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efta-efta00147306DOJ Data Set 9Other

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DOJ Data Set 9
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EFTA 00147306
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From To Subject. „ Date: Fri, 26 Jul 2019 10:30:51 +0000 c Importan e: Normal Mobile version and searchable archives available at fbi.bulletinintelligence.com. LiryBI News Briefing TO: THE DIRECTOR AND SENIOR STAFF DATE: FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2019 6:30 AM EDT TODAY'S TABLE OF CONTENTS LEADING THE NEWS • Wray Raises Encryption Concerns At Cyber Conference. • Democrats Mull Next Steps On Impeachment Following Mueller Testimony. COUNTER-TERRORISM • Syrian Refugee Pleads Not Guilty To Pittsburgh Church Bomb Plot Charges. • Teen Pleads Guilty To Plotting New York Muslim Community Bombing. • DO) Official Vows To Step Up Fight Against Hezbollah Amid Iran Tensions. COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE • Senate Intelligence Committee: Russia Targeted Election Systems In Every State In 2016. • Wikileaks Criticizes New UK Prime Minister For Likely Supporting Assange Extradition To US. • ODNI's Joyce Corell Discusses The Need For Security In Federal Supply Chains. • Opinion: Compromised CIA Techn

Persons Referenced (13)

Nicholas TartaglioneKellyanne Conway

...aired cognition." Politico (7/25, Forgey, 4.29M) reports White House counselor Kellyanne Conway said Thursday, "I feel great empathy and compassion for folks who, as some of...

The Defendant

...t British engineering firm Rolls-Royce." According to Law 360, "All but one of the defendants were foreign, and those who showed up got relatively lenient sentences, in part for cooperating with pro...

The victim

...tralizing the Iranian-backed terrorist group during a conference commemorating the victims of the Hezbollah bombing of a Jewish cultural center in Argentina 25 years ago. 'Destroying Hezbollah's su...

United States

...orders, substantial capacity to wage Russian-style influence operations in the United States ahead of next year's election," and nations including China, Israel, Saudi Arab...

FBI agents

...In Murder-For-Hire Plot Blocked From Contact With Son. • Lawsuit Reveals What FBI Agents Found In 2014 Raid Of Arizona Body Donation Center • Suspect Arrested In Calif...

United States Attorney

...sentenced by a federal judge in Midland, according to a press release from the United States Attorney's Office Western District of Texas - U.S. Attorney John F. Bash and FBI Specia...

U.S. Attorney

...ss release from the United States Attorney's Office Western District of Texas - U.S. Attorney John F. Bash and FBI Special Agent in Charge Emmerson Buie Jr., El Paso Divisi...

Ivanka Trump

...s Delay Action To Hold Conway In Contempt. • House Panel Subpoenas Kushner And Ivanka Trump's Personal Emails, Texts. • Norton Seeks To Block Administration's Plan To Rel...

Bill Clinton

...d A. Clarke, who was White House counterterrorism coordinator under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, argues that when corporations are hit with a cyberattack, CEOs often choose to pay the...

Robert Mueller

...itol Hill among Democrats: Do they move forward with impeachment one day after Robert Mueller testified before the American people, saying he did not exonerate the President?" ABC's Mary Bruce: "Le...

Geoffrey Berman

...5, Rundle, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports that Manhattan US Attorney Geoffrey Berman echoed Wray's and Barr's comments, saying, "We're not talking about a back door into these systems. We'...

Jeffrey Epstein

...n Cell. The CBS Evening NewsVi (7/25, story 5, 2:00, O'Donnell, 251K) reported Jeffrey Epstein is "on suicide watch after being found on the floor of his cell at a New York...

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From To Subject. Date: Fri, 26 Jul 2019 10:30:51 +0000 c Importan e: Normal Mobile version and searchable archives available at fbi.bulletinintelligence.com. LiryBI News Briefing TO: THE DIRECTOR AND SENIOR STAFF DATE: FRIDAY, JULY 26, 2019 6:30 AM EDT TODAY'S TABLE OF CONTENTS LEADING THE NEWS • Wray Raises Encryption Concerns At Cyber Conference. • Democrats Mull Next Steps On Impeachment Following Mueller Testimony. COUNTER-TERRORISM • Syrian Refugee Pleads Not Guilty To Pittsburgh Church Bomb Plot Charges. • Teen Pleads Guilty To Plotting New York Muslim Community Bombing. • DO) Official Vows To Step Up Fight Against Hezbollah Amid Iran Tensions. COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE • Senate Intelligence Committee: Russia Targeted Election Systems In Every State In 2016. • Wikileaks Criticizes New UK Prime Minister For Likely Supporting Assange Extradition To US. • ODNI's Joyce Corell Discusses The Need For Security In Federal Supply Chains. • Opinion: Compromised CIA Technology May Have Led To Iran Identifying Spy Ring. • Opinion: Expanding Covert Agent Secrecy Law Could Discourage CIA Officers To Report On Controversial Activities. CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS • Epstein On Suicide Watch After Being Found Unresponsive In Cell. • Attorney Says Review Raises Doubts About Fatal Texas Drug Raid. • Threats Of "Lethal Force" Against Law Enforcement Prompt Texas FBI Operation. • Prosecutor Says More Could Be Charged In R Kelly Case. • US Examining Photo Of Armed Students At Emmett Till Sign. • NYPD Officer Charged In Murder-For-Hire Plot Blocked From Contact With Son. • Lawsuit Reveals What FBI Agents Found In 2014 Raid Of Arizona Body Donation Center • Suspect Arrested In California Shooting Spree That Killed Four. • FBI Asks Public To Look Out For North Carolina "Pink Lady Bandit." • Alabama Man Gets 10 Years For Shooting Sheriff Deputy. • FBI Says Whitesboro, Schuyler Incidents Related. • Federal Authorities Said To Investigate Hudson County Lottery Pool. • Former Suffolk Cop Sentenced Over Civil Rights Violation. • Bloods Gang Member Sentenced On Heroin Conviction. EFTA00147306 • FBI, Homeland Security Raid Cerritos Home. • Former Dayton Commissioner Accused Of Corruption No Longer KeyBank Market President. • Three Flint Men Face Charges Over Marijuana Grow Robbery. • Second Man Faces Federal Charges In Killing Of South Dakota Woman. • Two Men Sentenced On Child Exploitation Charges. • Albuquerque Man Faces Gun, Drug Choices. • Inmate Gets Seven More Years For Hiring Hitman. • Man Sentenced To Eight Years For Meth Possession, Intent To Distribute. • Man Likely To Get 30 Years For 1999 Kidnapping, Assault. • Granger Man Gets Prison, Order To Pay Back $1.6 Million. • 14 Charged In TDOC Contraband Investigation. • Ex-Milton Mayor Thompson's Sentencing Delayed. • St. Clair Sheriff's Office Helps FBI Bring In Child Porn Fugitive. • Authorities Offering $32,000 For Info On Assault Of Baltimore Police Employee. • Man Busted On Meth Charges Sentenced To Eight Years. • FBI Explains How Intrust Robber Was Caught So Quickly. • San Fernando Valley Shooting Suspect In Custody. FINANCIAL CRIME & CORPORATE SCANDALS • Puerto Rico's Next Governor Already Under Fire. • FBI Reportedly Probing California Political Consultant's Work. • Former Oyster Bay, New York Supervisor Expected To Plead Guilty To Corruption Charges. • FBI Reportedly Probing Online Reputation Management Firms. • Amid Federal Probe, Oklahoma Charter Schools Operator Will Continue To Get State Funding, Accreditation. • FBI Affidavit Alleges Mail, Wire Fraud By Outcome Health, Co-Founders. • North Carolina Mega-Donor's PAC Forfeited $475,000 To Federal Authorities. • FBI Probing Possible Insider Trading At Long Island Iced Tea Corp. • US Finds Potential Fraud In Student Loan Repayment Programs. • Rolls-Royce Defendant Skips $9 Million Bail. • Seattle Doctor Charged In Opioid Kickback Scheme. CYBER DIVISION • FBI Probing Ransomware Attack On Collierville, Tennessee. • Cybersecurity Firm: More Than 23 Million Stolen Credit Cards Are Being Traded On Dark Web. • Tech Firms Step Up Fight Against Terrorists Using Platforms To Recruit, Campaign. • Facebook Removes Fake Accounts From Russia, Thailand, Ukraine, Honduras. • British Cyber Expert To Be Sentenced Today In US For Creating Malware. • Judge Hears Arguments In Georgia Voting Machine Lawsuit. • Brazilian President's Cellphone Hacked Amid Scandal Intrigue. • Attempting To Define Cyber Command's Future Role. • Opinion: Appropriate Language And Rhteroic Critical For Framing Problems By Military Professionals. • NSA's Cybersecurity Directorate Selects Leadership. • Congress Debating Which Agency Should Manage Cyberthreats To US Oil And Gas Pipelines. LABORATORY • DNA Evidence Links Maryland Man To 1999 Kidnapping Of 10-Year-Old Girl. LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES • FBI Phoenix Warns Of Phone Scammers Posing As Federal Agents. • Barr Announces Five Child Murderers In Federal Custody Will Be Executed. EFTA00147307 • Trump Calls Dousing Attacks On NYPD Officers "Unacceptable" And "Tragic." • Author Of "Orange Is The New Black" Calls For Criminal Justice Reform. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS • Canadian Police Continue Search For Suspects In American's Murder. • Europol: Police Bust Global Balkan Cocaine Cartel. OTHER FBI NEWS • FBI Agents Settle Into New Rapid City, South Dakota Location. • New Honolulu SAC Named. • Newington Rotary Club Drawing Attention To Trafficking In Connecticut. • "BTK" Serial Killer's Daughter In "Extended Period Of Trying To Recover." • FBI Warns Families About Kidnapping Scams. OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS • Budget Deal Easily Passes House, But With Two-Thirds Of Republicans Opposed. • Barr Discusses Antitrust Concerns Related To Tech Companies With States. • DO) Pressing States To Support T-Mobile/Sprint Merger. • Southwest Airlines Grounding Boeing 737 MAX Planes Until Next Year. • White House To Fight Ruling Blocking New Asylum Rules. • Administration Mulls Travel Ban On Guatemala. • Morgan: 52 Miles Of New Wall System Has Been Built. • Democrats Boycott Senate Hearing On Border Bill. • House Democrats Confront Officials Over Family Separations. • Record 61,000 Unaccompanied Migrant Children In Federal Custody Since October. • Border Patrol Chief Was Member Of Racist Facebook Group Under Investigation. • House Approves TPS For Venezuelans. • Sixteen Marines Charged With Smuggling Migrants. • Migrants Transported Away From Nuevo Laredo To Monterrey. • Mexico's Murder Rate Hit Record High In 2018. • Senate Confirms Milley As Next Joint Chiefs Chairman. • Senate Committee Backs Craft To Be UN Ambassador. • Lawmakers Delay Action To Hold Conway In Contempt. • House Panel Subpoenas Kushner And Ivanka Trump's Personal Emails, Texts. • Norton Seeks To Block Administration's Plan To Relocate Federal Workers. • Different Judge Will Hear Trump Suit To Block Democrats Getting His New York Tax Returns. • Altered Presidential Seal Projected Behind Trump At Turning Point USA Event. • Democrats Say They Will "Own" August Recess. • Giuliani Says He Had To Borrow $100,000 From Trump Lawyer To Pay Taxes. INTERNATIONAL NEWS • Navy SEALs Sent Home For Drunken Behavior In Iraq. • Ignatius: US Turning Its Back On Kurdish Allies In Syria. • Pompeo, Ghani Agree To "Accelerate Efforts" To End War In Afghanistan. • Trump "Very Disappointed" After Swedish Court Charges ASAP Rocky With Assault. • Pompeo: US Still Wants North Korea Talks Despite Launches. • Pompeo Says He's Willing To Go To Tehran To Take Message To Iranians. • Pompeo Urges Turkey Not To Make Russian Missile System "Operational." • Senate Panel Advances Saudi Sanctions Measure. • Tunisian President Essebsi Dies At 92. • Concerns Rise About Potential Chinese Military Response To Hong Kong Protests. EFTA00147308 • Headlines From Today's Front Pages. • Mongolian President To Visit White House Next Week. • US Sanctions Maduro's Stepsons, Others For Alleged Food Corruption. • Media Analyses: Johnson Echoes Trump In Pledging To Deliver Brexit. WASHINGTON'S SCHEDULE • Today's Events In Washington. LEADING THE NEWS Wray Raises Encryption Concerns At Cyber Conference. The Washington Times (7/25, Blake, 492K) reports that Director Wray "echoed" Attorney General Barr on Thursday "by calling on tech companies to help solve investigative setbacks caused by criminals using encrypted devices and messaging platforms." Wray "made the plea while speaking at the International Conference on Cyber Security at Fordham University in New York, where Mr. Barr raised similar concerns during his keynote address earlier in the week. 'Cybersecurity is a central part of the FBI's mission,' said Mr. Wray, according to his prepared remarks. 'But as the attorney general discussed earlier this week, our request for lawful access cannot be considered in a vacuum. It's got to be viewed more broadly, taking into account the American public's interest in the security and safety of our society, and our way of life. That's important because this is an issue that's getting worse and worse all the time." In a paywall-protected article, Law360 (7/25, Subscription Publication, 8K) reports that Wray "called on tech companies to build a way for authorities to access encrypted devices, backing up" Bar's comments "earlier this week and echoing what has become a familiar government refrain. 'There's one thing I know for sure: It cannot be a sustainable end state for us to be creating an unfettered space that's beyond lawful access for terrorists, hackers, and child predators to hide," Wray said. CNBC (7/25, Fazzini, 3.62M) reports that Wray said he strongly supported Barr's comments "that tech companies need to provide a way for law enforcement to access criminals' and suspects' encrypted phones and apps. 'I get frustrated when I hear people suggest that we are trying to weaken encryption or weaken cybersecurity more broadly,' Wray said. 'As the attorney general discussed a few days ago, our requests can't be assessed in a vacuum. That's important because this is an issue that is becoming worse and worse all the time." The Wall Street Journal (7/25, Rundle, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports that Manhattan US Attorney Geoffrey Berman echoed Wray's and Barr's comments, saying, "We're not talking about a back door into these systems. We're talking about cooperation with private companies that will allow us access to the information when we need it." Brooklyn US Attorney Richard Donoghue said the US had "struck the balance between privacy and public safety" with the Fourth Amendment. Democrats Mull Next Steps On Impeachment Following Mueller Testimony. ABC World News TonightVI (7/25, story 4, 1:50, Muir, 597K) reported on "the divide on Capitol Hill among Democrats: Do they move forward with impeachment one day after Robert Mueller testified before the American people, saying he did not exonerate the President?" ABC's Mary Bruce: "Less than 24 hours after Robert Mueller was sworn in, Democrats were eager today to pivot back to their agenda. ... Mueller's testimony add[ed] new fire to the impeachment debate," but was "not enough to move the needle" for House Speaker Pelosi. Norah O'Donnell said on the CBS Evening NewsVi (7/25, story 7, 1:45, 251K) that Mueller's "appearance on Capitol Hill yesterday was not quite what Democrats were hoping for and did not make impeachment any more likely, [so] the Democrats are regrouping." Lester Holt said on NBC Nightly NewsVI (7/25, story 5, 0:55, 127K) that Democrats "are still debating whether to pursue impeachment of the President. ... This is a big split among Democrats and it EFTA00147309 didn't change because of yesterday." NBC's Kristen Welker: "Democrats are still very divided about how to move forward. ... There's broad agreement the Mueller hearings did not deliver the kind of punch they were hoping for to start impeachment proceedings, and that it actually may have blunted momentum, but there are still Democrats who are not ready to give up on impeachment." The Washington Post (7/25, Bade, Debonis, 14.2M) reports Democrats are now "struggling to figure out their next move" after the "highly anticipated hearing...fell flat, forcing some Democrats to second-guess their strategy while aggravating divisions in the party over impeachment." The New York Times (7/25, Hulse, 18.61M) writes that President Trump "was probably never going to be impeached" before the 2020 election, and "the absence of an electrifying Washington moment" during Mueller's testimony "makes that a near certainty." The Hill (7/25, Beavers, 2.98M) reports, "Several rank-and-file Democrats in the House are feeling deflated" over Mueller's testimony, "with some blaming the media and their own party for overhyping hearings they say fell short of expectations. While many Democrats publicly heralded Mueller's testimony," some "privately expressed disappointment in his, at times, shaky performance, the brevity of his answers and the lack of a big moment that would have shifted the electorate's sentiment on whether President Trump was guilty of obstruction." Politico (7/25, Johnson, Everett, 4.29M) says "impeachment took a blow" with Mueller's "muted and sometimes shaky testimony." Despite all this, Politico (7/25, Cheney, Desiderio, 4.29M) says in another report, impeachment supporters "showed new signs of life Thursday." Five more Democrats "publicly endorsed an impeachment inquiry post-Mueller, joining more than 90 lawmakers who had already come out in favor," including Rep. Katherine Clark (D-MA), "vice chair of the House Democratic Caucus and the highest-ranking Democrat to join the effort." The New York Times (7/25, Fandos, Davis, Stolberg, 18.61M) says "some senior lawmakers" are now "pushing...to begin formal impeachment hearings soon." House Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler "has gradually become convinced that his panel should proceed with impeachment hearings and do so as expeditiously as possible, though he has not stated so publicly, according to lawmakers and aides familiar with his thinking." Nadler said on CNN's Anderson Cooper 360Vi (7/25, 706K), "[Attorney General] Barr has been lying about what was in the report. It was important that that be demolished, and that the findings of the report - which are very, very damning to the President - be put before the American people." Rep. Jackie Speier (D-CA) was asked on CNN's The LeadVI (7/25, 963K) why she favors an impeachment inquiry. Speier said, "The President has obstructed justice on 12 different occasions. Even if you were to be of the opinion that he actually didn't get to go all the way through with it because Don McGahn didn't follow through, the intent to obstruct justice is a crime as well." But the Daily Caller (7/25, Conklin, 716K) reports that House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff, a vocal critic of the President, "is `not convinced' Democrats should follow through with impeachment proceedings. He told CNN that the only way Trump will be removed from office is if he is `voted out' in 2020." In an op-ed in the New York Times (7/25, 18.61M), President of the American Constitution Society Caroline Fredrickson writes, "Special Counsel Robert Mueller publicly confirmed 100 percent of the devastating findings of his report, and made clear that his inquiry does not exonerate the president. She contends that "examination of the questions concerning President Trump's actions and other misconduct identified by Mueller should be the highest priority for every member of Congress, no matter their party affiliation. Public accountability requires nothing less, because no one in this country, no matter how high, should be above the law. Reuters (7/25, Morgan) reports the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee "is expected to move its obstruction investigation of the president into federal court this week with a lawsuit to compel former White House Counsel Don McGahn to testify and a separate legal request for access to the Mueller probe's grand jury evidence." EFTA00147310 The Wall Street Journal (7/25, Thomas, McCormick, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports Democratic presidential candidates have steered away from discussing the issue. While a majority of the two dozen contenders have backed some form of impeachment inquiry, they are generally not discussing it on the campaign trail. Joe Biden did say in an interview with Urban One Radio's Tom Joyner that aired Thursday, "I think Nancy [Pelosirs going about it the right way." The AP (7/25, Miller) writes, "While the Mueller probe loomed as a pressing political problem for Trump," the President "also saw that it could be turned into an asset. From the start, he's peppered his campaign rallies with complaints about the swirling investigation getting in the way of his agenda. And Trump has no plans to let go of the now-concluded Mueller inquiry as his focus turns toward reelection." Hugh Hewitt writes in his Washington Post (7/25, 14.2M) that Trump "has decisively repulsed the attempt to deny him the opportunity to win that vindication at the polls in November 2020. Indeed, the president is now obviously, and with a high probability of success, going on the offensive." Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA), ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, said on Fox News' The Story (7/25), "I think [Mueller and his staff) were working with the Democrats. I think when you look at Mueller's team, it was a team that we still don't know how that got put together. ... I think what we didn't expect is that Mr. Mueller didn't seem to know a whole lot about the report." Rep. Doug Collins (R-GA), ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, said on Fox News' The Story (7/25), "What's really amazing to me, I think the House Judiciary Committee, I think they are just so delusional about what they wanted to Mueller to say and what it didn't say and they tried to convince themselves of the new narrative since then." Michael Gerson writes in the Washington Post (7/25, 14.2M), "Something did end during the Mueller hearings, at least for me. It was the death of the deus ex machina - the hope that a G-man of mythic abilities would decisively intervene on the side of good and save the honor of the country. ... I invested a great deal of trust in Mueller, who is the living repudiation of the shoddiness and shallowness of the Trump era. ... When politics is contaminated by hatred and cruelty, our ritual of renewal is a national election with a decisive result. And that means the savior is us." The Washington Post (7/24, Zak, Yuan, 14.2M) assesses that Mueller "was a star witness who eschews stardom. ... Democrats tried to cast him as a patriot who has exposed a corrupt and criminal president. Republicans tried to cast him as a figurehead who had no control over a posse of partisan assassins." CNN (7/25, Wolf, 83.16M) assesses "it was on one hand refreshing to see a congressional witness answer simply and maddening because both Democrats and Republicans actually wanted answers from him. What was left for Democrats was to read incriminating sections from the obstruction of justice portions of the redacted report and for Mueller to verifying them. And for Republicans, it was an opportunity to poke holes in the report's reasoning and try to tie Mueller in knots, which they did to some effect as he shuffled through the redacted version of the report in a three-ring binder containing the report and trying to follow along." In her column in the Wall Street Journal (7/25, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) Kimberly Strassel writes that a key aspect of the Mueller report is how it orginated, namely the Steele Dossier. She contends that Mueller's opening statement confirms that the omission has been deliberate. She argues that it reinforces the need for Attorney General Barr's investigation into the origins of the Russia inquiry. In a 2,500-word fact-check piece, the Washington Post (7/25, Rizzo, Kessler, 14.2M) looks at "some of the claims made by lawmakers that were factually shaky or misleading" during the Mueller testimony. The Daily Caller (7/25, Athey, 716K) criticizes the Post for "fact check[ing) only Republicans" in the piece. Republicans Continue To Question Mueller's Condition. A continuing substory of the Mueller hearings regards Mueller's condition during his first public congressional testimony EFTA00147311 in six years. The Washington Times (7/25, Mordock, 492K) reports Republicans "had expected former special counsel Robert Mueller's feeble testimony" according to Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), who said Thursday that "the 74-year-old prosecutor's health had been a hot topic in GOP prep sessions." Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham told the Times, "I know he's in a weakened condition." The Washington Examiner (7/25, Pearce, 448K) reports Mueller "stuttered, misheard questions, and gave elusive answers for nearly seven hours of testimony." In a Thursday tweet, Rudy Giuliani referred to Mueller's "impaired cognition." Politico (7/25, Forgey, 4.29M) reports White House counselor Kellyanne Conway said Thursday, "I feel great empathy and compassion for folks who, as some of these headlines suggest, may be feeble or not understanding some of the questions - asking them to be repeated, clearly not conversant with the facts and with his own report." Breitbart (7/25, Key, 673K) reports Conway added, "I've read the polls that very few Americans say they've read the Mueller report. I'd like to know if that number includes Bob Mueller himself." Conway said on Fox News (7/25) that the Mueller hearings were "seen by most Americans as a political exercise, not a legal exercise. I saw Mueller as somebody who resents being used and abused by people...who can't just move on." Anne Applebaum writes in the Washington Post (7/25, 14.2M), "In principle, it shouldn't matter" whether Mueller "speaks a lot or a little, whether he is charming or charmless, whether he stumbles occasionally or does not ever stumble. ... He is meant to produce evidence, not entertain." However, "we don't live in a world where only facts matter. What matters, even more, is trust. What matters more is who presents the facts and how they are presented." In an op-ed in The Hill (7/25, 2.98M), former FBI Assistant Director Kevin Brock writes Mueller's "unsteady testimony before Congress this week should not define his legacy." However, Mueller's "rough day of congressional testimony brought added texture to what the American people are seeing more clearly with each passing day: The processes and infrastructure of government that we trust to fairly administer justice were imperiled for naked political motivations and advantage. It was cynical and wrong, and it begs for reform so that it never happens again." Mueller Hearings Drew Smaller TV Audiences Than Comey And Cohen. The AP (7/25, Bauder) reports, "Nearly 13 million people watched former special counsel Robert Mueller's testimony before two House committees on the biggest broadcast and cable news networks," according to Nielsen data. The hearings drew smaller audiences than did "well- publicized hearings involving three other Trump-era figures: former FBI director James Comey (19.5 million), Trump attorney Michael Cohen (15.8 million) and Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh (20.4 million)." The Daily Caller (7/25, 716K) reports Fox News "blew away the competition" in the ratings for its coverage with just over three million viewers; second-place MSNBC had about 2.4 million, each of the broadcast networks about two million, and CNN just over 1.5 million. The Washington Free Beacon (7/25, Griswold, 78K) reports former MNSBC host Krystal Ball "criticized her former network Thursday for pushing `conspiracy theories' about Donald Trump and Russia after special counsel Robert Mueller's disappointing testimony before Congress." Ball "stressed that her critique was not a personal attack on her former colleagues, many of whom she still considers friends, but complained that `nearly all of [them] got swept up in the ratings bubble that was feverish Russian conspiracy theories." The New York Times (7/25, Grynbaum, 18.61M) writes, "Television's Trump bump may be fading. Or perhaps the reticent witness - a career prosecutor who delivered terse, technical answers - was not the type to keep Americans tuned in for a marathon day of viewing. Whatever the reason, the ratings...failed to match the big viewership for other recent political spectacles." COUNTER-TERRORISM EFTA00147312 Syrian Refugee Pleads Not Guilty To Pittsburgh Church Bomb Plot Charges. The AP (7/25) reports from Pittsburgh, "A Syrian refugee accused of plotting to bomb a Christian church in Pittsburgh to inspire Islamic State of Iraq followers has pleaded not guilty to terrorism charges." Mustafa Mousab Alowemer "entered his plea Wednesday during his arraignment in federal court. His lawyers have dismissed the alleged plotting as `puffery and bragging." Alowemer "is charged with attempting to provide material support and resources to the Islamic State of Iraq and two counts of distributing information about an explosive, destructive device, or weapon of mass destruction." Teen Pleads Guilty To Plotting New York Muslim Community Bombing. WROC-TV Rochester, NY (7/25) reports from Rochester, New York, "The fourth suspect who plotted to bomb a Muslim community near the Pennsylvania border has pleaded guilty." Police said Nicholas Pheilshifter, 16, "along with three others planned to bomb Islamberg, in Tompkins County." Pheilshifter "pleaded guilty to attempted criminal possession of a weapon as a case of terrorism," and "he faces seven years in prison and five years of post release supervision." Pheilshifter is scheduled to be sentenced on August 9. In June, "three others pleaded guilty in connection to the incident." Investigators "said they had made explosive devices using mason jars and duct tape, with black power inside the jars along with projectiles like BBs and nails." DOJ Official Vows To Step Up Fight Against Hezbollah Amid Iran Tensions. The Washington Examiner (7/25, Dunleavy, 448K) reports, "A top Justice Department official made it clear Thursday that combating Hezbollah is a top priority for the department, a move that puts pressure on the terrorist organization's sponsor, Iran." Principal Deputy Attorney General John Cronan, "who leads the department's team that investigates Hezbollah financing and narcoterrorism, laid out the government's efforts and plans for dismantling and neutralizing the Iranian-backed terrorist group during a conference commemorating the victims of the Hezbollah bombing of a Jewish cultural center in Argentina 25 years ago. 'Destroying Hezbollah's support networks and neutralizing the Hezbollah threat is a top priority for this Department of Justice and will continue to be,' Cronan said, though full details of the operations can't be shared. 'Investigations may be covert, charges may be sealed, defendants may be cooperating, and Hezbollah supporters may be facing non-terrorism crimes as we work to build terrorism charges; he said." COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE Senate Intelligence Committee: Russia Targeted Election Systems In Every State In 2016. The New York Times (7/25, Sanger, Edmondson, 18.61M) reports the Senate Intelligence Committee "concluded Thursday that election systems in all 50 states were targeted by Russia in 2016, an effort more far-reaching than previously acknowledged and one largely undetected by the states and federal officials at the time." But while the report's warning that the US "remains vulnerable in the next election is clear, its findings were so heavily redacted at the insistence of American intelligence agencies that even some key recommendations for 2020 were blacked out." Bloomberg (7/25, Dennis, 4.73M) says the report "recounted 'extensive' efforts by Russia to compromise the U.S.'s election infrastructure from 2014 to 'at least 2017' and urged new efforts to deter the threat." Mary Bruce reported on ABC World News TonightVi (7/25, story 5, 0:30, Muir, 597K), "This bipartisan report outlines sweeping attempts by Russia to interfere in the 2016 election. It says that Russia targeted all 50 states, though no votes were changed. And the report warns that swift action needs to be taken to shore up these systems, because they say Russia will be EFTA00147313 at it again." The CBS Evening NewsVI (7/25, story 6, 0:20, O'Donnell, 251K) briefly covered the report as well. The Wall Street Journal (7/25, Strobel, Hughes, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) says the report recommends states adopt voting machines that have a verified paper trail and that are not connected to wireless networks, and urges states not to implement online voting. CS2 Roll Call (7/25, Lesniewski, 154K) reports that a "key objective, according to the report, is to reinforce the `primacy' of states in running elections. Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden offered a dissent, saying he could not support such a statement, but in general, the report appears to be overwhelmingly bipartisan. Three other Democrats on the panel expressed general, but not universal, agreement with the report." The Los Angeles Times (7/25, Megerian, 4.64M) reports that "experts warn that time is running out to boost local and state defenses before the 2020 election. That message was amplified Thursday when the Senate Intelligence Committee released a bipartisan report on gaps in election infrastructure security, from voter registration to voting machines." The Washington Post (7/25, Demirjian, Itkowitz, 14.2M) reports that the SSCI "echoed findings from other federal officials who have said there is no evidence that any votes were changed or that any voting machines were compromised." The Washington Examiner (7/25, Dunleavy, 448K) says that SSCI concluded "that `Russian government-affiliated cyber actors conducted an unprecedented level of activity against state election infrastructure in the run-up to the 2016' but found `no evidence' that vote tallies were altered or that voter registry files were deleted or modified, though the committee said that the intelligence community's insight into that is limited. The committee said one official made the car thief analogy, saying that the car thief `didn't go in, but we don't know why." ABC News (7/25, Ferran, 2.97M) reports that Russia did "successfully exfiltrated the personal data of hundreds of thousands of voters from systems in at least two states, the report says: Illinois and another unnamed state. Illinois was previously named by local officials as likely a victim state mentioned in an indictment secured in July 2018 by then-special counsel Robert Mueller against purported Russian military intelligence cyber operatives." The Hill (7/25, Chalfant, Miller, 2.98M) reports that SSCI Chairman Richard Burr said, "It is my hope that the Senate Intelligence Committee's bipartisan report will provide the American people with valuable insight into the election security threats still facing our nation and the ways we can address them." SSCI Ranking Member Mark Warner "echoed Burr, saying neither the federal government nor the states were `adequately prepared' when Russia attempted to infiltrate U.S. voting statements in 2016 but said they have taken steps since then to ensure election systems are better secured." Gizmodo (7/25, Cameron, 2.7M) reports that Wyden "renewed a call Thursday for Congress to immediately intervene and impose mandatory security standards on election systems nationwide." Vox (7/25, Ward, 2.27M) says that report "underscores two vital points: 1) that determined foreign actors can gain access to America's election infrastructure, and 2) Russia is skilled and willing to meddle inside of it." Business Insider (7/25, Sheth, 3.67M) says that the SSCI report is the "first volume of its final multi-part report on Russia's interference in the 2016 US election. The panel had been conducting its investigation of the matter in parallel with the FBI and other congressional committees since the US intelligence community first revealed Russia was meddling in the race." TechCrunch (7/25, Shieber, 605K) reports that through "two and a half years the committee has held 15 open hearings, interviewed more than 200 witnesses and reviewed nearly 400,000 documents, according to a statement, and will be publishing other volumes from its investigation over the next year." Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) said on CNN's Anderson Cooper 360Vi (7/25, 706K), "That Intelligence Committee report is bipartisan. What it shows is that...this misinformation and disinformation attack on our democracy as early as 2014, well before the 2016 election, they are continuing." Rep. Will Hurd (R-TX) said on CNN's Situation RoomVi (7/25, 980K), EFTA00147314 would like to see all of Congress pay a little bit more attention on how we counter this threat...that the Russians are trying to do instead of just white-gloving the Mueller Report." Meanwhile, the Washington Post (7/25, Timberg, Romm, 14.2M) reports that Iran also "has, within its borders, substantial capacity to wage Russian-style influence operations in the United States ahead of next year's election," and nations including China, Israel, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Venezuela have also demonstrated such capacities. The Wall Street Journal (7/25, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) says in an editorial that it is essential that the Justice Department complete its investigation of ongoing foreign interference efforts separate from any lingering aspects of Mueller's investigation of the Trump Administration. Politico (7/25, Matishak, 4.29M) also covers the Senate report. Report Critical Of Officials' Reaction Prior To Election. Newsweek (7/25, Touchberry, 1.53M) reports that according to the report, government officials "feared that warning the public about ongoing efforts by Russia to subvert the 2016 U.S. elections would sow discord in the integrity of America's voting systems." The report "revealed that officials at `all levels of government' were concerned with eroding election integrity and thus chose not to offer detailed warnings to staffers at the state level, which in turn led local officials to not react with `any additional urgency,' causing `confusion and a lack of information." Fox News (7/25, Re, 27.59M) says that report "faulted the FBI and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for providing inadequate warnings to state governments. The panel found that alerts often went to the wrong people or contained insufficient information, and blended in with previous general warnings the states had received." NPR (7/25, Lucas, 3.12M) also reports on the SSCI document, as does Engadget (7/25, Lawler, 437K), CNET News (7/25, Reichert, Morse, 1.99M), StateScoop (7/25), Mother Jones (7/25, Vicens, 881K), the New York Post (7/25, Fredericks, 4.57M), Bloomberg (7/25, 4.73M), and The Verge (7/25, Hollister, 2.05M). McConnell Blacks House Democrats' Election-Security Legislation. CNN (7/25, Barrett, Collier, 83.16M) reports that on Thursday, Senate Majority Leader McConnell "personally" objected to "House-passed legislation backed by Democrats. This comes after Republican Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith of Mississippi objected to a trio of bills on Wednesday, in keeping with long standing GOP arguments that Congress has already responded to election security needs for the upcoming election." McConnell called the House legislation partisan, and said that any supported in the Senate must be bipartisan. Vox (7/25, Zhou, 2.27M) reports that McConnell "has argued that election security bills could get the federal government too involved in states' efforts." USA Today (7/25, Johnson, 10.31M) reports that "barely a day after" Mueller "sounded an alarm over Russian election meddling," Senate Republicans "blocked two bills, both offered by Democrats, that would have required political campaigns to report attempts at interference by foreign interests. A third Democratic proposal, aimed at thwarting hacking attacks against senators and their staffs, also bit the dust." The AP (7/25, Mascaro, Jalonick) reports Senate Minority Leader Schumer "called inaction by Congress a `disgrace' and pledged to keep pushing for votes. Mueller's testimony `should be a wake-up call; he said." The AP (7/25) reports that "Even if Congress were immediately to send funds to states to replace voting equipment, it would be difficult to make substantial upgrades in time for the 2020 elections. It can take months to decide on replacement machines, develop security protocols, train workers and test the equipment. Republicans said Thursday that $380 million was allocated to the states in 2018 and not all of that money has been spent." CQ Roll Call (7/25, Lesniewski, 154K) reports that Sen James Lankford (R) is "making clear that he still wants to get support for encouraging states to have paper audit trails and to boost the ability of election officials to get timely security clearances." Lankford, "who has been working with Minnesota Democrat Amy Klobuchar, told reporters Thursday that with the 2020 primaries and caucuses just around the corner, security enhancements would be meant for the next midterms." EFTA00147315 Pompeo Expresses Confidence In Election Security. Secretary of State Pompeo was asked on Fox News Special Report (7/25, 1.53M) if he is confident the US is prepared if Russia tries to interfere in the 2020 elections. Pompeo said, "I am. I don't know that we will achieve perfection. But take a look, there's been an election after 2016. We had one in 2018 as well. The Russians had intent to mess around in that as well. We were pretty effective. We certainly had safe and secure elections, and we reduced the Russians' capacity to have an impact on impact on that election." More Commentary. Stanley McChrystal, a retired General, and David Eichenbaum, a Democratic media consultant, write for Politico Magazine (7/25, 4.24M) that "today's digital battlefield presents an entirely new landscape—one where state and non-state actors participate in a raging asynchronous information war that poses a serious threat to our democracy. It's a war America is losing—badly." They recommend the creation of "a nonpartisan, non-governmental Fair Digital Election Commission to protect the integrity of our elections by detecting, exposing, evaluating and remediating the impact of disinformation." Democratic presidential candidate John Hickenlooper writes in an op-ed for NBC News (7/25, 6.14M) that "Inaction is not an option. We are going to need to find concrete solutions if we hope to safeguard our country from the very real cyberthreats" Mueller's report identifies. Wikileaks Criticizes New UK Prime Minister For Likely Supporting Assange Extradition To US. The Washington Times (7/25, Blake, 492K) reports WikiLeaks "reacted to Boris Johnson becoming British prime minister Wednesday by pouncing on recent comments he made relevant to the website's jailed publisher, Julian Assange." WikiLeaks "said on Twitter that 'it should be unthinkable for the new PM to support the extradition of Assange,' who is wanted by the US and currently imprisoned in the UK." ODNI's Joyce Corell Discusses The Need For Security In Federal Supply Chains. FedTech (7/25) interviews Joyce Corell, Assistant Director for Supply Chain and Cyber at the NCSC, Office of the Director of National Intelligence, about federal supply chain security. Asked about identifying risks in the supply chain, Corell said, "Your defense contractors, who are building the stuff, might be in a position to detect that something has gone wrong. ... The intelligence community does what the intelligence community does. But in the commercial sector, there is vast, untapped information available from commercial data providers." On best practices, she noted, "I think there are common best practices. One is to think about security as the fourth pillar. When you're buying goods and services, the community that does the purchasing looks at cost, schedule and performance. Those are the three pillars. Historically, people working in the supply chain environment have said, 'Performance, doesn't that include security?' Well, it doesn't. Security really needs to be the fourth pillar." Opinion: Compromised CIA Technology May Have Led To Iran Identifying Spy Ring. In her syndicated column appearing in the Kansas City (MO) Star (7/25, 549K), Rachel Marsden writes that "Iran released a stash of documents this week that purportedly identify the CIA officers involved in the spy ring." Iran's counterespionage chief "said that CIA officers were recruiting Iranians online, and he claimed Iran had penetrated CIA systems that were masquerading as more benign websites." Marsden suggests that Iran may have received assistance from China, which "Foreign Policy magazine in 2018 explain[ed] how Chinese counterespionage dismantled the CIA's in-country espionage network from 2010 to 2012, leading to the exposure and execution of the CIA's Chinese assets." Marsen contends that the "disastrous episode was blamed on the agency's use of a supposedly secure covert communication system that had been migrated over from the Middle East and allowed recruited assets to communicate with their CIA handlers." She asserts that, "given that China, Russia and Iran are allies, what are the odds that the Chinese shared their findings about the CIA's spy EFTA00147316 network with the Russians and Iranians? And if the system was originally developed for CIA intelligence operations in the Middle East, information about that system would clearly be useful to Iranian intelligence and to Russia's efforts in countering CIA operations in Syria and elsewhere in the region." Opinion: Expanding Covert Agent Secrecy Law Could Discourage CIA Officers To Report On Controversial Activities. In an op-ed in Just Security (7/25), Stanton Foundation National Security Fellow at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press Linda Moon writes that an expansion of the Intelligence Identities Protection Act (IIPA) of 1982, "which was pushed by the CIA and is fast- tracking through Congress as part of this year's intelligence authorization bills, would remove the overseas requirement entirely, meaning that intelligence agencies could criminalize the disclosure of the identities of clandestine officers and agents in perpetuity, including after retirement or even after death." Moon argues that "without the overseas requirement, there is a concern that the IIPA could be used to threaten legal action for reporting on controversial activities...whose identity is common knowledge but whose activities might be classified." She contends the "CIA has not been shy in wielding the law as a threat in similar cases in the past - two independent journalists who figured out the names of key individuals in the CIA's efforts against al-Qaeda agreed to censor the name of one of these officers after the CIA repeatedly invoked the IIPA. The proposed expansion would just heighten that concern." CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS Epstein On Suicide Watch After Being Found Unresponsive In Cell. The CBS Evening NewsVi (7/25, story 5, 2:00, O'Donnell, 251K) reported Jeffrey Epstein is "on suicide watch after being found on the floor of his cell at a New York City jail." CBS' Mola Lenghi added that "law enforcement sources say Epstein was found lying on the floor of his jail cell earlier this week, semiconscious, despondent and crying, with slight bruising around his neck." Lenghi said that officials at the correctional center where Epstein is being held are "reviewing internal security cameras to try to figure out what happened inside [his) cell." On ABC World News TonightVi (7/25, story 3, 2:00, Muir, 597K), Whit Johnson reported, "Investigators initially thought he'd tried to take his own life or make it seem that way. Now, they're looking into whether he was assaulted by another inmate or whether he had even paid someone to beat him up. They've interviewed another inmate, Nick Tartaglione, a former cop accused of murder." On NBC Nightly NewsVI (7/25, story 3, 1:45, Holt, 127K), Stephanie Gosk reported, "Tartaglione's lawyer says his client was questioned, but is not a suspect." Attorney Says Review Raises Doubts About Fatal Texas Drug Raid. The AP (7/25, Lozano) reports from Houston, "An independent review by the family of a woman who along with her husband were killed in a drug raid earlier this year by Houston police is casting doubts on how authorities have portrayed the deadly shooting, attorneys said Thursday." The January 28 drug raid in which Rhogena Nicholas and her husband, Dennis Tuttle, "were fatally shot in their home and five officers were injured came under scrutiny after police alleged one of the officers who was shot, Gerald Goines, lied in a search warrant about having a confidential informant buy heroin at the home." According to the AP, "Family and friends of Tuttle and Nicholas have continuously dismissed allegations the couple sold drugs." On Thursday, attorneys for Nicholas' family "said a forensic review of the crime scene found evidence contradicting how the shooting took place and how long it took to finish." KH0U-TV Houston (7/25, Dougherty, 207K) reports, "Attorneys representing the family of the woman killed in January's botched drug raid in southeast Houston are claiming a private investigation found Rhogena Nicholas was shot from outside of her home," which "contradicts EFTA00147317 what police said happened that day." The attorneys "filed a petition with probate court requesting depositions from officers to address these findings," and "they said in addition to their private investigator showing Nicholas was shot from outside of her home on Harding Street, they also showed where several other rounds were fired into the home as well." The attorneys "said black tar heroin was never sold there - something they said police lied about," and "they also said 30 minutes after the shootout supposedly ended in the home, a neighbor took cellphone video where two gunshots were fired inside of the home." Threats Of "Lethal Force" Against Law Enforcement Prompt Texas FBI Operation. The Waco (TX) Tribune-Herald (7/25, Hoppa, 129K) reports, "An hourslong standoff with a person at a Robinson home ended sometime around midday Thursday, but officials with the FBI, Robinson police and McLennan County Sheriff's Office were mum on how it ended." According to the Tribune-Herald, "Emergency vehicles before noon left the scene in the 700 block of Stegall Drive, where an individual had threatened 'lethal force' against law enforcement agencies gathered there starting about 7 a.m., Robinson police Lt. Tracy O'Connor said, reading an FBI statement." O'Connor "said the agencies were conducting a 'court-authorized law enforcement operation." KCEN-TV Waco, TX (7/25, Wilson, 51K) reports, "The person in the home would not cooperate with officers and threatened to use 'lethal force against law enforcement,' O'Connor said," and "as of 10 a.m., the Robinson Police Department, McLennan County Sheriff's Office, EMS, FBI, and the fire department were still outside the home trying to coax the person out." KCEN-TV adds, "By about 12:30 p.m. the bomb squad was seen leaving the neighborhood, but roads remained closed," and "officials later reported no explosives were on scene." KWTX-TV Waco, TX (7/25, 189K) reports, "The FBI had what a law enforcement source described as a 'considerable presence' late Thursday afternoon in a Robinson neighborhood where a local man died of a gunshot wound as agents arrived early in the morning to serve warrants, but the source says there was no standoff at the home." The FBI "declined throughout the day to provide specific information about what local law enforcement sources had described as a standoff, but as two-dozen local and state law enforcement vehicles streamed out of the neighborhood just before noon Thursday, and agency spokeswoman Michelle Lee did say there is 'no longer any threat to the public:" Sources "said FBI agents went to the home in the 700 block of East Stegall Drive to serve search and arrest warrants," and "late Thursday afternoon, the law enforcement source said agents spent the day processing evidence and confirmed there was no standoff." Prosecutor Says More Could Be Charged In R Kelly Case. The AP (7/25) reports from Chicago, "More charges and more defendants could be added to the federal case against R. Kelly in Chicago that currently alleges child pornography and other crimes by the R&B singer and two associates, a prosecutor told a judge Thursday." Prosecutor Angel Krull "said a more far-ranging indictment could replace the charging document that led to Kelly's arrest as he walked his dog in Chicago in mid-July," but "she offered no hints about possible new investigative targets." Kelly, 52, "is being held without bond on charges that include producing child pornography and coercing minors to engage in sex." Kelly "faces similar federal charges in New York, along with Illinois charges brought by Cook County prosecutors." Krull "also requested an order protecting evidence and limiting what lawyers can say publicly about it." US Examining Photo Of Armed Students At Emmett Till Sign. The Mississippi Center For Investigative Reporting (7/25, Mitchell) reports, "Three University of Mississippi students have been suspended from their fraternity house and face possible investigation by the Department of Justice after posing with guns in front of a bullet-riddled sign honoring slain civil rights icon Emmett Till." According to MCIR, "One of the students EFTA00147318 posted a photo to his private Instagram account in March showing the trio in front of a roadside plaque commemorating the site where Till's body was recovered from the Tallahatchie River" after "the 14-year-old black youth was tortured and murdered in August 1955." MCIR adds, "It is not clear whether the fraternity students shot the sign or are simply posing before it." The sign "is part of a memorial effort by a Mississippi civil rights group and has been repeatedly vandalized, most recently in August 2018." The AP (7/25, Amy) reports, "Ole Miss spokesman Rod Guajardo said the image was reported in March to the university's Bias Incident Response Team, which takes reports of incidents where students, faculty or staff are targeted because of their race or other characteristics." Guajardo "said university police asked the FBI to investigate, but says the FBI declined to open an inquiry because the photo 'did not pose a specific threat," but "U.S. Attorney Chad Lamar told the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting that federal prosecutors are examining the case." NYPD Officer Charged In Murder-For-Hire Plot Blocked From Contact With Son. WCBS-TV New York (7/25) reports, "A New York City police officer accused in a murder for hire plot was back in court Thursday." A judge "put a stop to communication between the jailed officer and her 5-year-old son." Valerie Cincinelli "appeared in divorce court in Nassau County to face the estranged husband she is accused of plotting to kill," and "the judge revoked her visitation calls with her son after she was accused of demonstrating poor judgement in one recent call and violating protocols for contact from behind bars." Cincenelli "is also accused of plotting to kill her boyfriend's teen-aged daughter." WCBS-TV adds, "One of Cincinelli's brothers committed suicide earlier this month. He was an FBI agent." The New York Daily News (7/25, Light, McShane, 2.52M) also reports. Lawsuit Reveals What FBI Agents Found In 2014 Raid Of Arizona Body Donation Center. The New York Post (7/25, Bowden, 4.57M) reports, "Buckets of body parts, a cooler filled with male genitalia and a woman's head sewn onto a male torso 'like Frankenstein' were found by FBI agents during a raid on an Arizona body donation center, a new lawsuit reveals." According to the Post, "The stomach-churning scene was discovered by FBI agents at the now-shuttered Biological Resource Center in 2014 as part of a multi-state investigation into the illegal trafficking and sale of human body parts, as reported by the Arizona Republic." The Post adds, "Details of the grim find were revealed in a lawsuit filed against the center this week by 33 defendants whose loved ones' bodies were donated to the facility under the guise they would be used for scientific purposes." The Hill (7/25, Campisi, 2.98M) reports, "The Phoenix facility, which served as a body donation center and tissue bank, was raided in 2014 by FBI agents in hazmat suits as part of the agency's multistate investigation into the illegal trafficking and sale of human body parts," and "agents found bodies cut up with chainsaws and band saws, and 'pools of human blood and bodily fluids were found on the floor of the freezer' with no identification tags to mark the corpses, the lawsuit reportedly alleges." The Hill adds, "The center's owner, Stephen Gore, was sentenced to a year of deferred prison time and four years of probation after pleading guilty in October to illegal control of an enterprise." Newsweek (7/25, 1.53M) reports, "According to the testimony of former FBI Assistant Special Agent Mark Cwynar, they found a 'cooler filled with male genitalia; 'a bucket of heads, arms and legs; and 'infected heads,' a CNN News Wire report says." Suspect Arrested In California Shooting Spree That Killed Four. The CBS Evening NewsVi (7/25, story 3, 0:25, O'Donnell, 251K) reported a suspect was arrested Thursday after "a shooting spree that left at least four people dead." Police say Gerry Zaragoza, 26, "killed his father and brother" and then shot "a woman and man at a gas EFTA00147319 station." NBC Nightly NewsVI (7/25, lead story, 1:35, Holt, 127K) reported that at least six people were shot across three locations in Los Angeles' San Fernando Valley. The Los Angeles Times (7/25, Fry, Winton, Ormseth, 4.64M) reports "the shootings and manhunt...lasted roughly 12 hours." On ABC World News TonightVi (7/25, lead story, 2:00, Muir, 597K), Clayton Sandell reported authorities are "trying to figure out a motive." FBI Asks Public To Look Out For North Carolina "Pink Lady Bandit." WWAY-TV Wilmington, NC (7/25, 6K) reports, "The FBI is asking the public to be on the lookout for a woman who is accused of robbing three banks in three different states." The robber has been dubbed the "Pink Lady Bandit," reportedly, "because in at least two of the robberies she carried a distinctive pink handbag." WNCN-TV Raleigh-Durham, NC (7/25) reports the suspect "has robbed at least three banks since July 20" and "has now struck in North Carolina." Alabama Man Gets 10 Years For Shooting Sheriff Deputy. The Mobile (AL) Press-Register (7/25, Carter, 840K) reports, "A Stockton, Ala., man has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for being a drug user in possession of a firearm, the U.S. Attorney's Office announced." Carl Bullin fired at Baldwin County sheriff's deputies in December of 2019. Reportedly, the case was "investigated by the Baldwin County Major Crimes Task Force, the Baldwin County Sheriff's Office, the Bay Minette Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation." FBI Says Whitesboro, Schuyler Incidents Related. WKTV-TV Utica, NY (7/25, 3K) reports, "The two federal investigations in Whitesboro and Schuyler, Tuesday, were related." Reportedly, "the FBI has returned calls about a heavy police presence in Whitesboro on Tuesday," and the agency "confirmed the incident was related to a court order." Federal Authorities Said To Investigate Hudson County Lottery Pool. The Hudson County (NJ) Jersey Journal (7/25, Conte, 1.8M) reports, "Multiple people, including one county employee, have been called to testify in a federal probe into an alleged illegal lottery contest that hundreds of Hudson County employees pay a $20 fee to enter." Reportedly, "The feds are looking into whether the organizers of the game, based on numbers drawn in the state lottery's official Pick-6, are taking a cut of the total pool money." Asked for comment, an FBI spokeswoman in Newark said, "The FBI can neither confirm nor deny the existence of investigations." Former Suffolk Cop Sentenced Over Civil Rights Violation. Newsday (NY). (7/25, Kessler, 932K) reports, "A former Suffolk police officer was sentenced to 1 year in prison Thursday for pressuring a woman he arrested to twice engage in sexual acts in a police precinct." Christopher McCoy "pleaded guilty in October 2018 to a single federal misdemeanor count of deprivation of civil rights under color of law." Suffolk Police Commissioner Geraldine Hart said in a statement, "The Suffolk County Police Department assisted the FBI in its criminal investigation into this matter." Bloods Gang Member Sentenced On Heroin Conviction. The Wilmington (NC) Star News (7/25, Bellamy, 154K) reports, "A man that Wilmington police characterized as a high-ranking member of the Bloods street gang has been sentenced to more than 12 years in prison." Reportedly, "The case was investigated as part of an FBI-led operation called 'Dodge Ball,' focused on gang members involved in the distribution of heroin, possession of firearms and associated violence." EFTA00147320 FBI, Homeland Security Raid Cerritos Home. The Los Cerritos (CA) Community News (7/25, Hews, 102K) reports, "FBI and Homeland Security personnel raided a home in on the 17000 block of Maurice Dr. in Cerritos." Reportedly, "Neighbors said that three carloads and about a dozen officers went into the house, took 'all sorts of stuff out of the house and the garage." Agents are said to have been at the residence "for about 1.5 hours." Former Dayton Commissioner Accused Of Corruption No Longer KeyBank Market President. The Dayton (OH) Daily News (7/25, Gnau, Hulsey, Sweigart, 121K) reports, "Former Dayton City Commissioner Joey Williams - charged with corruptly soliciting a bribe while in office — is no longer market president at KeyBank." Williams, who faces federal charges following an FBI corruption investigation, "has been accused of taking more than $50,000 in money and benefits such as home renovations from an unnamed individual in 2015 in exchange for using his influence to get the city and CityWide Development Corp. to award them contracts." Three Flint Men Face Charges Over Marijuana Grow Robbery. The Grand Blanc (MI) View (7/25) reports, "An indictment was unsealed Monday charging three Flint men with conspiring to rob a Sanilac County marijuana grow operation, announced U.S. Attorney Matthew Schneider. Joining Schneider in the announcement was Federal Bureau of Investigation Special Agent in Charge Timothy R. Slater." SAC Slater said, "Because of the hard work of the FBI and its law enforcement partners, these men will face the consequences of their reckless actions." Second Man Faces Federal Charges In Killing Of South Dakota Woman. The AP (7/25) reports a federal indictment named Ramon Simpson "with kidnapping resulting in death and conspiracy to commit kidnapping in the killing of Phyllis Hunloff." Simpson is the second man charged in Hunloff's death. Two Men Sentenced On Child Exploitation Charges. KIDY-TV San Angelo, TX (7/25) reports, "An Abilene man was one of two defendants sentenced to serve time in federal prison on charges of child exploitation." James Vernon was sentenced to 15 years, and Christopher Mayhall was sentenced to 20 years. Reportedly, "The two cases were unrelated; however, the men were both sentenced by a federal judge in Midland, according to a press release from the United States Attorney's Office Western District of Texas - U.S. Attorney John F. Bash and FBI Special Agent in Charge Emmerson Buie Jr., El Paso Division." Albuquerque Man Faces Gun, Drug Choices. KVEO-TV Harlingen, TX (7/25, Resendiz) reports Henry Felix was arrested on Tuesday and "charged in a federal complaint with possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime; being a felon in possession of a firearm; and possession of heroin with intent to distribute." Reportedly, "The FBI Violent Crime Task Force...arrested Felix after executing a search warrant of his residence in Albuquerque." Inmate Gets Seven More Years For Hiring Hitman. The AP (7/25) reports Mason Stickney has been sentenced to more than seven years in prison for trying to "hire someone to kill three people, including a police officer." Reportedly, another inmate "alerted authorities and worked with them to put Stickney in contact with a hit man who was actually an undercover FBI agent." Man Sentenced To Eight Years For Meth Possession, Intent To Distribute. EFTA00147321 The York County (ME) Journal-Tribune (7/25, Gotthelf, 25K) reports Joshua Kaufman "has been sentenced in federal court to eight years in prison and five years of supervised release for possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine." Reportedly, "This case was investigated by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service and Southern Maine Gang Task Force, which is comprised of investigators from the FBI; the Portland, South Portland and Lewiston Police Departments; the York County Sheriff's Office; U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration." Man Likely To Get 30 Years For 1999 Kidnapping, Assault. The Somerset County_(PA) Daily American (7/25, Ellich, 38K) reports Timothy Nelson pleaded guilty to "kidnapping and aggravated sexual abuse in federal court on Thursday - 20 years after the crime was committed." In the years since then, Nelson's victim "grew into a strong woman and a state police trooper and FBI agent never gave up on finding the man who hurt the Shade Township resident on Sept. 19, 1999." Granger Man Gets Prison, Order To Pay Back $1.6 Million. WBND-TV South Bend, IN (7/25, Hudson) reports James Cotton "was sentenced to 63 months in federal prison and ordered to pay $1,666,721 in restitution for devising a scheme to defraud his former employer." Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's Indianapolis Division Grant Mendenhall said, "We expect the people we work with to be honest and trustworthy, but Mr. Cotton chose to betray his employer's trust for his own financial gain." The South Bend (IN Tribune (7/25, Wright, 182K) reports, "Cotton admitted that from approximately January 2009 to October 2017, he devised a fraud scheme to obtain money from his employer by means of false representations, according to court documents. Cotton created five sham businesses which did not have any actual employees and did not engage in any legitimate business activity." 14 Charged In TDOC Contraband Investigation. TVC-TV Chattanooga, TN (7/25, 101K) reports, "14 people face several counts stemming from a Tennessee Department of Corrections (TDOC) contraband investigation." TDOC Commissioner Tony Parker reportedly "has been intimately involved in the national fight against contraband and has taken part in conversations with the FCC, ASCA, the FBI and mobile technology leaders to find ways to reduce cell phone utilization in contraband introduction." Ex-Milton Mayor Thompson's Sentencing Delayed. The Pensacola (a) News Journal (7/25, Blanks, 170K) reports, "A sentencing hearing for ex- United Way of Santa Rosa County Director Guy Thompson has been delayed by one month so doctors retained by Thompson's lawyers can perform a forensic mental health evaluation on the former mayor, according to court documents." Thompson "pleaded guilty in May to 20 counts of wire fraud and three counts of tax evasion after an FBI investigation revealed he embezzled more than $650,000 from United Way of Santa Rosa County between 2011 and 2018. Thompson executed a complex bank fraud scheme using several banks throughout Santa Rosa County to redirect money meant for charity into his own personal coffers." St. Clair Sheriff's Office Helps FBI Bring In Child Porn Fugitive. The Anniston (AL Star (7/25, Hanner, 57K) reports, "The St. Clair County Sheriff's Office assisted the FBI on Tuesday in apprehending" Charles Stoker of Indianapolis, a fugitive wanted on child pornography charges. St. Clair County Sheriff Billy Murray "said his office received a request from the FBI in locating the man." Authorities Offering $32,000 For Info On Assault Of Baltimore Police Employee. EFTA00147322 The Baltimore Sun (7/26, Davis, 1.33M) reports, "Authorities are offering up to $32,000 in rewards for information that leads to the arrest of three people who assaulted a Baltimore police civilian employee Wednesday." Reportedly, "Detective Jeremy Silbert wrote in an email that the FBI and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are each offering separate $5,000 rewards for information on each of the three suspects in the case and Metro Crime Stoppers are offering an additional $2,000." Man Busted On Meth Charges Sentenced To Eight Years. The Santa Clarita Valley (CA) Signal (7/25, Holt, 11K) reports Patrick Fry, "one of two Saugus men arrested just over a year ago for involvement in a nationwide meth-trafficking ring was sentenced earlier this month in a Pennsylvania court to at least eight years in prison." Reportedly, "Several law enforcement agencies including the FBI dismantled the 'multi-state drug trafficking organization that used the U.S. Postal Service to mail packages of crystal methamphetamine and marijuana from California to traffickers in Montgomery County dating back to at least April 2016 and the arrests of five leaders who spearheaded the corrupt organization." FBI Explains How Intrust Robber Was Caught So Quickly. KWCH-TV Wichita, KS (7/25, 162K) reports the FBI on Thursday detailed "how officers managed to locate and quickly arrest" Jeremy Vos, who was accused of robbing an Intrust Bank branch inside a Dillons grocery store. Reportedly, "The FBI says Vos left the bank and came back with his ID." Police went to Vos' house, where they found clothing matching bank employees' descriptions. They then went to the house of one of Vos' friends, who told police "Vos messaged her that morning saying he was 'going to rob a bank,' and that 'he had money and wanted to buy" marijuana. Vos was arrested at the friend's house. San Fernando Valley Shooting Suspect In Custody. The Los Angeles Times (7/25, Fry, Winton, Ormseth, 4.64M) reports, "A 26-year-old who embarked on a shooting rampage that left four dead - beginning with his own family and ending with a stranger on a bus - was arrested Thursday afternoon after an hours-long manhunt that cast a shadow of fear across the sweltering San Fernando Valley, police said." Gerry Zaragoza "was taken into custody about 2:30 p.m. when two law enforcement officers with the LAPD and FBI joint fugitive task force spotted him walking on Canoga Avenue near Gault Street." FINANCIAL CRIME & CORPORATE SCANDALS Puerto Rico's Next Governor Already Under Fire. ABC World News TonightVi (7/25, story 6, 0:20, Muir, 597K) reported that with Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello announcing "he will step down next Friday, the Secretary of Justice is in line to take over, but she's already under fire...for her handling of aid after Hurricane Maria." Bloomberg (7/25, Kaske, Albright, 4.73M) reports Secretary of Justice Wanda Vazquez is under investigation by the island's Office of Government Ethics for "her conduct as the commonwealth's chief law-enforcement officer." Zulma Rosario, executive director of Puerto Rico's Office of Government Ethics, on Thursday ordered a review of "accusations that Vazquez ignored evidence of possible corruption in the provision of hurricane relief." Rosario said in an interview Thursday, "What we're investigating is her alleged denial or refusal to investigate these claims as secretary of justice." USA Today (7/25, Bacon, Ortiz, 10.31M) reports that "Vazquez's close political ties to Rossello, along with her own political history, have many people here viewing her as only a temporary solution." Soon after Rossello's announcement, "#WandaRenuncia began trending on EFTA00147323 Twitter." Carlos A. Suarez Carrasquillo, a lecturer at the University of Florida, said, "Vazquez is unlikely to stay as a permanent governor. Especially if accusations keep piling up and protest against her continue and pick up steam." NBC Nightly NewsVi (7/25, story 7, 1:25, Holt, 127K) reported, "Vazquez inherits a government dealing with a year's long recession, allegations of rampant corruption, and rebuilding after Hurricane Maria." NYTimes Analysis: Puerto Rico Governor's Hubris Led To His Fall. In an analysis, the New York Times (7/25, Mazzei, Robles, 18.61M) says Rossello "misread the anger brewing among his people after years of economic stagnation and broken promises." According to the Times, Rossello "packed his team with trusted friends who in many cases had as little experience in government as he did." In the end, "with crisis enveloping his administration, the governor found himself increasingly isolated, having lost support from the public, the leaders of his political party and many of his own aides, who tendered their resignations." FEMA To Require Puerto Rico To Submit Requests To Access Relief Funds. The Wall Street Journal (7/25, Scurria, Coronado, Acevedo, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports that pointing to the political turmoil in Puerto Rico, the Federal Emergency Management Agency said Thursday it would further restrict the territory's access to federal funds for repairing hurricane damage. Puerto Rico must submit requests to the agency to draw down all funds related to Hurricanes Irma and Maria. WPost: Puerto Ricans Should Continue To Demand Change. In an editorial, the Washington Post (7/25, 14.2M) says Puerto Ricans must "continue to press for change that will root out the corruption and dysfunction that for far too long have marked how the U.S. territory has been governed." According to the Post, "what is needed is an orderly transition, thorough investigation of any wrongdoing and implementation of a system to ensure that federal aid is effectively dispersed to where it is needed." It supports the "appointment of a federal coordinator to oversee relief funds, similar to the efforts undertaken in New Orleans and New York following Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy." FBI Reportedly Probing California Political Consultant's Work. The Monterey County (CA) Weekly (7/25, Duan, 94K) reports, "Before two agents from the FBI's Oakland field office stepped foot on the Central Coast to start questioning people about John Fickas' political work and the money that flows in and out of local politics, they made a call to detectives at the Salinas Police Department. 'They contacted us to get information about the sexual assault investigation,' says Assistant Chief Roberto Filice," who "says the agents indicated they weren't interested in that case, one in which Fickas, a longtime coach at North Salinas High School and a political operative who's been involved in numerous local campaigns, is charged with drugging and raping a woman and a girl." One person the FBI interviewed told the Weekly that "the agents' questions focused entirely on money - how cash was used in local elections and how Fickas moved money around." Former Oyster Bay, New York Supervisor Expected To Plead Guilty To Corruption Charges. Newsday (NY). (7/25, Murphy, 932K) reports, "Former Town of Oyster Bay Supervisor John Venditto is expected to plead guilty to state corruption charges Friday in a deal that will spare the former Republican powerbroker any jail time, sources close to the case said." Venditto, 70, of Massapequa, New York "is expected to admit in Nassau County Court to a felony charge of corrupt use of position or authority and a misdemeanor charge of official misconduct, according to the sources. 'My only comment is that there is an agreement that the pleas will result in a conditional discharge with no fine, no probation, no jail time and no other punishment in any regard,' Manhattan attorney Marc Agnifilo, one of Venditto's lawyers, told Newsday on Thursday." Venditto "served two decades as Oyster Bay's top elected official before resigning in EFTA00147324 January 2017 as a separate federal corruption case was pending against him that ended in May 2018 with his acquittal." FBI Reportedly Probing Online Reputation Management Firms. The CBS Evening NewsVi (7/25, story 9, 4:10, O'Donnell, 251K) reported, "Tonight, a CBS News investigation has captured the attention of the FBI." CBS "We looked into an industry that has been booming in recent years...called online reputation management," and "found that some companies hired to clean up Google searches may be breaking the law." CBS (Axelrod) added, "Reputation management companies...legally try to trick Google by flooding the internet with positive content about their clients," but "some companies employ other, shadowy tactics." According to CBS, "So far, federal prosecutors have sent at least two cases to the FBI." Amid Federal Probe, Oklahoma Charter Schools Operator Will Continue To Get State Funding, Accreditation. The Tulsa (OK) World (7/25, Eger, 205K) reports from Oklahoma City, "The Oklahoma State Department of Education is proceeding as normal with accreditation and state funding for Oklahoma's largest online school operator, despite ongoing state and federal law enforcement investigations." According to the World, "At its monthly meeting, the State Board of Education approved Epic Charter Schools' accreditation for 2019-2020 along with the full slate of public schools across the state," and "afterward, State Superintendent Joy Hofmeister told reporters she had consulted with Ricky Adams, the director of the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, about whether Epic should continue to be included in the distribution of state aid dollars for the new fiscal year when monthly payments begin on Aug. 1. 'The word we heard back (from OSBI) was, "Keep moving as normal," Hofmeister said." FBI Affidavit Alleges Mail, Wire Fraud By Outcome Health, Co-Founders. The Chicago Tribune (7/25, Marotti, Meisner, 2.65M) reports, "The FBI was conducting a criminal investigation of Outcome Health and its executives as recently as November, nearly a year after the company settled a civil lawsuit by big-name investors alleging Outcome Health and its co-founders committed fraud to secure almost $500 million in funding." According to the Tribune, "An affidavit for a warrant to search a company laptop, sought in November 2018, was briefly unsealed Wednesday in federal court in Chicago and contains allegations that there was 'probable cause to believe' co-founders Rishi Shah and Shradha Agarwal and other employees 'conspired to commit wire fraud...and committed mail and wire fraud." The Tribune adds, "No charges have been filed against Outcome Health, Shah or Agarwal," and "it was unclear if the federal investigation is continuing, but the U.S. attorney's office moved quickly to reseal the affidavit for the search warrant on the same day." North Carolina Mega-Donor's PAC Forfeited $475,000 To Federal Authorities. WRAL-TV Raleigh, NC (7/25, Fain, 338K) reports from Raleigh, North Carolina, "A political action committee funded by mega-donor Greg Lindberg, and specifically mentioned in Lindberg's federal bribery indictment, forfeited more than $475,000 to the U.S. Department of Justice shortly after the indictment was filed, new campaign finance records show." According to WRAL- TV, "N.C. Growth and Prosperity is a PAC that Lindberg and his team created last year, and its political purpose was never publicly clear," but "the treasurer was John Palermo, a Lindberg associate indicted by a federal grand jury in March along with Lindberg, then-North Carolina Republican Party Chairman Robin Hayes and another Lindberg associate named John Gray." WRAL-TV adds, "All four are accused of trying to funnel bribe money to state Insurance Commissioner Mike Causey, who was cooperating with federal investigators." All four "have pleaded not guilty, and a trial is tentatively slated for September." FBI Probing Possible Insider Trading At Long Island Iced Tea Corp. EFTA00147325 Quartz (7/25, Detrixhe, Rohrlich, 368K) reports, "Even during the heady days of the epic bitcoin bubble in 2017, Long Island Iced Tea Corp.'s pivot to blockchain was a particularly brash ploy to latch onto the crypto hype," and "more than a year later, court records show that authorities are still digging into what they believe was a sophisticated insider trading operation designed to supercharge the stock's rise." According to Quartz, "The beverage company's stock skyrocketed nearly 300% when it said it was changing its name to Long Blockchain on Dec. 21, 2017, and indicated that it was 'shifting its primary corporate focus' from tea to distributed-ledger technology," and "since then, the Farmingdale, New York-based company has been delisted from the Nasdaq stock market and investigated by two US financial regulators, with authorities poring over evidence from recorded phone calls and a hacked 'Phone." US Finds Potential Fraud In Student Loan Repayment Programs. The AP (7/25, Binkley) reports, "Tens of thousands of federal student loan borrowers may be getting their monthly payments lowered by lying about their income and family size, yet the U.S. Education Department is doing little to catch them, according to a report released Thursday by a federal watchdog agency." According to the AP, "Among the most extreme cases reported by the Government Accountability Office are two separate borrowers who claimed to have 93 relatives in their households, along with 3,300 cases in which borrowers said they had no income even though federal data suggest they made $100,000 a year or more. All were approved for lower loan payments." Investigators "were reviewing the Education Department's oversight of its popular income-driven repayment plans, which allow borrowers to pay lower monthly rates based on their incomes and family sizes." Rolls-Royce Defendant Skips $9 Million Bail. In a paywall-protected article, Law360 (7/25, Subscription Publication, 8K) reports, "A Russian man who pled guilty to conspiracy over bribes Rolls-Royce paid to win contracts on a state- owned gas project in Asia has failed to show up for his sentencing, abandoning $9 million in bail and prompting a judge to issue a warrant for his arrest." Vitaly Leshkov, "who had been expected in Ohio federal court Tuesday, was one of two foreign consultants scheduled to be sentenced this week along with an executive and two employees at British engineering firm Rolls-Royce." According to Law 360, "All but one of the defendants were foreign, and those who showed up got relatively lenient sentences, in part for cooperating with prosecutors." Seattle Doctor Charged In Opioid Kickback Scheme. The AP (7/25) reports, "A Seattle pain doctor is facing charges related to a major nationwide kickback scheme involving fentanyl prescriptions." Dr. Rajni Jutla "is accused in an indictment returned in U.S. District Court Wednesday of accepting more than $109,000 in kickbacks between 2012 and 2016 from Arizona-based Insys Therapeutics." Prosecutors "said she took sham speaking fees to more broadly prescribe an oral fentanyl spray approved for a specific type of cancer pain." CYBER DIVISION FBI Probing Ransomware Attack On Collierville, Tennessee. The Memphis (TN) Commercial Appeal (7/25, Kennedy, 338K) reports that the FBI "is investigating after a ransomware attack severely impacted the town of Collierville's computer systems last week, town officials said," and "while the source of the attack has not been identified, spokesperson Jennifer Casey said the hack had little impact on the public." According to the MCA, "City staff discovered the cyber breach the morning of July 18 and have worked around the clock since then to get the city's computer systems back up and running, Casey said." The city "had no direct communication with the hacker, at the direction of the FBI." Casey EFTA00147326 "said the town still had 'limited functionality' on the computer front and that some systems could take several weeks to get back to normal." The Wall Street Journal (7/25, Kamp, Calvert, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports on the growing incidences of ransomware attacks against cities and towns in the US, and said the FBI has noted a growing patterns of attacks against larger enterprises rather than individual users. USA Today: Paying Ransom ware Hackers Only Encourages More Cyberattacks. In an editorial, USA Today (7/25, 10.31M) argues that public officials should not give in to ransomware demands. When it comes to taxpayer dollars, the editorial says, "they should be spent to prevent ransomware attacks," because paying will only result in more attacks and allows hackers to invest in more sophisticated software. In an op-ed for USA Today (7/25, 10.31M), Richard A. Clarke, who was White House counterterrorism coordinator under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, argues that when corporations are hit with a cyberattack, CEOs often choose to pay the hacker because it is the less costly option. He asserts that "we cannot deny mayors the option CEOs have so frequently chosen." Cybersecurity Firm: More Than 23 Million Stolen Credit Cards Are Being Traded On Dark Web. ZDNet (7/25, Osborne, 299K) reports that the cybersecurity firm Sixgill claims that more than 23 million credit and debit cards were available on the dark web in the first half of 2019. The researchers found that almost two thirds of the stolen cards originated in the US, followed by the UK at less than ten percent. Russia was the origin of only 316 cards. Reportedly, "three trading posts accounted for 64 percent of the cards on offer during the first half of 2019" Tech Firms Step Up Fight Against Terrorists Using Platforms To Recruit, Campaign. In a piece for Forbes (7/25, 9.71M), Zak Doffman writes that Facebook wrote in a blog post on Wednesday that "When terrorists misuse the internet...they often upload the same piece of content to multiple platforms to maximize their reach," and "this has allowed the social media giant - along with Google, Microsoft and Twitter under the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism (GIFCT) alliance - to 'more quickly identify and take action against potential terrorist content on our respective platforms." According to Doffman, "In 2018, the alliance reached its intended milestone of assembling 100,000 such hashes," but "in the first half of 2019...the number has already doubled," and "there are now 'more than 200,000 unique hashes in the database,' each of which is described as a digital fingerprint pointing to a known piece of terrorist content." Facebook Removes Fake Accounts From Russia, Thailand, Ukraine, Honduras. Reuters (7/25, Tanakasempipat) reports from Bangkok, Thailand, "Facebook Inc said on Thursday it had erased over 1,800 accounts and pages from Thailand, Russia, Ukraine and Honduras, its latest move to counter deceptive political propaganda and other abuses of its service." Reuters adds, "Across the four countries, a total of 294 accounts, 1,509 pages and 32 groups were taken down for what the company calls 'coordinated inauthentic behavior." Facebook "has been cracking down on such accounts globally after coming under fire from governments and rights groups around the world for not developing tools quickly enough to combat extremist content and propaganda operations. 'We don't see a connection between them, but they all were using networks of fake accounts to mislead people about who they were and what they were doing,' Nathaniel Gleicher, Head of Cybersecurity Policy, told Reuters in a phone briefing." British Cyber Expert To Be Sentenced Today In US For Creating Malware. EFTA00147327 The AP (7/26, Moreno) reports from Milwaukee, "Just as Marcus Hutchins was hailed as a hero for helping stop a worldwide computer virus in May 2017, his criminal past as a malware developer was about to catch up to him." FBI agents "had been investigating the 25-year-old British cybersecurity wunderkind for years," and "less than two months after his claim to fame, they arrested him and accused him of creating malware to steal banking passwords - charges for which he will be sentenced Friday. `It is this darker side of Hutchins' life that brings him before the Court for sentencing in this case,' prosecutors said in a filing ahead of his sentencing hearing in federal court in Milwaukee." Prosecutors "note Hutchins accepted responsibility for his actions during a plea deal in April , and they also gave him credit for his role in finding a `kill switch' to the WannaCry virus ." Judge Hears Arguments In Georgia Voting Machine Lawsuit. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (7/25, Niesse, 895K) reports that US District Judge Amy Totenberg, "who is deciding whether to shut down Georgia's 27,000 electronic voting machines heard testimony Thursday that they flipped votes, lost ballots and posed election security risks." Judge Totenberg "considered a request that she immediately put the state's 17-year-old voting machines out of service for this fall's local elections, which include votes for the Atlanta school board, the Fulton County Commission and city councils across the state." Georgia officials "are already preparing to announce a replacement voting system that would go into use statewide in the March 24 presidential primary," but "the concerned voters and election integrity advocates who sued say Georgia's existing voting machines are fundamentally insecure and susceptible to hacking," and "they also plan to challenge the state's incoming voting machines, which will still use touchscreens but with the added component of printed-out ballots that create a backup of electronic vote counts." The AP (7/25, Brumback) reports that attorneys "for election integrity activists grilled Georgia election officials about cybersecurity measures taken to protect the state's elections infrastructure, seeking Thursday to convince" Judge Totenberg "to order an immediate halt to the state's use of outdated voting machines." Their lawsuit "argues that the paperless touchscreen voting machines Georgia has used since 2002 are unsecure, vulnerable to hacking and can't be audited," and "it seeks statewide use of hand-marked paper ballots." Brazilian President's Cellphone Hacked Amid Scandal Intrigue. The Washington Post (7/25, Lopes, 14.2M) reports, "Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro's cellphone was hacked as part of an operation that also targeted senior members of his government, Brazil's justice ministry said on Thursday." Four men "have been arrested on suspicion of having broken into the cellphones of several cabinet ministers and hundreds of judges and prosecutors. `They are wasting their time with me,' Bolsonaro told reporters on Thursday." On Twitter, "he called the hacks `a grave attack against Brazil and its institutions' that must be punished, and said he has never discussed sensitive or national security issues on his cellphone." The Post adds, "No information from Bolsonaro's phone has yet to appear publicly, but the arrests widen a scandal that has challenged the president's mandate as a self- proclaimed crusader against corruption." Attempting To Define Cyber Command's Future Role. Fifth Domain Cyber (7/25, Pomerleau) reports on the evolution and outlook for Cyber Command. It is "an organization whose workforce and capabilities have grown rapidly, but whose future remains uncertain." Some experts have noted that the Department of Defense "isn't operating in domestic networks, but rather trying to thwart attacks before they get to the US." However, others "contend that the new approach and authorities might embolden decision makers to rely on cyberwarriors for a new host of problems." Leaders at Army Cyber Command "have hinted that they want the organization shift to be something along the lines of Army Information Warfare Command." Cyber Command's current leader, Gen. Paul Nakasone, "had EFTA00147328 previously testified in 2018 to Congress that during his most recent assignment leading the cyber offensive against ISIS that information operations were the most eye-opening." Some in the national security community "have cautioned that cyber operations are being viewed too narrowly. Rather, it should be considered under a larger umbrella of information operations." Opinion: Appropriate Language And Rhteroic Critical For Framing Problems By Military Professionals. In an op-ed in Fifth Domain Cyber (7/25), University of Utah Professors of Communication and Argumentation Sean Lawson and Michael K. Middleton write that, in a recent study, "we examined uses of the Pearl Harbor metaphor in the United States cybersecurity debate from its earliest appearance in 1991 until just before the Russian cyberattack on the 2016 US presidential election." They contend the "continued reliance on cyber Pearl Harbor-like doom scenarios to frame our thinking has had real, negative impacts. Constant worry about such doomsday scenarios has clouded our ability to perceive actual threats. There is a growing chorus of experts who claim that this is precisely what occurred in the run-up to Russia's 2016 attacks." They argue that "the importance of language and rhetoric for appropriately framing and responding to problems is embraced by military professionals and academics alike. Hyperbolic analogies like cyber Pearl Harbor are not only inadequate, but may actually be harmful to our ability to engage with the cyber threats we face today." NSA's Cybersecurity Directorate Selects Leadership. CyberScoop (7/25, Vavra) reports an NSA spokesman said Neal Ziring "will be the Cybersecurity Directorate's technical director." Dave Frederick "will be the new deputy director." In addition to the roles of director, technical director, deputy director, and chief of staff, Neuberger and her team "still have a lot of personnel questions before the directorate starts operating in October." The NSA has not "determined the number of people that will comprise the directorate in all, although it will be 'sizable,' according to the spokesperson." Congress Debating Which Agency Should Manage Cyberthreats To US Oil And Gas Pipelines. E&E Publishing (7/25, Sobczak, Subscription Publication) reports Congress is attempting to decide which agency should have authority over monitoring cyberthreats to US oil and gas pipelines. Coats "warned in a threat assessment early this year that China has the ability to bring down an American gas pipeline for 'days to weeks' through cyber means." Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-AZ) , the top Republican on the House Homeland Security Subcommittee on Transportation and Maritime Security, "has called securing pipeline networks a 'critically important task and sought additional authority for TSA's pipeline program, including a legal basis for borrowing personnel from other DHS agencies." Another bill from Reps. Fred Upton (R- MI) and David Loebsack (D-IA) "would shift some gas pipeline focus to DOE, by directing the agency 'to establish policies and procedures to coordinate federal agencies, states, and the energy sector' handling of gas distribution and transmission security." LABORATORY DNA Evidence Links Maryland Man To 1999 Kidnapping Of 10-Year-Old Girl. The Baltimore Sun (7/25, 1.33M) reports, "Timothy D. Nelson Jr. pleaded guilty Thursday in the Johnstown, Pennsylvania, federal courthouse and agreed to a deal that will likely result in a 30- year sentence" for kidnapping and sexually assaulting a 10-year-old girl in 1999. Reportedly, "FBI agent Robert Jones says the child was able to help investigators recover a discarded paper bag and napkins that eventually linked Nelson to the crime." EFTA00147329 WESA-FM Pittsburgh (7/25, Press, 4K) says the "50-year-old from Cumberland, Maryland, is admitting he abducted the girl in Cairnbrook, Pennsylvania, took her to West Virginia and assaulted her before releasing the child." The AP (7/25) and KDKA-TV Pittsburgh (7/25, 144K) also reported on this. LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES FBI Phoenix Warns Of Phone Stammers Posing As Federal Agents. KTVK-TV Phoenix (7/25, 302K) reports, "The FBI office in Phoenix is warning the public about an 'impersonation' phone scam that could be targeting Arizona residents." FBI agents "say that during the scam, a caller pretends to be an FBI special agent, asks for money, and threatens to arrest the person if money isn't sent." KTVK-TV adds, "In one instance reported in Tucson this month, a victim reported receiving a phone call from someone who claimed to be an FBI employee." The caller "told the victim that he had an arrest warrant and that he would be arrested if he didn't send money," and "other calls followed from criminals claiming to be affiliated with the FBI. 'These claims are false and the calls are not real,' reads a statement from the FBI office in Phoenix." Barr Announces Five Child Murderers In Federal Custody Will Be Executed. ABC World News TonightVI (7/25, story 9, 0:20, Muir, 597K) reported the Administration has "announced the federal government will resume executing prisoners awaiting the death penalty for the first time in 16 years." The AP (7/25, Balsamo, Long) reports Attorney General Barr has instructed the Bureau of Prisons to "resume executing federal death-row inmates...ending an informal, two-decade moratorium." The first five men to be executed are "all accused of murdering children." Barr is quoted as saying, "The Justice Department upholds the rule of law - and we owe it to the victims and their families to carry forward the sentence imposed by our justice system." The AP says President Trump "has spoken often - and sometimes wistfully - about capital punishment and his belief that executions serve as both an effective deterrent and appropriate punishment for some crimes, including mass shootings and the killings of police officers." Bloomberg (7/25, Sobczyk, Stohr, 4.73M) reports the Justice Department said in a statement Thursday the inmates were "convicted of murdering, and in some cases torturing and raping, the most vulnerable in our society - children and the elderly." The Washington Post (7/25, Barrett, Berman, 14.2M) reports that DO) "has scheduled executions in December and January for the following prisoners: Daniel Lewis Lee, for the killing of a family of three, including an 8-year-old girl; Lezmond Mitchell for the killing of a 63-year-old and her 9-year-old granddaughter; Wesley Ira Purkey for the rape and murder of a 16-year-old girl and the murder of an 80-year-old woman; Alfred Bourgeois for molesting and killing his 2-year-old daughter; and Dustin Lee Honken, for shooting and killing five people, including two children." According to Reuters (7/25, Lynch), "Early in the Trump administration, former Attorney General Jeff Sessions ordered the Federal Bureau of Prisons to examine what steps might be required to resume the use of the death penalty," and in March 2018, Sessions "also called on federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty when bringing cases against drug dealers and traffickers as part of a strategy to help combat the opioid crisis." The New York Times (7/25, Benner, 18.61M) reports that prosecutors "still seek the death penalty in some federal cases, including for Dylann S. Roof, an avowed white supremacist who gunned down nine African-American churchgoers in 2015, and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the Boston Marathon bomber. But the federal government has only executed only three inmates since it reinstated the death penalty in 1988, including the Oklahoma City bomber Timothy J. McVeigh." On the CBS Evening NewsVi (7/25, story 4, 1:50, O'Donnell, 251K), Jeff Pegues reported, "One reason for the federal moratorium was concerns the three-drug cocktail administered EFTA00147330 during lethal injections was leading to botched executions." The Justice Department said on Thursday "that it would use a single drug, pentobarbital, going forward." The AP (7/25, Wu) reports, "Executions on the federal level have long been rare. The government has put to death only three defendants since restoring the federal death penalty in 1988, the most recent of which occurred in 2003, when Louis Jones was executed for the 1995 kidnapping, rape and murder of a young female soldier." Robert Dunham, "the executive director of the nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center, said he was concerned the process for resuming executions was rushed. 'The federal government hasn't carried out any executions in 15 years and so that raises serious questions about the ability to carry out the executions properly,' he said." Trump Calls Dousing Attacks On NYPD Officers "Unacceptable" And "Tragic." The New York Post (7/25, Marsh, Feis, 4.57M) reports President Trump on Thursday "waded into the slew of recent water-bucket attacks on NYPD cops, slamming" New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio "for letting the lawlessness unfold on his watch." Trump tweeted, "We love our Law Enforcement Officers all around this great Country. What took place in NYC with water being tossed on NYPD officers was a total disgrace. It is time for @NYCMayor @BilldeBlasio to STAND UP for those who protect our lives and serve us all so well ..." In another tweet, Trump added, "... What took place was completely unacceptable, and will not be tolerated. Bill de Blasio should act immediately!" When he was asked on Fox News' Hannity (7/25, 535K) about the water dousing attacks, Trump said, "It's a bad mayor, probably the worst mayor in the history of New York City. He has done a bad job and now he is running for president. The people can't even believe it. He's a horrible mayor. The policemen and women cannot stand him. They don't respect him. ... I thought that was tragic, watching that scene a couple of days ago. When I first saw it, I couldn't believe it." HUD Secretary Carson was asked on Fox News' The Story (7/25) about the recent incident in New York City in which buckets of water were thrown at police officers. Carson said, "There's no question that people do what they think they're going to get away with and I think it's incumbent upon all the leadership of every city to make it clear that they're not going to tolerate anarchy and you're certainly not going to tolerate attacks on the police. Recognizing that these are people who put their lives on the line every day. Are there bad apples among

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