.
West Virginia Man Pleads Guilty To Child Sex Trafficking.
The Huntington (WV) Herald-Dispatch (5/6, Herald-Dispatch, 82K) reports that Dale Randall
EFTA00135961
McCarthy Jr. pleaded guilty to a child sex trafficking charge. According to the Herald-Dispatch,
McCarthy agreed to pay "a man he met online...$100 to have sex with a 14-year-old girl." The
Herald-Dispatch says that federal prosecutors "praised the investigative work of the FBI Child
Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Force" in the case.
MS-13 Member Pleads Guilty To Violent Crimes In Maryland.
The Annapolis (MD) Capital Gazette (5/6, Hutzell, 85K) reports that, on Wednesday, Moises Alexis
Reyes-Canales "pleaded guilty in federal court to conspiracy to participate in a racketeering
enterprise as part of MS-13 gang activities, including murder and two attempted murders."
According to the Gazette, "as part of a plea agreement, Reyes-Canales admitted he became an
associate gang member in March 2016, participated in the murder of a suspected rival gang
member, and tried to kill other people in Annapolis." The Gazette says federal prosecutors will
recommend a 35-year sentence in the case.
FBI Investigating Arizona Shooting Of FBI Task Force Officer.
The Arizona Republic (5/6, Onneweer, 1.05M) briefly reports that the FBI is "offering a reward for
information leading to arrests" in an April 23rd drive-by shooting that targeted "an FBI Task Force
officer" in Phoenix.
FBI's Role In Missing Buffalo Student Case Noted.
In a story about a local New York prosecutor's announcement that Saniyya Dennis, a Buffalo
college student who has been missing for a week, died by suicide, WABC-TV New York (5/6, 351K)
briefly notes the FBI's participation in the case, saying agents interviewed Dennis' boyfriend and
ruled him out as a suspect.
FBI Reward For Truman Artifacts Noted.
In a story about the theft of "a collection of swords and daggers" from the Harry S. Truman
Presidential Library and Museum, KSHB-TV Kansas City, MO (5/6, Reid, McCormick, 147K) notes
that the FBI is offering a $10,000 reward "for information leading to the return of" the artifacts.
Attorney Gets More Than 15 Years In Prison For Scheming To Defraud Drug Traffickers.
The Washington Post (5/6, Bella, 10.52M) reports Texas attorney James Morris Balagia, who was
found guilty of scheming "to defraud Colombian cocaine traffickers," has been sentenced "to more
than 15 years in prison." Balagia "was turned in to the FBI by the very drug traffickers he
attempted to defraud."
Three Rhode Islanders Plead Guilty To Participating In Drug Distribution Conspiracy.
The Woonsocket (RI) Patch (5/6, Sandoli, 1.44M) reports the FBI conducted an investigation that
will lead to prison time for Rhode Island residents Juan Batista, Natalie Cassidy, and Angel Aviles,
who pleaded guilty "to participating in a conspiracy" to distribute crack cocaine and fentanyl.
Suspected Drug Dealer Arrested In Massachusetts.
In online coverage, WWLP-TV Springfield, MA (5/6, Asiamah, 453K) reports the DEA and the FBI
participated in a Thursday search warrant operation that led to the arrest of a "suspected drug
dealer in Springfield." A similar Springfield (MA) Republican (5/6, DeForge, 592K) article says
Springfield resident Mario Monge "was arrested on drug trafficking and firearms charges." The
WBZ-AM Boston (5/6, 114K) website also covers this story.
Pay-For-Play Marijuana Trial Of Former Massachusetts Mayor Continues.
The Providence (RI) Journal (5/6, 376K) reports jurors in the trial of former Fall River,
Massachusetts, Mayor Jasiel Correia II on Wednesday heard how Correia "demanded a bribe -
EFTA00135962
with no middleman involved - accepted the cash and then promptly handed over a coveted non-
opposition letter to a hopeful marijuana vendor." Local business owner Charles Saliby in 2018 "was
trying to open a marijuana dispensary and needed a much sought after letter of non-opposition
from the mayor. He called city hall and was told the city had already reached its limit for
marijuana shops." The article describes the testimony in detail, narrating the questioning of US
District Attorney David Tobin.
Kansas City Man Convicted For Role In Cell Phone Burglary Scheme.
The Kancac City (MO) Star (5/6, 519K) reports court records show Bryan C. Kirkendoll II of Kansas
City, Missouri, "has been convicted in federal court of helping to steal more than $1 million worth
of cell phones over several months across multiple states." A jury found Kirkendoll "guilty of three
counts of transporting stolen property across state lines, two counts of witness tampering, and one
count each of participating in a conspiracy and transmitting threats in interstate commerce,
according to a news release from the United States Attorney's office for the Western District of
Missouri." US Attorneys say that while Kirkendoll was free on bond, he "intimidated and threatened
a victim scheduled to testify as a witness against him in court."
Virginia Man Gets 18 Months For Bribing FBI Official Over Data Center Contract.
DatacenterDvnamirc (5/6) reports Virginia resident Robert Bailey "was sentenced to 18 months in
federal prison for paying a bribe to an FBI official after pleading guilty." Bailey's bribes helped his
business "win a contract to build the FBI's 'Grey Wolf' Pocatello data center. The official, James
Heslep, was sentenced to 39 months in April." The artide quotes acting US Attorney Rafael M.
Gonzalez Jr. saying, "When private individuals perform contracts for the government, they
effectively become public servants who must uphold a public trust. Mr. Bailey breached that trust
and now faces the consequences of his actions. The Court's 18-month sentence sends the
appropriate message to Mr. Bailey and other similarly-situated government contractors: take the
public trust seriously or wind up behind bars."
CYBER DIVISION
DHS Secretary Warns Ransomware Attacks Increasing.
ABC NPWc (5/6, Barr, 2.44M) reports Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas "warned
that cyberattacks - specifically ransomware attacks - are on the rise and targets range from
government agencies to small businesses." Mayorkas said at the US Chamber of Commerce's Now
& Then Speaker series Wednesday, "The threat is real. The threat is upon us. The risk is to all of
us. Inform oneself. Educate oneself and defend oneself." Mayorkas "said that $350 million was paid
out for ransomware attacks in 2020." Mayorkas also "stressed Wednesday that ransomware
attacks against small businesses have been successful." The Washington Post (5/6, 10.52M)
reports in its Cybersecurity 202 column that Mayorkas also announced DHS "would begin its next
major 60-day initiative focused on workforce development. DHS plans to hire 200 new cyber
employees by July." That hiring could be a "boon to the agency's ransomware capabilities."
Gov Info Security (5/6) reports Mayorkas "said about 50% to 70% of all ransomware attacks
in the US are targeting small and medium-sized businesses, costing the victims an estimated total
of $350 million in the last year," fxecutiveGov (5/6) reports Mayorkas "urged small and medium-
sized businesses to strengthen defense against cyber attacks as ransomware threats continue to
escalate and the 'backbone' of US economy serves as the target of cyber actors."
DHS Seeks To Hire 200 Cyber Pros.
Federal Computer Week (5/6, 263K) reports DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas "said on
Wednesday his agency will begin its 60-day workforce sprint with an aggressive hiring campaign to
expand the agency's cadre of cybersecurity professionals." During remarks at a US Chamber of
Commerce event, Mayorkas "called the effort 'the most significant hiring initiative that DHS has
undertaken in its history." He also "said Wednesday was the first day of the department's
EFTA00135963
workforce sprint." The new campaign "aims to hire 200 cyber personnel by July 1." Half of those
'conditional job offers' "will be made by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency while
the other half will be made by various DHS component agencies."
Proposed Legislation Would Bolster National Guard's Role In Cyber Response.
Defence Newc (5/6, Pomerleau, 73K) reports the National Guard Cybersecurity Support Act,
introduced by Rep. Andy Kim (D-NJ) and Rep. Joe Wilson (R-SC) "would give governors the ability
to decide when and how to deploy their state's National Guard to stand off against increasing
cyberattacks that could impact various agencies and services, such a water supplies or the
electrical grid." The National Guard Cybersecurity Support Act "seeks to codify that National Guard
support in cybersecurity missions defending critical infrastructure by modifying Title 32 of the US
Code, which governs the National Guard."
Cybersecurity Incident Pushes Alaska Court System Offline.
The AP (5/6) reports the chief justice of the Alaska Supreme Court on Thursday "said the court
system did not receive a ransom demand or any direct message from those involved in a
cybersecurity attack last week that resulted in the system disconnecting its online services." Chief
Justice Joel Bolger told The Associated Press in an interview, "So we feel fortunate that we caught
this attack at an early stage." The court system "said it had disconnected online services to
remove malware from its servers and was working with a cybersecurity company to respond to
the incident and prevent 'any further system breaches." The disruption has "affected the public's
ability to email court email addresses, including for filing documents; view cases online; or
participate in hearings via videoconference, according to the court system."
UK Spies Warn Local Authorities Over "Smart City" Tech Risks.
BBC News (5/6, Corera, 876K) reports cities are "increasingly relying on sensors and other
network-connected devices which feed data into a central system." The National Cyber Security
Centre (NCSC) has "warned smart cities will be a target for hackers, and councils need to be
prepared." The NCSC - an arm of GCHQ - has "published guidance for local authorities on how to
secure what they call 'connected places." They "warn that critical public services will need to be
protected from disruption." The NCSC is "warning of possible 'destructive impacts' if systems were
switched off which, in some cases, could even 'endanger' residents." Another concern is that the
"large volumes of data about people that are collected could erode privacy by allowing citizens to
be tracked even more, or could be stolen by criminals or hostile states."
Insurer AXA To Stop Reimbursing Ransomware Payments In France.
The AP (5/6) reports that, in an apparent industry first, the global insurance company AXA "said
Thursday it will stop writing cyber-insurance policies in France that reimburse customers for
extortion payments made to ransomware criminals." AXA, among Europe's top five insurers, "said
it was suspending the option in response to concerns aired by French justice and cybersecurity
officials during a Senate roundtable in Paris last month about the devastating global epidemic of
ransomware." Christine Weirsky, a spokeswoman for the US AXA subsidiary, a leading underwriter
of cyber-insurance in the US, "said the suspension only applies to France and does not affect
existing policies." She "said it also does not affect coverage for responding and recovering from
ransomware attacks, in which criminals based in safe havens induding Russia break into networks,
seed malware and cripple them by scrambling data."
Experts Say Zero Trust Should Be Foundation For Security Approaches.
MeriTalk (5/6) reports that, "although zero trust has become a bit of a buzzword in the IT world,
experts agree that zero trust is 'foundational' to all security approaches and that foundation needs
to continue to grow in tandem with emerging tech." During an event on May 5, US Air Force CDO
Eileen Vidrine and Matthew Marsden, vice president at Tanium "discussed how zero trust has
shaped their security journeys and why the strategy so important when it comes to security
EFTA00135964
today." When "asked how his work in the IC has shaped his work in zero trust, Marsden called his
support for zero trust a 'no brainer." Marsden said, "It [zero trust] has been foundational to all of
my approaches to security and access management."
DOD Announces Expansion Of Vulnerability Disclosure Policy.
f;overnmenr Computer News (5/6) reports the DOD is "expanding its vulnerability disclosure
program to cover all of its publicly available systems, including networks, frequency-based
communication, industrial control systems and internet-of-things devices." Sparked by the Defense
Digital Service's 2016 Hack the Pentagon initiative, the program "was initially restricted to public-
facing websites and applications, which limited the number and kinds of vulnerabilities reported."
Kristopher Johnson, the director for the Pentagon's Cyber Crime Center, which oversees the
program, said, "DOD websites were only the beginning as they account for a fraction of our overall
attack surface." The announcement comes "after the center announced a defense industry-focused
pilot of its bug bounty program in April."
LABORATORY
DNA, Fingerprint Evidence Lead To Arrest in 1983 Nebraska Cold Case Murder.
The Omaha (NE) World-Herald (5/6, 509K) reports on the 1983 discovery of the body of University
of Nebraska at Omaha student Firozeh Dehghanpour, saying news broke this week that "Nebraska
sex offender" Bud Leroy Christensen "had been arrested in her slaying. ... Pottawattamie County
law enforcement officials on Thursday provided additional details on the cold case arrest in
Dehghanpour's slaying, which was first reported Wednesday by The World-Herald." After a former
classmate brought the cold case to the attention of current law enforcement, "Pottawattamie
County Sheriff's Sgt. Jim Doty reopened the case in November 2020. ... Doty said he thought that
items that had been collected in 1983 as evidence...could now be tested again using advanced
technology. Doty sent 11 items to the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation laboratory.
According to an affidavit, test results that came back in March revealed that a left-handed glove
with apparent bloodstains contained a male DNA profile and Dehghanpour's DNA." The article
mentions parenthetically the involvement of the FBI in the original investigation.
OTHER FBI NEWS
Man Shot By FBI At CIA Headquarters ID'ed As Indiana Resident.
WISH-TV Indianapolis (5/6, 76K) reports that an "armed suspect who was fatally shot by the FBI
on Monday outside CIA headquarters was a man from Dubois County, Indiana." Dubois County
Sheriff Tom Kleinhelter "on Thursday confirmed Roy Gordon Cole, of Dubois County, was the
suspect shot and killed law enforcement in a standoff just outside CIA headquarters in McLean,
Virginia, on Monday."
Arizona Gathering Aims To Spotlight Cases Of Missing, Murdered Indigenous Women,
Girls.
The Arizona Republic (5/6, 1.05M) reports, "Dozens of people gathered in the Navajo Nation capital
Wednesday wearing red and holding signs in honor of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women
and Girls." The gathering was intended to "raise awareness of the issue, with proclamations issued
by tribes, Arizona and President Joe Biden." Tribal leaders on Wednesday "were joined by
representatives of the Albuquerque FBI Field Office at the Navajo Nation Veterans Memorial Park in
Window Rock to sign the proclamation designating May 5 as 'Navajo Nation Missing and Murdered
Indigenous Peoples Awareness Day.' ... Albuquerque FBI Special Agent in Charge Raul Bujanda
attended the proclamation and also met with local readers to review the roles of the FBI in
working with federal, tribal, and state agencies for responding to reports of missing and murdered
Indigenous people."
EFTA00135965
George Conway: Giuliani May "Offer Prosecutors" Trump To "Save Himself."
George Conway writes in the Washington Post (5/6, 10.52M) that if Rudy Giuliani, whose residence
was raided by the FBI last week, "has anything to offer prosecutors to save himself, it would have
to be [Donald] Trump, the only bigger fish left." Conway says, "Federal prosecutors in Manhattan
tried to get permission last fall for a Giuliani raid but were rebuffed by senior officials serving
under Trump. And last June, for reasons still opaque, then-Attorney General William P. Barr ousted
the U.S. attorney there and tried to handpick a successor. If any of that was intended to protect
Giuliani - or Trump himself - it might end up backfiring spectacularly."
Former Mob Lawyer Claims Hoffa Buried At Savannah Golf Course.
The New Ynrk Post (5/6, Lapin, 7.45M) reports that Reginald Haupt, a defense attorney who once
represented Chicago mob boss Lou Rosanova, daims his one of his clients helped bury the remains
of Jimmy Hoffa at the Savannah Inn and Golf Country Club, "an exclusive resort on Wilmington
Island, where members of the Chicago Outfit would vacation." According to the Post, Haupt "said
the feds have interviewed him several times about his claim," and "locals also recalled seeing FBI
agents on the course examining the location of the suspected" burial site. The Post says the FBI
declined to comment for the story.
Biden Touts Infrastructure Plan In Front Of Aging Bridge In Louisiana.
The AP (5/6, Boak) reports, "With a badly aging bridge as his backdrop," President Biden "stood in
reliably Republican Louisiana on Thursday to pressure GOP lawmakers to support his $2.3 trillion
infrastructure plan - and yet express a willingness to compromise on the corporate tax hikes he's
recommending to pay the cost." The President said, "I'm willing to hear ideas from both sides. I'm
ready to compromise. What I'm not ready to do is, I'm not ready to do nothing."
NBC Niohtly_Ill wq
(5/6, story 9, 1:10, Holt, 5.2M), the only broadcast network to make
note of the trip, said the President "traveled to a Republican stronghold...to sell his massive
infrastructure plan." NBC's Kristen Welker: "With Republicans opposing his $2.3 trillion plan to
overhaul the nation's infrastructure," Biden went "to bright red Lake Charles, Louisiana, to make
his case, joined by the Republican mayor." Biden: "Across the country, we have failed. We have
failed to properly invest in infrastructure for half a century." Welker: "But Republicans in Congress
[are] blasting it as a massive tax-and-spending spree they say focuses too little on traditional
infrastructure like roads and bridges."
KPLC-TV
Lake Charles, LA (5/6, 24K) reported Biden talked about "his proposed $2 trillion
American Jobs Plan which focuses on infrastructure." The plan focuses on "fixing highways and
updating airports and ports, but it also mentions things like eliminating use of lead pipes to carry
drinking water and providing broadband Internet throughout the country." Biden "did say the state
is working to rebuild the I-10 bridge," and "he said Americans can be put to work all across the
country fixing highways and roads."KTBS-TV
Shreveport, LA (5/6, 32K) reported Biden "spoke
in front of the Calcasieu River Bridge. His focus was on infrastructure. The significance of this
bridge is that it's 70 years old, which is 20 years past its designated lifespan."
KLFY-TV Lafayette, LA (5/6, 2.22M) reported Biden "came here to talk about repairing and
replacing America's crumbling infrastructure and also creating jobs. He called it the blue-collar
blueprint to get America back on track." Biden's "more than $2 trillion plan is focused on
infrastructure," but "it also indudes billions of dollars for other things like caregiving, technology,
and workforce development."
Reuters (5/6) reports that Biden "said a corporate tax rate between 25% and 28% could help
pay for badly needed infrastructure, suggesting he could accept a lower rate than what he has
proposed in his search for Republican support for the funding." The New Orleans Times-Picayune
(5/6, 691K) reports the President told "a small crowd in Lake Charles that he wanted to replace
the aging Interstate 10 bridge that served as a visual backdrop there and touring an antiquated
water plant in New Orleans where vital machinery frequently breaks down." WBRZ-TV
Baton
EFTA00135966
Rouge, LA (5/6, 20K) said "about $100 billion in the plan would go to fixing water systems like that
one."
The Baton Rouge Advocate (5/6, 255K) reports Biden, "dressed in a navy blue suit with
aviator sunglasses, spoke along the Lake Charles waterfront adjacent to its downtown, the hulking
I-10 bridge over the Calcasieu River and its arched truss in the distance behind him. ... Signs
around his podium included a picture of the bridge with the slogan: 'Getting America Back on
Track.' A smattering of local officials" and Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) "were in attendance, as was
a group of workers in hard hats whom Biden spoke with after finishing his speech, exchanging fist
bumps with a few."
The Washington Pact (5/6, 10.52M) says Biden "sought to define the debate on his $2 trillion
infrastructure plan as a question of priorities: overdue investments that would benefit a wide
swath of Americans versus tax cuts that would help a wealthy few." The President said, "In my
view, it's an easy choice, between giving tax breaks to corporations and the super wealthy and
investing in working families." Biden said the 2017 tax cuts "passed by Republicans 'created a $2
trillion dollar deficit with the vast majority of that going to the top one tenth of one percent of the
wage earners. I don't want to punish anybody. ... Just pay your fair share,' he said." On its
website, CNN (5/6, 89.21M) says Biden "noted the corporate rate, which is currently 21%, had
been as high as 35% before former President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans cut
taxes in 2017."
The New Ynrk Tirne (5/6, Flavelle, 20.6M) reports that when Biden arrived in Lake Charles,
"plywood still covered windows broken from back-to-back hurricanes that devastated the city last
summer. 'I promise you, we're going to build back better,' Mr. Biden said, talking about the need
to act as climate change continues. 'Better able to withstand storms that are becoming more
severe and more frequent than ever."
The New York Daily News (5/6, Goldiner, 2.51M) reports Lake Charles Mayor Nic Hunter (R)
"said in his own remarks that his city has a 'dire need' for 'an infrastructure plan that can build us a
new bridge.' Biden used Hunter's support as a cudgel for a thinly veiled jab at GOP lawmakers in
Congress." The President said, "I find more support from Republican governors and mayors and
Democratic governors and mayors around the country because they've got to answer the
question: Is life better in this town, this city, this state than it was before I got elected?"
WMC-TV Memphis, TN (5/6, 31K) reports on its website that "even as he engages with
Republicans in Washington, Biden is trying to sell their voters on the idea that higher corporate
taxes can provide $115 billion for roads and bridges" and other upgrades. KATC-TV Lafayette, LA
(5/6, 54K) reports on its website, "In Louisiana, 1,634 of the state's 12,853 bridges are classified
as structurally deficient. Repairs have been identified on 3,251 bridges at an estimated cost of $6.9
billion."
On its website, NBC News (5/6, 4.91M) quotes Biden as saying, "I've never seen a Republican
or a Democrat road: I just see roads. ... Infrastructure has historically been a bipartisan
undertaking and there's no reason it shouldn't be that way again, as the mayor is evidence of."
CBS News (5/6, 5.39M) reports on its website that Biden also spoke with Sens. Bill Cassidy (R-LA)
and John Kennedy (R-LA) during his trip.
The Washington Post (5/6, 10.52M) reports, "Dueling proposals to fund the nation's ailing
infrastructure network follow decades of timidity in Washington - a period that has seen roads
crumble and a warming dimate threaten investments of the past. A line of presidents couldn't
make transformational investments in infrastructure, despite big promises and yawning national
needs." The question today "is whether the nation still can make good on its aspirations - from
upkeep of its physical foundations to meeting the challenges experts say will intensify with a
changing planet."
Politico (5/6, 6.73M), The Hill (5/6, Samuels, 5.69M), and the CNBC (5/6, Wilkie, 7.34M),
WDSU-TV New Orleans (5/6, 101K), and WGNO-TV New Orleans (5/6) websites, also report.
Document Details Lander's Meetings With Epstein.
Politico (5/6, Lima, 6.73M) reports that Office of Science and Technology Policy Director-designate
Eric Lander's "past meetings with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein spanned
EFTA00135967
approximately 90 minutes over two events in the spring of 2012, according to a document
obtained by Politico." While Lander "has faced scrutiny from Democratic and Republican
lawmakers alike over" the meetings, "the document reveals details that largely align with Lander
and the White House's descriptions of the meetings as brief interactions, including during his recent
nomination hearing."
Fox News Report: Kiain And Others In Administration Tied To "Dark Money" Groups.
Fox News (5/6, Cawthorne, Schoffstall, 23.99M) reports on its website that President Biden "has
padded his administration with a number of individuals with strong ties to progressive dark money
groups," induding Chief of Staff Klain, "which could provide a pipeline for the groups to push their
agendas to the White House." According to Fox, Klain "has ties to the Center for American Progress
(CAP) Action Fund," but CAP's "reach within the administration extends far beyond him," with
"nearly 60 people with ties to the group...tapped for key posts."
Cases, Hospitalizations, Deaths Continue To Fall Across US.
NBC Nightly News
(5/6, lead story, 2:45, Holt, 5.2M) reported, "As America eases open the
doors of familiar life this week, the number of people...lost in this country to COVID has quietly
ticked above 580,000," with over 600 deaths on Thursday. However, "a dramatically slowing rate
of deaths and COVID infections tells us the vaccinations are working." NBC's Miguel Almaguer
added, "Across the country, more than 40% of all adults are fully vaccinated. A new study finds
when half the US is inoculated, the nation could prevent 6.8 million COVID cases and billions in
medical costs."
The CBS Evening News' (5/6, lead story, 3:25, O'Donnell, 4.04M) reported that "the US has
readied a seven month low in new infections of the virus. Hospitalizations and deaths are also
down significantly, and in some areas that were once overwhelmed by COVID, including parts of
California, vaccinations are so far up and cases so far down some communities may reach herd
immunity." However, "while infections are dropping so are the number of people getting
vaccinated, in just one week the rate of Americans getting their first shot has dropped by nearly
25%." CBS' Carter Evans added that "45% of eligible Americans have received at least one dose of
the vaccine." ABC World News Tonight
(5/6, story 2, 3:30, Muir, 6.52M) reported that "147
million people have received at least one dose, that's 57% of adults now. Across the country,
volunteers are reaching out to those who are still unvaccinated."
The New York Times (5/6, Al, Bosman, Mervosh, 20.6M) reports, "Across the country, the
outlook for the pandemic has indeed improved, putting the United States in its best position
against the virus yet." According to the Times, "The nation is recording about 49,000 new cases a
day, the lowest number since early October, and hospitalizations have plateaued at around
40,000, a similar level as the early fall. Nationwide, deaths are hovering around 700 a day, down
from a peak of more than 3,000 in January."
However, Politico (5/6, Goldberg, Ollstein, 6.73M) reports that "health officials are worried
that pockets of the country slow to get vaccinated against Covid-19 could turn into breeding
grounds for more dangerous virus variants, mimicking the experience in South Africa and Brazil.
Vaccination rates have been falling for weeks in parts of the South and mountain West, prompting
the White House to rethink its vaccination strategy to reach those reluctant or unwilling to get the
shots."
More Than 70% Of Elderly Americans Are Fully Vaccinated. CNBC (5/6, Rattner,
7.34M) reports on its website that, according to the CDC, "more than 70% of Americans aged 65
and older are fully vaccinated. ... About 45% of Americans have received at least one vaccine
dose, and nearly one-third are fully vaccinated." However, CNBC adds that the CDC data also
"shows an average of 2.1 million reported vaccinations per day over the past week, down from a
peak of 3.4 million in mid-April."
Politico Report: White House Slowly Returning To Pre-Pandemic Normal.
According to Politico (5/6, Korecki, Kumar, 6.73M), "White House and administrative staff are
EFTA00135968
beginning to trickle into the West Wing in greater numbers. And additional journalists are working
at the White House." Politico adds, "1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is starting to open up. How much,
however, remains unclear, in part because White House officials are reluctant to say." Politico says
"those officials insist they are moving cautiously and still working to balance medical guidance in
the workplace and the realities of employees returning to work within cramped quarters."
Cardona: Schools Should Be Fully Reopened By September.
In an appearance on MSNBC's Morning Joe
(5/6, 1.01M), Education Secretary Cardona said that
when the next school year starts, "I expect all schools to be open full-time in person for all
students. We really need to make sure students have an opportunity to learn in the classroom.
And quite frankly, I would rather have it this spring. Students don't learn as well remotely. There
is no substitute for in-person learning."
Axios (5/6, Allassan, 1.26M) reports that a survey released Thursday by the Education
Department suggests President Biden "has met his goal of having 'most' elementary and middle
open for full-time in-person learning by the end of his first 100 days in office. 54% of schools up to
the high school level are offering full-time classroom instruction, up from 46% in January. Nearly
40% are still holding all classes remotely, while 2 in 10 are using a hybrid model."
Reuters (5/6) reports, "While 58% of white students were enrolled in full-time, in-person
learning in March, only 36% of Black students, 35% of Hispanics and 18% of Asians were enrolled,
National Assessment of Educational Progress data shows." The Washington Post (5/6, 10.52M)
says, "The disparities reflect both what is offered to students and whether their parents choose to
send them back."
Jennifer Garner To Feature In Administration's Mother's Day Vaccine Campaign.
Axing (5/6, Mucha, 1.26M) reports that actor Jennifer Garner "will team up with the Biden
administration in a coordinated campaign to encourage vaccinations around Mother's Day, Axios
has learned." An HHS official said, "We hope this will help create a foundation of vaccine
confidence for mothers who may have otherwise been hesitant to get vaccinated or get their
children vaccinated once available." CDC Director Walensky is expected to "talk to Garner about
vaccines for a live Instagram event," and officials including Walensky, White House Health Equity
Task Force Director Marcella Nunez-Smith, and HHS Secretary Becerra will make appearances on
The View, PopSugar Family, and Al Punto as part of the push.
Sesame Street Launches Public Service Campaign Promoting Vaccines. The New
York Times (5/6, Tumin, 20.6M) reports that "in a new public service campaign, cast members of
'Sesame Street' explain why adults are getting vaccinated with a simple idea: Getting vaccinated
means sunnier days are ahead." The ad campaign is "part of a promotional effort to combat Covid-
19 vaccine skepticism that launched in February, backed by the Ad Council, a nonprofit advertising
group, and a coalition of experts known as the Covid Collaborative."
Local Health Officials Offer Incentives To Tackle Vaccine Hesitancy.
The CBS Evening News
(5/6, story 7, 1:45, O'Donnell, 4.04M) reported that public health officials
are going to "extraordinary lengths...just to entice COVID vaccine holdouts to get their shots.
They're offering everything from beer to concert tickets." CBS' Adriana Diaz said that beer with a
shot in New Jersey is "one of many incentives nationwide," including a $100 savings bond in West
Virginia, $50 for convincing someone to receive a dose in Detroit, Michigan, "and free salon and
barbershop services coming soon in Chicago," Illinois. Diaz added that "mass vaccination sites
nationwide are starting to wind down" as the focus shifts "to people who aren't going out of their
way to get vaccinated" and instead "vaccinating people where they are in their communities."
Survey: Few Unvaccinated Americans Intend To Get Shots. The New York Times
(5/6, Levin, 20.6M) reports that a survey that was published by the Kaiser Family Foundation's
Vaccine Monitor "suggests" that "the American public's willingness to get a Covid vaccine is
reaching a saturation point among adults, and many parents do not plan to vaccinate their
children. ... Only 9 percent of respondents said that they had not yet gotten a shot but intended to
EFTA00135969
do so," and just "three in 10 parents said they planned to vaccinate their children as soon as they
could." In addition, "The survey found that public confidence in the Johnson & Johnson vaccine has
plummeted since health authorities suspended using it for 10 days to examine possible links to a
rare, dangerous blood dotting problem."
In a separate piece, the New York Times (5/6, Hoffman, 20.6M) reports that the survey "also
found significant progress in persuading Republicans, who have been among the most hesitant, to
be vaccinated. The findings highlight the challenges ahead for the Biden administration's efforts to
persuade hesitant people to take the vaccine, even as a growing number of scientists and public
health experts have concluded that it is unlikely that the country will reach herd immunity."
Poll: 24% Of Georgians Will Not Be Vaccinated. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (5/6,
Bluestein, 1.46M) reports on a new poll that "highlights the sharp challenges confronting public
health officials battling apathy and all-out resistance as they scramble to inoculate as many
Georgians as possible with lifesaving coronavirus vaccines." While "about 51% of the registered
voters who responded to the poll said they have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine,"
one-third of those have yet to be vaccinated "are in a wait-and-see mode and...half don't intend to
get vaccinated. Roughly two-thirds of Republicans who aren't vaccinated don't plan to get a shot."
In all, "about 24% of the poll's respondents say they don't intend to get vaccinated. That's down
from the 34% who said in January that they would not be willing to take the vaccine."
Experts Say Vaccines' Efficacy For Teens Could Boost Inoculations. USA Today (5/6,
Bacon, 12.7M) reports that "encouraging data" recently released by Moderna and Pfizer "on the
effectiveness and safety of COVID-19 vaccines for kids" may "ignite much-needed momentum in
the lagging national vaccination effort, experts say." Moderna on Thursday reported "that its
vaccine is showing a 96% effectiveness rate in Phase 2/3 testing of adolescents ages 12 to 17,"
while Pfizer has said its vaccine is 100% effective for those aged 12 to 15. Butler University public
health specialist Ogbonnaya Omenka "said the latest data could help curb broader vaccine
hesitancy, which has been partly to blame for a slowdown in daily shots."
Judge's Action On Barr Memo Spotlights Secretive Dal Office.
The Hill (5/6, Neidig, Beitsch, 5.69M) reports a "small but powerful section of the Department of
Justice (DO]) is under renewed scrutiny after a federal judge tore into former Attorney General
William Barr and ordered the DO) to release a memo that let former President Trump claim he
was exonerated by the Mueller probe." Critics of the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) have long
"argued it acts as a rubber stamp for the president and essentially drafts laws behind closed
doors." The judge's "accusation this week that the OLC was tasked with clearing Trump's name is
only likely to increase calls for reform and greater transparency." Ethics and transparency
advocates have been "calling for the office to be reformed for years, and some are hoping that the
latest revelation about how it operated during the Trump Administration will provide some
momentum."
Studies Suggest Pfizer And Moderna Vaccines Protect Against Variants.
The New York Times (5/6, Anthes, Otterman, Mandavilli, Waller, 20.6M) reports that "several new
studies released on Wednesday offered encouraging news about the ability of widely used vaccines
to protect against severe Covid-19 cases, induding illness caused by some dangerous variants.
Two published studies found that the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was extraordinarily effective against
severe disease caused by two variants, including the dominant one in the United States. And the
results of an early-stage trial of the Moderna vaccine - though not published or vetted by scientists
- suggested that a single dose given as a booster was effective against variants first identified in
South Africa and Brazil, the company said."
Pfizer Can Manufacture Up To 3B Vaccine Doses This Year.
Bloomberq (5/6, Kresge, 3.57M) reports that Pfizer and BioNTech "have the capacity to make as
many as 3 billion doses of their Covid-19 vaccine this year, lifting their production target even as
pressure mounts to waive their patents to boost global supply." According to Bloomberg, "Though
the production goals aren't the same as firm orders, the increases more than double what the
EFTA00135970
partners had said they'd be able to make less than six months ago."
Foreign Health Officials Pause Distribution Of J&J Vaccines Made By Emergent.
The New York Times (5/6, Al, Hamby, LaFraniere, Stolberg, 20.6M) reports that "quality-control
problems" at Emergent BioSolutions' manufacturing plant in Baltimore, Maryland have led health
officials in Canada, the European Union, and South Africa "to pause the distribution of millions of
Johnson & Johnson doses, as the troubles of a politically connected U.S. contractor ripple across
the world." Officials from all three governments "said there was no evidence that any of the doses
they had received were tainted. But the problems identified in Baltimore have slowed their
vaccination efforts while they perform additional quality assessments as a precaution." An FDA
spokesperson said the agency is "in close communication with our foreign regulatory counterparts"
on the matter.
Pritzker Targets June 11 To Fully Reopen Illinois.
The Chicago Tribune (5/6, Petrella, Yin, Whidden, 2.03M) reports that Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker (D)
on Thursday said that the state's COVID restrictions will be loosened on May 14, with a goal of fully
reopening on June 11. While mask requirements would stay in place until the CDC recommends
otherwise, Pritzker said, "The light that we can see at the end of the tunnel is getting brighter and
brighter." He also "announced the state is now making [vaccine] doses available to individual
doctor's office, the next step in the distribution effort." The Chicago Sun-Times (5/6, Armentrout,
970K) reports that the announcements come as cases in the state "have fallen to their lowest
levels in about six weeks." However, Pritzker cautioned, "We have to make sure that we don't see
another surge in the virus. And the best way to do that is for everyone to get vaccinated." Over a
third of the state's population is now fully vaccinated.
Walz To Lift Minnesota COVID Restrictions On May 28.
The jvlinneaoolic Star Tribune (5/6, Olson, 855K) reports that Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D)
unveiled a plan on Thursday that will see COVID restrictions on businesses and social gatherings
end on May 28 and an indoor mask-wearing mandate following to end on July 1. The rollback will
begin on "Friday with an elimination of capacity caps for outdoor entertainment venues...an
expansion of caps for indoor venues, and an end to early bar and restaurant closings." The mask
mandate "could be lifted before July 1 if the state can increase the rate of Minnesotans who have
received COVID-19 vaccine from 59% to 70%." Walz is quoted as saying, "Let's just go get it done
and end this thing."
In an editorial, the Minneapolis Star Tribune (5/6, 855K) praises Walz's plan as "a sensible
one after a year of mostly grim state updates," with "three safe and remarkably effective
vaccines" available, an abundant supply of doses, and residents signing up for vaccinations at a
high rate.
Florida Theme Parks Loosen COVID Protocols.
USA Today (5/6, Deerwester, 12.7M) reports, "Walt Disney World Resort and Universal Orlando
are relaxing some of their COVID-19 protocols, which have been in place since the Florida theme
parks reopened last summer." Universal Orlando announced that visitors will no longer undergo
temperature checks and that social distancing protocol has been reduced to three feet, though
masks will still be required across the resort. Disney World similarly "said it would begin phasing
out temperature checks...starting May 16," while its mask mandate will remain in place.
Families Start To Rethink Role Of Nursing Homes Following Pandemic.
The New Ynrk Times (5/6, Abelson, 20.6M) says, "The pandemic's toll on nursing homes drove
occupancy down significantly - not just from the 132,000 deaths but also because of a decline in
admissions." The roughly "14,000 skilled nursing facilities in the United States now have on
average a vacancy rate of slightly more than 25 percent, according to figures from the National
Investment Center for Seniors Housing & Care." The pandemic and "deaths of so many elderly
EFTA00135971
residents, captive in those homes, has deepened levels of anxiety and guilt among many families
planning the next phase of care for an aging relative." With this in mind, "experts say rethinking
the purpose of nursing homes is long overdue."
Initial Jobless Claims Fell Last Week To Lowest Point Since Pandemic Began.
The AP (5/6, Rugaber) reports the Labor Department announced Thursday that "the number of
Americans seeking unemployment aid fell last week to 498,000, the lowest point since the viral
pandemic struck 14 months ago and a sign of the job market's growing strength as businesses
reopen and consumers step up spending." Bloomberg (5/6, Lubbers, Rockeman, 3.57M) says that
"the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for 538,000 claims."
But, the New York Times (5/6, Casselman, 20.6M) says applications "remain high by
historical standards," and ReiiteN (5/6, Mutikani) that "the labor market is not out of the woods
yet, with about 16.2 million people still collecting unemployment checks."
CNBC (5/6, Cox, 7.34M) reports on its website that on Friday, the Labor Department will
"release...its nonfarm payroll count for April." According to CNBC, "Economists expect that the
economy added another 1 million jobs during the month, with hiring likely to be the quickest in the
hospitality sector, which sustained the worst of the pandemic-related damage. However,
continuing claims actually ticked higher last week, rising 37,000 to just below 3.7 million." The
Washington Post (5/6, Telford, 10.52M) and the Wall Street Journal (5/6, Guilford, Subscription
Publication, 8.41M) provide similar coverage.
McConnell: Biden Stimulus Has Created Labor Shortage.
The Washington Mgt (5/6, 10.52M) reports that on Thursday, Senate Minority Leader McConnell
"alleged that the Biden administration's stimulus law, which induded $1,400 checks and new
unemployment assistance for millions of Americans, had created a massive labor shortage that
threatens to hold back the country's economic recovery." McConnell said. "Regretfully, it's actually
more lucrative for many Kentuckians and Americans to not work than work. So we have a
workforce shortage, and we have raising inflation, both directly related to this recent bill that just
passed." According to the Post, "Employers across a range of industries have complained that it is
difficult to find workers, even though millions of Americans remain unemployed."
Bloomberg (5/6, Lubbers, Rockeman, Pickert, 3.57M) says there is "a growing debate about
whether there are enough workers to power faster economic growth" as companies "from fast food
chains like Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. to chicken producer Pilgrim's Pride Corp. and MGM Resorts
International say they can't find - or entice - enough workers." Bloomberg says that "executives
often blame stimulus checks and generous unemployment benefits for hampering hiring efforts.
But economists and policy makers are unclear about what's really causing this gap and how long it
will last."
The New Ynrk Timeq (5/6, McCabe, 20.6M) reports employers "have said in recent weeks
that they would like to hire even faster but have struggled to find enough workers," and "some
have blamed enhanced unemployment benefits for discouraging people from returning to work."
The Wall Street Journal (5/6, Morath, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) provides similar coverage.
House Republicans Tout Rescue Plan Spending In Their Districts.
Axios (5/6, Allassan, 1.26M) reports that "a number of Republican lawmakers are celebrating and
promoting provisions of President Biden's American Rescue Plan in their home constituencies,
despite unanimously voting against the sweeping COVID rescue bill." With polls indicating the plan
"is widely popular among the American public," Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-NC) "said he was
'proud' to see taxpayer money return to his district, referencing the millions in health care grants
the relief bill sent to local communities," and Rep. Alex Mooney (R-WV) "promoted the more than
$41 million going to 12 health care centers in his district, without mentioning the plan."
The AP (5/6, Peoples) says Democrats "are promising to make the pandemic relief vote - and
the Republican resistance to it - a central element in their political strategy moving into next
year's midterm elections. ... And there are early signs that Republicans may struggle to defend
their opposition to the popular legislative package, which was designed to protect the nation's
EFTA00135972
fragile economic recovery following the worst public health threat in a century."
Kamin Says Biden Tax Increases Will Lead Wealthy To Give More To Charity.
The New York Times (5/6, Tankersley, 20.6M) reports in a private conference call last week, NEC
Deputy Director David Kamin told nonprofit leaders that President Biden's plan to increase taxes
on high earners and the wealthy would lead more rich Americans to donate property or other
assets to charity before they die in order to avoid large tax bills. Asked how the President's tax
plans "would affect charitable giving," Kamin said the plan "actually increases the incentive to give
to charity. ... And it basically says if you want to not pay tax on the gain, the way you need to do
that is to give the property to charity." The limes calls the comments "an acknowledgment that
Mr. Biden's proposals would encourage the wealthy to find new workarounds to reduce the amount
of tax they or their heirs pay...even as the president seeks to level the tax playing field between
typical workers and the very rich."
Rural Democrats Express Concern About Administration's Capital-Gains Tax Plan.
The Wall Street Journal (5/6, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports 13 rural Democrats have
expressed concern to House leaders about the possible impact of the Biden Administration's plan to
tax unrealized capital gains at death could have on family farms. In a letter to House leaders, the
lawmakers said they would appreciate the Administration's proposal to let family-owned farms and
businesses defer the taxes if the remain under family control but would push to make sure the
protections are included as the plan moves forward.
In an editorial, the Wall Street Journal (5/6, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) says there is
mounting evidence that the capital-gains tax increase will reduce federal revenue. Citing the rural
Democrats' call for an exemption for family farms, the Journal says exceptions are granted, the
impact on revenue will get worse.
Biden Seeks To Close Tax Loophole For Farmers.
The Wall Street Journal (5/6, Parker, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports that while President
Biden has sought to reassure Americans that his tax plan would only impact Americans earning
more than $400,000, his package would undermine farmers by tightening a tax loophole allowing
landowners to defer capital-gains tax payments.
Bloomberg Analysis: IRS Funding Increase Unlikely To Quickly Boost Tax Receipts.
Bloomberg (5/6, Versprille, 3.57M) reports that President Biden's "plan to raise $700 billion over a
decade from increased tax audits of the wealthy and corporations - a major funding source for his
economic-investment proposals - will probably take years to bear fruit and faces skepticism that
the figure is realistic." The Biden Administration "has proposed a more than 10% funding increase
for the Internal Revenue Service for the next fiscal year and an overall investment of $80 billion
over the next 10 years to beef up the agency's depleted auditing staff and outdated technology. ...
But some former IRS officials said it will take several years to produce significant results,
especially after accounting for the time it takes to hire and train new employees and to complete
audits of highly complex returns."
Federal Judge Stays Ruling Overturning CDC Eviction Moratorium.
The AP (5/6) reports that "a federal judge has temporarily stayed an order that found the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention exceeded its authority when it imposed a federal eviction
moratorium to help stop the spread of the coronavirus." The stay, which was issued Wednesday by
a federal judge in Washington, "came after the Justice Department filed an emergency appeal in
the case." It "means there will be no immediate impact on the ban, which was extended in March
to go through the end of June."
A Wall Street Journal (5/6, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) editorial says district courts have
said the CDC is not empowered to impose the ban but expresses concern that if the CDC order
expires on June 30, the cases will be rendered pointless. However, the Washington MO (5/6,
EFTA00135973
10.52M) editorializes, "The practical effect of a federal judge's opinion tossing out the pandemic-
era nationwide freeze on evictions may be limited," since "some states and localities have their
own moratoria," and other courts have made different decisions. But "make no mistake: Most
tenants who try to fight landlords in eviction court face next-to-impossible odds, and countless
Americans are at risk of losing their homes as a result."
The Washington Post (5/6, Al, 10.52M) has a 2,600-word front-page feature on a family
facing eviction.
One In Eight Americans Facing Food Insecurity.
NBC Ni l.gteyLs
(5/6, story 10, 2:10, Holt, 5.2M) reported that "one in eight people are
reportedly having food insecurity." NBC's Cynthia McFadden added, "In Iowa, one in seven
children struggle with hunger. In Nebraska, it's one in six." NBC reported on "a food bank that
stretches over 93 counties in those states. ... While there have been plenty of hard times over the
years, nothing has been as rough as this. The month before the pandemic struck, they were
spending $80,000 a month on food." Now they spend about $1.5 million per month. NBC added
that "food banks can't do it alone." Brian Barks, who runs Food Bank for the Heartland, "says the
federal government's decision to extend the 15% increase in food stamp benefits known as SNAP
through the summer will help." Barks: "For every meal that a food bank distributes, SNAP can do
nine. When you do the math, it just makes sense."
DeLauro Says House Will Move Appropriations Bills In June, July.
The Hill (5/6, Elis, 5.69M) reports House Appropriations Chair Rosa DeLauro told a Brookins event
Thursday that her panel and its subcommittee will mark up the 12 government funding bills for
fiscal 2022 in June with passage by the full House expected in July. DeLauro said, "The
subcommittee and full committee markups will be in June, and we will be on the floor in July." The
Hill says the House version of the measures "will include a reintroduced version of earmarks."
DeLauro said, "I know what scrutiny there will be in regards to these projects. They are being
carefully vetted."
Fed Warns Rising Asset Prices Could Harm Investors.
The AP (5/6, Crutsinger) reports a Federal Reserve report released Thursday "warn[ed] that prices
of stocks and other financial assets are rising to levels that could set investors up for big losses
from sudden declines." The report "noted that stocks and other risky assets have risen in value
since last November, in some cases to record highs, as the outlook for the post-pandemic U.S.
economy has improved with increases in vaccinations and business re-openings." The report
warned, "Asset prices may be vulnerable to significant declines should risk appetite fall." The
Washington Post (5/6, Siegel, 10.52M) describes Fed "fears that a significant drop-off in asset
prices could ripple through the broader financial system."
The warning, came in the Fed's "latest report on financial stability," Reuters (5/6, Schneider,
Schroeder, Saphir) reports. Fed Governor Lael Brainard said in a statement released with the
report, "With investors ebullient on expectations for a strong rebound, it is important to closely
monitor risks to the system and ensure the financial system is resilient "Jilnomhera (5/6, Torres,
3.57M) and the New York Times (5/6, Smialek, 20.6M) provide similar coverage.
Gensler: Rules Needed For Brokerage Apps That Turn Stock Trades Into A Game.
The New York Times (5/6, Goldstein, 20.6M) reports SEC Chair Gensler "is putting transparency in
the markets and the need to understand the impact of new technology at the top of his priority
list." Gensler "appeared by video before the House Committee on Financial Services to discuss the
S.E.C.'s response to the tumultuous trading in shares of GameStop in January." He "said the
S.E.C.'s staff has been working on a report addressing the issues raised by the episode that will be
released this summer. He also said new rules may be needed for brokerage apps that turn stock
trading into a game or contest, a method called gamification." Gensler "said the S.E.C. will need to
'lean in' to make sure traders, companies and others are not using social media to manipulate the
EFTA00135974
markets." The Wall Street Journal (5/6, Osipovich, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) provides
similar coverage.
Amid Skyrocketing Steel Prices, Bank Of America Analyst Warns Of A Bubble.
CNN (5/6, 89.21M) reports on its website that "the reopening of the economy is driving a steel
boom so strong that some are convinced it will end in tears." Prices for US benchmark hot-rolled
coil steel, which "bottom[ed] out around $460 last year," are now "sitting at around $1,500 a ton,
a record high that is nearly triple the 20-year average." In addition, "steel stocks are on fire. US
Steel (X), which crashed to a record low last March amid bankruptcy fears, has skyrocketed 200%
in just 12 months." But Bank of America analyst Timna Tanners warned, "This is going to be short-
lived. It's very appropriate to call this a bubble." Tanners "predicted a painful reversal as supply
catches up with what she described as unimpressive demand." Tanners said, "We expect this will
correct - and often when it corrects, it over-corrects."
National Chicken Council Downplays Talk Of Shortage.
USA Today (5/6, Tyko, 12.7M) reports on a shortage that is making poultry "so scarce and
expensive that some restaurants are limiting or running out of chicken sandwiches, wings and
tenders. Others are considering changes to menus and promotions." It is "unclear if and how the
low supplies will affect consumers in the g