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Mobile version and searchable archives available at fbi.bulletinintelligence.com.
;
.IFBI News Briefing
DATE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 2020 6:30 AM EDT
TODAY'S TABLE OF CONTENTS
• Chicago Police Fired Upon Amid Widespread Looting.
PROTESTS
• Trump Urges Oregon To Deploy National Guard In Portland.
• Seattle City Council Votes To Cut Back Police Department Funding.
• Judge Releases Full Body Camera Videos In George Floyd Case.
• DC Police Union Moves To Block Mandatory Release Of Body Camera Footage.
• Minnesota Nonprofit That Received Donations From Biden Staff Bailing Out Violent Criminals.
• Ahead Of November, Republicans Look To Stoke BLM Backlash.
• NYTimes Analysis: Protesters Increasingly Targeting Officials' Homes.
• Conservatives File Free-Speech Lawsuits Over Pro-Police Street Murals.
• Trump Thanks Secret Service After Shooting Incident Outside White House.
• DO) Seeks More Time To Decide On Tsarnaev Appeal.
• New York Man Pleads Guilty To Attempting To Support ISIS.
• Senate Panel Subpoenas FBI Records On 2016 Russia Probe.
• Senate Panel Subpoenas FBI Records On 2016 Russia Probe.
• DC Circuit To Hear Oral Arguments In Michael Flynn Case Tuesday.
• Former Student Says Halper Predicted Flynn's Ouster.
• Chinese Research Who Hid In US Consulate In San Francisco Pleads Not Guilty.
• IC-Funded Venture Developing Tool To Monitor "Unsavory" Online Speech.
• Pentagon Seeks 30 Days To Continue Review Of )EDI Cloud Contract Bids.
• Space Force Releases Capstone Doctrine.
• Editorial: US "Must Unite" To Fight Foreign Electoral Interference.
• US, EU Evaluating Privacy Shield Follow-up Following EU Ruling.
• FBI Releases Surveillance Photos In Probe Of Kentucky Woman's Disappearance.
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• Two Philadelphia Men Face Trial After Alleged Armored Truck Heist.
• FBI Investigating Carjacking In Michigan.
• Continuing Coverage: FBI Searching For Missing Georgia Woman.
• New Jersey Men Indicted Over Bank Robberies.
• Indiana Man Charged With Enticement Of Minor.
• Illinois Man Sentenced Over FBI Death Threat.
• FBI Investigating Illinois Bank Robbery.
• New York Fugitive Placed On FBI Most Wanted List.
• Idaho Men Charged In Connection To Bank Robberies.
• New Jersey Police Officer Charged With Falsifying Information On Search Warrant.
• California AG Seeks To Free Woman Charged With Murder After Meth Found In Stillborn Baby.
• Documents Unsealed In Legal Battle Between Dershowitz, Epstein Accuser.
• Montana "Scales Back" Search For Missing Man.
• Pennsylvania Synagogue Vandalized.
• Colorado Man Sentenced Over Threats Against New Mexico Officials.
• FBI Investigating California Bank Robbery.
• Oklahoma Men Charged With Murder, Bank Fraud.
• Drug Trafficker Sentenced To More Than Six Years In Prison.
• Drug Case Defendant Gets 30-Month Prison Sentence.
• Georgia Resident Gets 30-Year Prison Sentence For Cocaine Trafficking.
• Border Patrol Agent Facing Drug Charges.
• Ally Of Ohio House Speaker Contributed To Campaigns, Supported FirstEnergy.
• FBI Arrests Two In Probe Of Wisconsin Moving Company.
• Minnesota Man Is Third Charged In Probe Of Magazine Sales Scam.
• Former Texas Southern University Law School Employee Charged With Stealing Funds.
• Federal Prosecutors Recommend Probation For Ex-Rep. Hayes.
• Michigan Woman Defrauded By Fake FBI Employee.
• Massachusetts Man Pleads Guilty To Wire Fraud In Foreign Student Recruitment Case.
CYBER DIVISION
• White House Announces Plans For Spectrum Auction To Step Up 5G Growth.
• Microsoft Faces "Complex Technical Challenges" From TikTok Carveout.
• Senators Seek To Include National Cyber Director In 2021 NDAA.
• US Cyber Command Employing Unclassified Networks "To Fight Election Interference."
• FBI Among Those Monitoring Iranian "Fox Kitten" Hacking Group.
LABORATORY
• North Dakota Authorities Hope New Science Can Help ID Man Found Dead In 1982.
• Gun Seizures Are Up At US Airports.
OTHER FBI NEWS
• Wray Taps Jones As FBI General Counsel.
• White-Collar Prosecutions In Decline During Trump Administration.
• Barr: Left Believes In "Tearing Down the System."
• Trump: Pelosi And Schumer Ready For Stimulus Deal After Executive Orders.
• Fauci "Cautiously Optimistic" A Vaccine Will Be Available In Early 2021.
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• Fauci Hopeful Rapid Testing Will Soon Be Widely Available.
• Fauci: It Is Possible To Get Virus To A Controlled Level.
• Cuomo Dismisses Calls For Probe Of Nursing Home Deaths.
• NYTimes Analysis: Critics Fear FDA's Hahn Unable To Withstand Political Pressure.
• Federal Officials Undertaking Vaccine Distribution Pilot Program.
• Officials Struggling To Address Racial Disparities In COVID-19 Information, Testing.
• Trump Urges Universities Not To Cancel Football Season.
• Top California Health Official Resigns Amid Testing Backlog Controversy.
• Fauci Calls For Universal Mask Wearing In Schools.
• Parents, Administrators Facing Difficult Choices About Reopening Schools.
• Trump Says 1918 Spanish Flu "Probably Ended" World War II.
• Top Tech Firms Challenge Trump's Temporary Ban On Foreign Workers.
• White House Weighs Plan To Block Infected Citizens, Permanent Residents From Entering US.
• White House: Kodak Loan Will Not Go Forward Until Allegations Of Wrongdoing Cleared.
• Some Grocers Concerned New Coronavirus Cases May Cause New Round Of Product Scarcity.
• Federal Deficit Down In July After Record IRS Tax Collection.
• Pompeo's Wife To Join Him On Trip To Europe.
• Democrats Concerned USPS Changes Could Impair By-Mail Voting.
• Puerto Rico Supreme Court Considering Emergency Petition Over Botched Primary.
• Trump Lawyers Seek Details Of Manhattan DA's Investigation.
• Azar Praises Taiwan's Coronavirus Response.
• Spain Defends Pandemic Response As Case Numbers Overtake Britain.
• Poor Dying In Brazil At Higher Rate Than Wealthy.
• Craft Calls For UN To Extend Iran Arms Embargo.
• Pakistani Ambassador Not Ruling Out Another War With India Over Kashmir.
• Trump Asks WTO To End China's "Developing Nation" Status.
• Trump Postpones G7 Summit Until After Election.
• WTimes: Biden Likely To Cancel Trump's Foreign Policy Initiatives If Elected.
• State Department: Pompeo Cleared In Emergency Saudi Arms Sale.
• Lebanese Government Resigns Amid Protests Over Beirut Explosion.
• Lukashenko Warns Against Protests Over Contested Belarus Election Results.
• Study Finds Antarctic Ice Shelves Melting Faster Than They're Being Replenished.
THE BIG PICTURE
• Headlines From Today's Front Pages.
WASHINGTON'S SCHEDULE
• Today's Events In Washington.
Chicago Police Fired Upon Amid Widespread Looting.
The AP (8/10, Babwin) reports that "hundreds of people descended on downtown Chicago early
Monday following a police shooting on the city's South Side, with vandals smashing the
windows of dozens of businesses and making off with merchandise, cash machines and
anything else they could carry." Police Superintendent David Brown "told reporters that the
Sunday afternoon shooting of the man who had opened fire on officers apparently prompted a
social media post that urged people form a car caravan and converge on the business and
shopping district. ... Over several hours, police made more than 100 arrests and 13 officers
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were injured." Bloomberg (8/10, Singh, 4.73M) reports "a civilian and a security guard" were
shot, according to Superintendent Brown.
On the CBS Evening NewsVi (8/10, story 6, 1:15, Brennan, 4.37M), Adriana Diaz
reported, "There was chaos and looting along Chicago's famed Magnificent Mile and other areas
overnight. They broke into ATMs and emptied shelves at this Walgreens. The coordinated effort
followed a police shooting of a 20-year-old who allegedly opened fire first, says Superintendent
David Brown."
According to the New York Times (8/10, Al, Bosman, Hauser, Diaz, 18.61M), "The
eruption of violence unnerved a city that is already on edge. Chicago, like many other cities
across the country, has seen a spike in gun crimes this summer." Mayor Lori Lightfoot,
"appearing at a morning news conference, made it clear that she saw no connection between
the unrest overnight and what she described as a `righteous uprising' after the killing of George
Floyd in Minneapolis police custody in May."
ABC World News TonightVi (8/10, story 4, 1:41, Muir, 7.2M) likewise reported, "Mayor Lori
Lightfoot saying this wasn't a righteous protest, instead calling it straight up felony criminal
conduct." The Chicago Sun-Times (8/10, 875K) reports "Lightfoot and her police superintendent
defended the cops and blamed Cook County prosecutors for being soft on looters who'd been
arrested in late May and early June, setting the stage for the violence." State's Attorney Kim
Foxx, however, "responded that she's prosecuting looters to the fullest extent of the law and
said Lightfoot is oversimplifying the issue."
The Chicago Tribune (8/11, Crepeau, Hinkel, 2.65M) reports Foxx, "who is no stranger to
accusations that she is soft on crime, flatly rejected that narrative at a news conference
Monday." From late May to mid-June, roughly 325 people were arrested on felony charges
"related to the demonstrations and civil unrest that followed the murder of George Floyd," her
office said in a statement Monday.
The Washington Post (8/10, Guarino, Elfrink, Armus, 14.2M) reports Illinois Gov. J.B.
Pritzker (D) "told reporters that the state police were dispatched last night." Said Pritzker,
"Anything and everything we are asked to do, we will be helpful."
The Chicago Tribune (8/10, Zumbach, Marotti, Elejalde-Ruiz, Ori, 2.65M) reports that
"downtown business owners still struggling during the coronavirus pandemic were scrambling to
board up broken windows and take stock of damage" after Monday's vandalism and looting. The
Chicago Sun-Times (8/10, Spielman, 875K) similarly reports "businesses that survived the stay-
at-home shutdown and sustained heavy losses during the looting in late May triggered by the
death of George Floyd may be reluctant to rebuild for fear they won't be protected."
On NBC Nightly NewsVi (8/10, story 5, 2:00, Holt, 6.1M), Gabe Gutierrez reported,
"Across the country, it's been an increasingly violent summer. ... But in Chicago, where the
Trump Administration sent in federal agents last month to help investigate crimes, the violence
continues." The Wall Street Journal (8/10, Barrett, Ailworth, Subscription Publication, 7.57M)
and the Washington Examiner (8/10, Giaritelli, 448K), among other news outlets, also report
the violence overnight on Monday.
Analysis: Foxx Has Dropped 29.9% Of Felony Charges During Her Tenure. The
Chicago Tribune (8/10, Jackson, Lighty, Marx, Richards, 2.65M) reports Cook County State
Attorney Kim Foxx "is dropping felony cases involving charges of murder and other serious
offenses at a higher rate than her predecessor, according to a Tribune analysis that comes amid
a growing debate over criminal justice reform." During Foxx's first three years at the post, "her
office dropped all charges against 29.9% of felony defendants, a dramatic increase over her
predecessor, the Tribune found. For the last three years of Anita Alvarez's tenure, the rate was
19.4%." In an interview, "Foxx did not dispute the Tribune's findings but said her office's higher
rate of dropped felony cases gives an incomplete picture of her commitment to keeping the
public safe."
EFTA00149848
PROTESTS
Trump Urges Oregon To Deploy National Guard In Portland.
President Trump on Monday tweeted "Portland, which is out of control, should finally, after
almost 3 months, bring in the National Guard. The Mayor and Governor are putting people's
lives at risk. They will be held responsible. The Guard is ready to act immediately. The
Courthouse is secured by Homeland!"
Noting the President's tweet, the New York Post (8/10, Moore, Nelson, 4.57M) reports it
came as protests in the city "continued over the weekend as rioters set fires outside a police
union building and lobbed fireworks at police officers, injuring at least two."
Seattle City Council Votes To Cut Back Police Department Funding.
The Washington Examiner (8/10, Mastrangelo, 448K) reports the Seattle City Council "approved
steep cuts to the city's police department but avoided the 50% scale back in funding social
justice activists had sought." The council voted 7-1 to approve "a spending plan that will cut the
pay of top police officers while eliminating the Navigation Team and SWAT unit, according to
several reports." It would also cut the department's "$400 million budget by around $3 million."
Judge Releases Full Body Camera Videos In George Floyd Case.
CBS Evening NewsVi (8/10, story 5, 1:43, Brennan, 4.24M) reports in Minneapolis on Monday,
"a judge released the full body cam videos from two former officers charged with aiding and
abetting murder in the death of George Floyd. The footage raises new and troubling questions
about how Floyd was treated." CBS's Mola Lenghi said the newly released video shows Floyd
being "loaded into a ambulance. Aid is given to the unconscious Floyd one minute and 18
seconds after he is placed into the medical unit. ... The lifesaving attempts came after Floyd
lost consciousness."
DC Police Union Moves To Block Mandatory Release Of Body Camera Footage.
Reuters (8/10) reports the Washington, DC police union said Monday it "asked a court to block
the mandatory release of body camera footage and names of police officers involved in
shootings." In a statement, the union said, "The release of the body-camera footage and names
of officers will unjustly malign and permanently tarnish the reputation and good name of any
officer that is later cleared of misconduct concerning the use of force."
Minnesota Nonprofit That Received Donations From Biden Staff Bailing Out Violent
Criminals.
Fox News (8/10, Olson, 27.59M) reports on its website that a Minnesota nonprofit "that saw a
huge windfall in donations during the protests and riots that followed the death of George
Floyd" has been "putting up money to bail out people charged with serious violent crimes,
including sexual assault, attempted murder and murder." A FOX 9 report shows "that among
the people helped by the Minnesota Freedom Fund (MFF) - which received donations from a
number of Joe Biden campaign staffers as it saw a $35 million fundraising windfall in the weeks
after Floyd's death - are Darnika Floyd, who was charged with second-degree murder," and
Christopher Boswell, "who is facing charges of sexual assault and kidnapping."
Ahead Of November, Republicans Look To Stoke BLM Backlash.
Politico (8/10, Barran-Lopez, Thompson, 4.29M) reports that "facing possible electoral calamity,
Republicans are now turning to a familiar playbook: stoking fear by trying to redefine the Black
Lives Matter movement as a radical leftist mob looking to sabotage the white, suburban
lifestyle." Republicans are using "two lines of attack: the Trump administration, candidates in
safe red seats and right-wing social media channels seek to label the entire movement 'Marxist'
EFTA00149849
and anti-family as they try to energize their conservative base." Republicans running in swing
districts and states, meanwhile, are "tying their Democratic opponents to activists' demands to
defund police departments."
NYTimes Analysis: Protesters Increasingly Targeting Officials' Homes.
The New York Times (8/10, Baker, Bogel-Burroughs, 18.61M) reports that as Seattle "was
exploring a proposal to cut 50 percent of the police department's budget to promote racial
justice and alternatives to policing last month...Debora Juarez, the first enrolled Native
American on the Seattle City Council, was not yet willing to throw her support behind such a
steep cut without a plan for how to carry it out." Activists then "decided to take their protest"
outside Ms. Juarez's home. Public protests are "becoming more direct, more personal, and for
some of its targets, more frightening."
Conservatives File Free-Speech Lawsuits Over Pro-Police Street Murals.
The Washington Times (8/10, Richardson, 492K) reports Scott LoBaido, who painted a "pro-
police" mural on Hylan Boulevard in Staten Island, "said Monday he will pursue legal action
after the New York City Department of Transportation ordered him to remove his handiwork."
LoBaido "insists his pro-police message has every bit as much right to adorn the streets as the
Black Lives Matter murals embraced by Mayor Bill de Blasio." Like LoBaido, "conservatives
seeking to paint pro-police, pro-life and other right-tilting messages on America's streets are
running into speed bumps from local officials, even those who allow massive Black Lives Matter
murals," and are filing lawsuits in response.
Trump Thanks Secret Service After Shooting Incident Outside White House.
The CBS Evening NewsVi (8/10, Story 2, 2:10, Brennan, 4.37M) reported on "a rare security
breach at the White House," as "moments after beginning his daily coronavirus briefing with
reporters on live television, President Trump was escorted out of the room by an agent who
whispered in his ear." CBS (Weijia Jiang) added the President "abruptly left his news conference
after shots were fired outside the White House," prompting Secret Service "to clear the
grounds." NBC Nightly NewsVI (8/10, lead story, 2:34, Kristen Welker, 6.23M) showed the
President saying upon his return to the podium, "It seems that the person was shot by Secret
Service. So we'll see what happens."
ABC World News TonightVi (8/10, lead story, 4:01, Muir, 7.2M) noted Trump also said,
"There was a shooting outside of the White House. And seems to be very well under control. I'd
like to thank the Secret Service for doing their always quick and very effective work, but there
was an actual shooting and somebody's been taken to the hospital. I don't know the condition
of the person." ABC's Mary Bruce added that "a senior Administration official tells us this
happened right at 17th and Pennsylvania Avenue, just outside of the White House, just as the
President was beginning his briefing. Our Kyra Phillips who was in the room said she heard a
shot fired and a senior official tells us the suspect opened fire on a non-White House employee."
Fox News (8/10, Pappas, 27.59M) reports "the Secret Service later tweeted: 'The Secret
Service can confirm there has been an officer involved shooting at 17th Street and Pennsylvania
Ave. Law enforcement officials are on the scene. More information to follow."
The Washington Post (8/10, Williams, 14.2M) reports Thomas Sullivan, chief of the
Uniformed Division of the Secret Service, said a "51-year-old man had approached an officer
posted near 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW around 5:50 p.m. and said he had a
weapon." Sullivan says "the man...withdrew an object from his clothing" and "crouched into a
'shooter's stance.' The officer shot him, striking him in the torso, Sullivan said." USA Today
(8/10, Fritze, Jackson, Subramanian, 10.31M), the Washington Times (8/10, Al, Boyer, 492K)
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and the New York Times (8/10, Baker, 18.61M), among other news outlets, also cover the story
this morning.
DO) Seeks More Time To Decide On Tsarnaev Appeal.
The AP (8/10) reports from Boston, "Federal prosecutors said Monday that they need more time
to decide whether to ask an appeals court to reconsider the case of Boston Marathon bomber
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, whose death sentence was thrown out over concerns over about the jury
selection process." The Justice Department "urged the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to give
prosecutors until Sept. 14 to file a petition asking the full court to hear the case. They currently
have until Friday to file a petition for rehearing. 'The process of determining whether to seek
further review takes time, particularly in a case of this magnitude, because it requires input
from various components within the Department of Justice. Additional time is needed to make
the decision in this,' DOJ attorney William Glaser wrote in a court filing. The solicitor general will
make the decision, Glaser wrote."
The Boston Herald (8/10, Tiernan, 410K) reports, "Tsarnaev's lawyers did not object,
according to the filing. Prosecutors could be buying time to appeal directly to the Supreme
Court, where they are likely to earn a favorable ruling faster. Legal expert Robert Dunham of
the Death Penalty Information Center said last week the high court 'has been much more pro-
prosecution." The Herald adds, "A jury convicted Tsarnaev in 2015 on 30 counts, including
using a weapon of mass destruction and bombing a public place, for the 2013 bombing that
killed three people and injured 260 more — something his lawyers did not debate. Tsarnaev
was subsequently sentenced to death."
New York Man Pleads Guilty To Attempting To Support ISIS.
The AP (8/10) reports, "A Brooklyn man charged with trying to help the Islamic State group by
encouraging attacks on New York's subway system pleaded guilty Monday in Manhattan federal
court." Zachary Clark, 41, "pleaded guilty to attempting to provide material support to the
Islamic State of Iraq. He faces up to 20 years in prison when he is sentenced on Feb. 9. Acting
U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss said in a release that Clark admitted pledging allegiance to the
terrorist group."
The New York Post (8/10, Feuerherd, 4.57M) reports that Clark, "who uploaded
instructional manuals online about how to conduct lone-wolf terror attacks in New York City
pleaded guilty Monday to attempting to provide material support to ISIS." Clark "entered the
plea in Manhattan federal court after he was arrested last fall for posting manuals such as 'Knife
Attacks' and 'Make a bomb in the kitchen of your Mom' in encrypted chat rooms designed to
recruit new ISIS members. One of the handbooks included maps of the New York City subway
system and writings on how to commit attacks in the Big Apple, according to court papers."
Clark "pledged support to ISIS twice in 2019, including in July when he stated his allegiance to
the former leader of the terror group, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, prosecutors said."
Voice of America (8/10, 48K) reports, "Daryl Johnson, a former senior domestic terrorism
analyst at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, said many al-Qaida affiliates around the
world have been producing online propaganda materials specifically designed to target
Americans. 'They reach out to American audiences and plant ideas on how to conduct attacks
without necessarily acquiring the materials,' Johnson told VOA, adding that 'AQAP published
Inspire Magazine, which was written and packaged for a Western audience, particularly
Americans." Clark's arrest "His arrest was the result of cooperation between the FBI's Joint
Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) and other law enforcement agencies, U.S. officials said. 'Today's
plea by Mr. Clark is yet one more example of the resolve of the FBI's JTTF in New York, and our
many law enforcement partners, to protect this city and our citizens from the danger of lone
wolf attacks,' FBI Assistant Director William F. Sweeney Jr., said in a statement on Monday."
Newsday (NY). (8/10, Planas, 932K) reports, "Officials said Clark called for lone wolf
attacks in New York City after pledging his allegiance to ISIS twice in 2019. Clark first did so in
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July 2019, to ISIS' then-leader Abu Bakar al-Baghdadi. He did so again, officials said, in
October 2019, to ISIS' new leader, Abu Ibrahim al-Hashemi al-Qurayshi, who became the
organization's leader following al-Baghdadi's death. 'Beginning in at least March 2019, Clark
disseminated ISIS propaganda through, among other avenues, encrypted chat rooms intended
for members, associates, supporters, and potential recruits of ISIS,' authorities said. 'Clark's
propaganda included among other things, calls for ISIS supporters to commit lone wolf attacks
in New York City."
Senate Panel Subpoenas FBI Records On 2016 Russia Probe.
Politico (8/10, Swan, 4.29M) reports Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Sen. Ron
Johnson (R-Wis.) "has issued the first subpoena of his Senate probe into the origins of special
counsel Robert Mueller's investigation: to FBI Director Christopher Wray." According to Politico,
the subpoena "demands documents but not testimony. Specifically, it asks for 'all documents
related to the Crossfire Hurricane investigation' - the FBI's counterintelligence probe into
Russian interference in the 2016 US election." Johnson "also released a lengthy letter detailing
the origins of his probe and criticizing the reaction it has garnered from media reports and
Democrats."
Johnson said on Twitter, "Democrats have initiated a coordinated disinformation campaign
in an effort to personally attack myself and Sen. @ChuckGrassley, but this will not obstruct our
investigation. We will find the truth and get answers for the American people." Johnson also
tweeted, "Today, I have released an open letter regarding the Democrats' combative and false
comments regarding my committee's investigation."
The Washington Times (8/10, Sherfinski, 492K) notes Johnson wrote, "Chairman [Charles
E.] Grassley and I will not be deterred by the false accusations despicably being made by
individuals with strong political biases and motivations. ... Our investigation has been, and will
continue to be, undertaken with the greatest integrity and transparency. We intend to
determine and reveal the truth."
The Washington Examiner (8/10, Dunleavy, 448K) reports Johnson also stated,
"Democrats and many in the media have mainly focused their criticism of our investigation on
the Biden component of our oversight. ... They have once again decided to weaponize a false
'Russian disinformation' narrative as a tool for attacking their political opponents."
The Washington Post (8/10, Hamburger, 14.2M) reports the FBI "said in a statement it has
received the subpoena and has 'already been producing documents and information to the
Senate Homeland Security Committee, which are directly responsive to this subpoena. As
always, the FBI will continue to cooperate with the Committee's requests, consistent with our
law enforcement and national security obligations:" The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (8/10,
Gilbert, 632K), among other news outlets, also reports the story.
Senate Panel Subpoenas FBI Records On 2016 Russia Probe.
Politico (8/10, Swan, 4.29M) reports Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Sen. Ron
Johnson (R-WI) "has issued the first subpoena of his Senate probe into the origins of special
counsel Robert Mueller's investigation: to FBI Director Christopher Wray." According to Politico,
the subpoena "demands documents but not testimony. Specifically, it asks for 'all documents
related to the Crossfire Hurricane investigation' - the FBI's counterintelligence probe into
Russian interference in the 2016 US election." Johnson "also released a lengthy letter detailing
the origins of his probe and criticizing the reaction it has garnered from media reports and
Democrats."
Johnson said on Twitter, "Democrats have initiated a coordinated disinformation campaign
in an effort to personally attack myself and Sen. @ChuckGrassley, but this will not obstruct our
EFTA00149852
investigation. We will find the truth and get answers for the American people." Johnson also
tweeted, "Today, I have released an open letter regarding the Democrats' combative and false
comments regarding my committee's investigation."
The Washington Times (8/10, Sherfinski, 492K) notes the subpoena seeks "all records
related to the Crossfire Hurricane investigation" and seeks "all records provided or made
available to the Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Justice for its review." In the
subpoena, Johnson wrote, "Chairman [Charles E.] Grassley and I will not be deterred by the
false accusations despicably being made by individuals with strong political biases and
motivations. ... Our investigation has been, and will continue to be, undertaken with the
greatest integrity and transparency. We intend to determine and reveal the truth."
Fox News (8/10, Singman, 27.59M) reports the subpoena states, "This includes, but is not
limited to, all records provided or made available to the Inspector General of the U.S.
Department of Justice for its review." The subpoena also demands "all records related to
requests" to the General Services Administration or the Office of the Inspector General for the
GSA for "presidential transition records from November 2016 through December 2017." The FBI
must provide "these documents to the committee by Aug. 20 at 5 p.m. Er, according to the
subpoena."
The Daily Caller (8/10, Ross, 716K) says Johnson is "demanding that Wray hand over all
records that the FBI provided the Justice Department's office of the inspector general for its
scathing report on Crossfire Hurricane." Johnson also "announced on Monday that he intends to
subpoena Jonathan Winer, a former State Department official who served as a key liaison
between dossier author Christopher Steele and State Department officials before the 2016
election." Winer "arranged a meeting for Steele at Foggy Bottom in October 2016 and was also
a background source for multiple news articles that contained Steele's unverified allegations of
collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia."
CBS News (8/10, Herridge, 3.68M) reports Johnson said he "decided to begin issuing
subpoenas primarily because of my strong belief that transparency in government is essential
and that the American people have waited too long for the truth."
The Washington Post (8/10, Hamburger, 14.2M) reports the FBI "said in a statement it has
received the subpoena and has `already been producing documents and information to the
Senate Homeland Security Committee, which are directly responsive to this subpoena. As
always, the FBI will continue to cooperate with the Committee's requests, consistent with our
law enforcement and national security obligations."
The AP (8/10, Tucker) reports in a separate statement "on Sunday, the FBI said it was
continuing to cooperate with the Judiciary Committee's investigation." The FBI also "said it had
`surged resources' to be able to continue producing documents to the committee on a rolling
basis."
The Federalist (8/10, Osburn, 126K) points out "the letter also addressed a weekend
Washington Post op-ed by Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., in which he claimed that
`disinformation and deception are gaining a toehold in Congress' as Johnson moves forward
with an investigation `using documents provided to the senator by the son of a former KGB
officer Johnson wrote in response, "This is false. ... Not only have we have repeatedly and
publicly denied it, no one has presented evidence to the contrary - nor can they, because there
is none." The Washington Examiner (8/10, Dunleavy, 448K) reports Johnson also stated,
"Democrats and many in the media have mainly focused their criticism of our investigation on
the Biden component of our oversight. ... They have once again decided to weaponize a false
`Russian disinformation' narrative as a tool for attacking their political opponents."
The Wall Street Journal (8/10, Subscription Publication, 7.57M), The Hill (8/10, Carney,
2.98M), Courthouse News (8/10, Rodgers, 2K), National Review (8/10, Evans, 731K), The New
York Post (8/10, Moore, 4.57M), The Washington Examiner (8/10, Dunleavy, 448K), and The
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (8/10, Gilbert, 632K), among other news outlets, also report the
story.
EFTA00149853
Graham: "I'm Going To Find Out Why" FBI "Told The Same Lies" About Steele
Dossier. Fox News (8/10, Halon, 27.59M) reports the FBI under Director Christopher Wray's
"leadership deceived lawmakers on the Senate Intelligence Committee during a 2018 briefing
on the Russia investigation, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham told
'Hannity' Monday, citing a document he obtained from the Department of Justice." Graham said,
"A year after they knew the Russian dossier was no longer reliable, they told the same lies to
the Congress, not just the [FISA) court, as a completely new front of legal liability, and I'm
going to find out what happened." Graham called on FBI Director Christopher Wray to address
why "the Senate Intel Committee was briefed about the dossier and the Russian subsource in
the same fashion that the FISA court was briefed," which Graham called "very misleading."
National Review (8/10, Evans, 731K) also reports.
DC Circuit To Hear Oral Arguments In Michael Flynn Case Tuesday.
Just Security (8/10, Geltzer) reports the DC Circuit will rehear oral arguments in the case
against Michael Flynn "en banc, in this instance in front of ten judges" on Tuesday. The outlet
suggests that key points during the hearing will revolve around: whether judges believe the
court "needs to take the unusual step of intervening now, on the emergency posture of a
mandamus petition, to prevent the district court from proceeding, or can any potential concerns
with how the district court handles the case be addressed later, on ordinary appeal;" the
definition of "leave of court;" the "particularities of the Flynn case and the nature of further
proceedings in the district court;" and if the case should "be reassigned to a different district
judge."
In an op-ed for The Washington Post (8/10, Zolle, 14.2M), Constitutional Accountability
Center appellate counsel Dayna Zolle writes the DC Circuit "should deny Flynn's request to
order the automatic dismissal of his case and should instead allow the district court to consider
the public interest in determining whether dismissal is appropriate. That would serve the
interests of justice, if not of this Justice Department."
In an editorial, The Washington Times (8/10, 492K) writes that "Americans are waiting for
a final resolution that frees Mr. Flynn, a long-suffering public servant. An endless cycle of
prosecution is itself a form of punishment. It should never have happened."
Former Student Says Halper Predicted Flynn's Ouster. The Washington Times
(8/10, Scarborough, 492K) reports that Steven P. Schrage, a "onetime associate of FBI spy
Stefan Halper says the University of Cambridge professor told him that retired Army Lt. Gen.
Michael Flynn was 'unsuitable' for the post of President Trump's national security adviser."
Halper told Schrage, "I don't think Flynn's going to be around long." Halper's comments to
Schrage, who was a doctoral candidate at Cambridge at the time, "were recorded on Jan. 10,
2017, two days before a Washington Post column on Flynn led to his quick White House
dismissal." the Post adds that Schrage "outed himself Sunday as a whistleblower with a post,
'The Spies Who Hijacked America,' on journalist Matt Taibbi's blog."
Former Student Says Halper Predicted Flynn's Ouster.
The Washington Times (8/10, Scarborough, 492K) reports that Steven P. Schrage, a "onetime
associate of FBI spy Stefan Halper says the University of Cambridge professor told him that
retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn was 'unsuitable' for the post of President Trump's national
security adviser." Halper told Schrage, "I don't think Flynn's going to be around long." Halper's
comments to Schrage, who was a doctoral candidate at Cambridge at the time, "were recorded
on Jan. 10, 2017, two days before a Washington Post column on Flynn led to his quick White
House dismissal." the Post adds that Schrage "outed himself Sunday as a whistleblower with a
post, 'The Spies Who Hijacked America,' on journalist Matt Taibbi's blog."
Chinese Research Who Hid In US Consulate In San Francisco Pleads Not Guilty.
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Bloomberg (8/10, Roth, 4.73M) reports, "A Chinese researcher who spent weeks in the
country's consulate in San Francisco before she was arrested by the U.S. on visa fraud charges
pleaded not guilty." Juan Tang, "whose prosecution has helped fuel tension between China and
the U.S., entered her plea Monday in federal court in Sacramento, near where she did cancer
research at University of California at Davis. She is among Chinese scholar visa holders in more
than 25 American cities who the Justice Department suspects of having an 'undeclared
affiliation' with the Chinese military."
IC-Funded Venture Developing Tool To Monitor "Unsavory" Online Speech.
The Washington Times (8/10, Lovelace, 492K) reports the CIA-contracted venture capital fund
In-Q-Tel "in the last six months has begun working on a new investment specifically targeting
speech that is deemed problematic and to identify people who say 'unsavory things' on
websites such as Twitter, Facebook and Reddit, said In-Q-Tel investor Morgan Mahlock."
Speaking at the University of California, Irvine on Friday, Mahlock said, "Can't yet mention the
name, but it is able to detect toxic content online," adding, "in social media forums, for example
on Reddit, or Facebook, or Twitter, it's able to identify people who are saying unsavory things to
others in a nuanced way, understanding the language and the context."
Pentagon Seeks 30 Days To Continue Review Of JEDI Cloud Contract Bids.
NextGov (8/10, Konkel) reports in a court filing Monday, "the Defense Department requested a
30-day extension to issue an award decision in its multibillion-dollar Joint Enterprise Defense
Infrastructure cloud contract." The Defense Department had "planned to award JEDI by Aug. 17
after numerous delays, including a 120-day remand sought by the agency in March to take
corrective action on issues identified in a legal protest by Amazon Web Services after the
Pentagon initially awarded Microsoft the contract in October." According to the filing, DOD has
"recently identified the need to reopen limited discussions related to certain aspects of the
offerors' pricing proposals." The filing indicates "both companies would have another chance to
submit questions and a revised bid," and that it "anticipates that the re-evaluation process will
be complete by early September."
Space Force Releases Capstone Doctrine.
Breaking Defense (8/10, Hitchens) reports the Space Force's "long-awaited capstone doctrine"
envisions the new service "providing decision-makers with potentially war-winning 'spacepower'
options for attacking enemy satellites in future conflicts." In the foreword of the release, Chief
of Space Operations Gen. Jay Raymond wrote the Space Capstone Publication: Spacepower
"represents our Service's first articulation of an independent theory of spacepower." The new
document is based on earlier documents such as Joint Doctrine 3-14, but in contrast it "sets out
to place military operations in space in a broader context as part of a national spacepower
strategy that includes diplomacy and economic activity." The document lays out what Space
Force calls "three Cornerstone Responsibilities" that it says "form the vital purpose of military
spacepower:" preserving US "Freedom of Action" in space, enabling "Joint Lethality and
Effectiveness," and providing US leaders strategic options in the space realm. Finally, the
doctrine says the service "competencies" require specialization by space warfighters in the
"disciplines" of "Orbital Warfare, Space Electromagnetic Warfare, Space Battle Management,
Space Access and Sustainment, Military Intelligence, Cyber Operations, and
Engineering/Acquisitions."
Editorial: US "Must Unite" To Fight Foreign Electoral Interference.
In an editorial, The Minneapolis Star Tribune (8/10, 1.04M) writes that in the face of electoral
interference and in order to protect "our democracy, America - from the White House to
Congress to the tech sector to everyday citizens - should unite as it would against any external
attack." The Tribune cites a recent statement from William Evanina, director of the National
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Counterintelligence and Security Center, citing the motivations of China, Russia, and Iran in
affecting the 2020 election. The outlet argues a declassification of the "intelligence assessment
on the threat from the three countries would also benefit citizens and Silicon Valley, which must
play its role in resisting disinformation disseminated by Moscow, Beijing, Tehran or elsewhere."
The Tribune concludes election interference "should be acknowledged for what it is - an attack
on the DNA of our democratic way of life."
US, EU Evaluating Privacy Shield Follow-up Following EU Ruling.
Bloomberg (8/10, Chapman, 4.73M) reports the Department of Commerce and "the European
Union have started talks to evaluate the potential for 'an enhanced EU-US Privacy Shield
framework' after the EU's top court threw out the current system for shipping data across the
Atlantic." In a joint statement issued on Monday, Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross and EU
Justice Commissioner Didier Reynders said both sides recognize the "vital importance of data
protection and the significance of cross-border data transfers to our citizens and economies."
FBI Releases Surveillance Photos In Probe Of Kentucky Woman's Disappearance.
The Lexington (KY) Herald-Leader (8/9, Spears, 257K) reports, "The Federal Bureau of
Investigation in Louisville has released new surveillance photos of vehicles related to the
investigation of Crystal Rogers' 2015 disappearance in Nelson County. `The surveillance
photographs ... are ones where we need the public's assistance in identifying the drivers of
those vehicles,' FBI spokesman Timothy Beam told the Herald-Leader Sunday. 'We believe the
drivers of these vehicles may have important information related to Crystal's disappearance."
Rogers "disappeared in Nelson County in July 2015, and the case has since gained national
attention. The FBI was called into Nelson County on July 24 to help the sheriff's office retrieve
possible human remains. Since then, the FBI has become the lead agency on the case." Beam
"reiterated Sunday there was no update on whether or not those remains belonged to Rogers,
but the FBI is now offering a $25,000 reward for information leading to the current
whereabouts of Rogers."
WDRB-TV Louisville, KY (8/10, 179K) reports from Bardstown, Kentucky, "The FBI was
back in Bardstown Monday evening, canvassing a neighborhood in connection with the Crystal
Rogers investigation." The FBI "said they went to Lookout Court in Valley View Estates to talk to
neighbors after receiving multiple tips on the agency's case task force website, though it is
unclear at this time what those tips were and how they relate to the Rogers investigation. The
IRS was also in the neighborhood for the canvass, according to WDRB's Fallon Glick. Agents
spent about 15 minutes at each home talking to residents, who said they did not want to
discuss the conversations with WDRB News out of respect for the family and didn't want to
jeopardize the investigation. This comes less than 24 hours after the agency announced that
they had finished 'it's judicially authorized search activities' in Bardstown and thanked the
Nelson County Sheriff's Office."
Spectrum News 1 Louisville MI 'y (8/10) reports, "FBI Louisville has concluded its search
activities regarding the Crystal Rogers case. As Bardstown waits for answers, the community
sentiment seems to be thankful there are more resources on the more than five-year-old cold
case. 'You need closure. If it were me, I'd want closure. So I think having the FBI or any
resources that can help do that, more power to them. I think it's a good move,'
said Mike
Searci, who is from the area but only moved to Bardstown four years ago." Spectrum News 1
adds, "City council member-at-large, David Dones, said that FBI Louisville's taking over last
week shows there is movement with the cold case. 'There is some hope that some new
information will come out. I think it's all been a positive feel from the community,' Dones told
Spectrum News 1 Kentucky."
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Two Philadelphia Men Face Trial After Alleged Armored Truck Heist.
The Inquirer (PA) (8/10, Dean, 347K) reports, "Two Philadelphia men who attempted to steal
almost half-a-million dollars from armored truck guards during a robbery that turned into a
shootout in University City last year have been indicted on charges that could land them in
prison for life, federal prosecutors said Monday." Jerry Collins, 40, "the alleged getaway driver,
and Tyree Lamont Holmes, 28, who allegedly dropped a money bag and fired on the guards
while fleeing, where indicted on federal armed robbery and firearms charges. They allegedly
targeted a Garda armored truck" on August 1. Collins "was arrested by the FBI last week, while
Holmes was arrested by Philadelphia Police in February. 'This was a risky armed robbery carried
out on a dense and active block in University City,' said Michael J. Driscoll, Special Agent in
Charge of the FBI's Philadelphia Division. 'The robbery crew showed up armed to the teeth to
accost Garda personnel, prompting a barrage of gunfire."
FBI Investigating Carjacking In Michigan.
WXYZ-TV Detroit (8/11, 236K) reports that the FBI Detroit Field Office and the Detroit Police
Department "are asking for the public's help identifying a suspect wanted in a carjacking and an
attempted carjacking at a BP gas station on West Eight Mile Road." Police "say the suspect
pointed a handgun at the victim's head and demanded the keys to his black Honda Accord
before fleeing south on Warrington."
Continuing Coverage: FBI Searching For Missing Georgia Woman.
NBC News (8/10, 6.14M) reports that the FBI has joined the search for Leila Cavett, whose
two-year-old son was found alone on July 26. Cavett's sisters "told NBC affiliate WTVJ that Leila
lives in Dawsonville, Georgia, but had been staying with family in Atlanta, and doesn't know
anyone in Florida."
New Jersey Men Indicted Over Bank Robberies.
My Central Jersey (8/10, 24K) reports Jaime Fontanez and Vincent Chan-Guillen "have been
indicted by a federal grand jury in connection with allegedly committing multiple convenience
and liquor store armed robberies in Union and Middlesex counties between August 2018 and
February 2019." They "were previously arrested on a criminal complaint for this conduct on Feb.
21, 2019."
Indiana Man Charged With Enticement Of Minor.
WFIE-TV Evansville, IN (8/10, Lyman, 35K) reports Roy Eugene Morrow, Jr "is accused of
traveling to Saline County, Illinois, to have sex with a child," who was actually an undercover
federal agent. He was arrested in July, when he arrived at the predetermined location.
Illinois Man Sentenced Over FBI Death Threat.
WFLD-TV Chicago (8/10, 42K) reports that a federal jury "has convicted [Robert Haas] of
threatening on social media to kill an FBI task force officer." He "threatened the officer in 2019
after the officer questioned him on another threat he allegedly made on a social media site." He
wrote, "I'm not afraid to walk out my door in the morning." He continued, "You should be
however considering you support Jewish terrorism and your anti-American (expletive) is going
to get you killed."
FBI Investigating Illinois Bank Robbery.
The Kendallville IN News Sun (8/10, 23K) reports that the FBI is "seeking information that
would identify three suspects in an armed robbery at a Chase Bank" in Illinois. The suspects
"used a handgun to rob a bank employee who was servicing an ATM."
New York Fugitive Placed On FBI Most Wanted List.
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The Hudson Valley (NY) Post (8/10) reports Eugene Palmer, who "is wanted for allegedly
shooting and killing his daughter-in-law, 39-year-old Tammy Pannirello Palmer, on September
24, 2012," has been placed on the FBI Most Wanted list. The FBI "is offering a reward of up to
$100,000 for information leading directly to the arrest of Palmer."
Idaho Men Charged In Connection To Bank Robberies.
KPVI-TV Idaho Falls, ID (8/10) reports Matayo H. Young and Myron McKinney have been
charged in connection to two bank robberies in Illinois. FBI Gang Response Investigative Team
member Christopher Gootee "allege[d) the first robbery took place at 2:40 p.m. Aug. 3," and he
"allege[d] the second bank robbery took place at 3:30 p.m. Thursday."
New Jersey Police Officer Charged With Falsifying Information On Search Warrant.
The Trentonian (NJ) (8/10, 106K) reports Trenton Police Detective Sgt. David Ordille "faces
termination for lying on a search-warrant affidavit in a high-profile, multi-defendant drug
trafficking case." A federal judge "described Ordille's tactics in obtaining a warrant to search
Wimbush's vehicle as 'affirmative acts of deliberate deception."
California AG Seeks To Free Woman Charged With Murder After Meth Found In
Stillborn Baby.
The New York Post (8/10, Brown, 4.57M) reports California Attorney General Xavier Becerra "is
fighting to free a woman who was charged with murder after her stillborn baby had a high level
of meth - accusing fellow prosecutors of twisting laws meant to protect women." Chelsea
Cheyenne Becker, 26, "has been in custody on $5 million bail since Nov. 10 after the Kings
County District Attorney said her drug use caused the death of the child on Sept. 10 last year."
On Friday, Becerra filed an amicus brief "to support Becker's appeal after it was rejected in
superior court in June." Becerra said that the law being used against her was "intended to
protect pregnant women from harm, not charge them with murder."
Documents Unsealed In Legal Battle Between Dershowitz, Epstein Accuser.
The New York Post (8/10, Feuerherd, 4.57M) reports that new documents have been unsealed
in the "legal battle between Jeffrey Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre and Harvard law professor
Alan Dershowitz." The documents relate, "in part, to Dershowitz's effort to subpoena and
depose billionaire Les Wexner for evidence in his counter suit of Giuffre." Dershowitz "is hoping
to show that Giuffre tried to extort Wexner - the former head of Victoria Secret's parent
company who has ties to multi-millionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein." Dershowitz "is also asking
that Wexner's attorney, John Zeiger, be deposed and be forced to provide documents related to
Wexner's relationship with Epstein accusers."
Montana "Scales Back" Search For Missing Man.
The Great Falls (MT) Tribune (8/10, 114K) reports that Glacier National Park officials "said
Monday they would scale down efforts to find [Barry J. Trager*" who has been "missing since
late July, saying no new clues have been uncovered." Park staff "started a search for Tragen on
July 25 after he did not return to his vehicle parked near Kintla Lake in the North Fork area of
the park."
Pennsylvania Synagogue Vandalized.
The Harrisburg (PA) Patriot-News (8/10, 427K) reports that the FBI is investigating the
vandalizing of Kesher Israel Congregation, which "was defaced sometime Monday morning with
two red swastikas spray painted at the entrance." Rabbi Elisha Friedman said, "It's sort of
disappointing to know there's people out there who want to behave in this kind of way." He
continued, "I don't think it's in any way a reflection of our Harrisburg community. The
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community is very supportive - the Jewish and the non-Jewish community, law enforcement,
elected officials and neighbors."
Colorado Man Sentenced Over Threats Against New Mexico Officials.
The Los Alamos (NM) Daily Post (8/10) reports Andrew Graham "was sentenced Wednesday,
Aug. 5, to 15 months in federal prison for interstate communication of threats." He "pled guilty
in federal court to sending communications threatening to kill an official with the New Mexico
Regulation and Licensing Department as well as an attorney with a private law firm" in
December 2019. The FBI investigated the case.
FBI Investigating California Bank Robbery.
The Times of San Diego (8/10) reports that the FBI is investigating the attempted robbery of
the bank on Monday. They "are looking for a female about 5-feet, 8-inches tall, wearing a dark
hooded sweatshirt and dark pants."
The San Diego Union-Tribune (8/10, 755K) reports that the failed robbery "happened a
few minutes after 1:30 p.m. at the Wells Fargo branch at 7080 Broadway, in the Lemon Grove
Plaza shopping center between Massachusetts Avenue and Federal Boulevard."
Oklahoma Men Charged With Murder, Bank Fraud.
The Tulsa (OK) World (8/10, 205K) reports that a federal grand jury returned indictments
against Michael Leon Johnson and Olusola Ojo, who "were charged with conspiring to obtain
loan proceeds from banks for federal Paycheck Protection Program forgivable loans guaranteed
by the Small Business Administration under the CARES Act." The men "created various business
entities, fraudulently represented on loan applications that they had a number of employees,
and shared fraudulent payroll expenses that would qualify for PPP loans."
Drug Trafficker Sentenced To More Than Six Years In Prison.
The Norwalk (CT) Hour (8/10, Tomlinson, 46K) reports Jermayne Butler was sentenced on
Monday "to six-and-a-half years in prison for his leadership role in a New Haven drug trafficking
ring." The "FBI's New Haven Safe Streets/Gang Task Force" was involved with the investigation
of the Butler case, according to the Hour article, which is posted to the New Haven (CT)
Register (8/10, 225K) and Connecticut Post (8/10, 347K) websites.
Drug Case Defendant Gets 30-Month Prison Sentence.
The Martinsburg (WV) Journal (8/10, 51K) reports the FBI was involved with an investigation
that led to a 30-month prison sentence for West Virginia resident Anthony Jones, who
"admitted to using a phone to arrange a heroin purchase in December 2018 in Berkeley
County." The Hagerstown (MD) Herald-Mail Media (8/10, Umstead, 32K) publishes a similar
article.
Georgia Resident Gets 30-Year Prison Sentence For Cocaine Trafficking.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (8/10, Lee, 895K) reports Georgia resident Alfonzo Jamal
Lewis "has been sentenced to 30 years in federal prison after being found guilty of trafficking a
half-million dollars of cocaine from Atlanta to Albany in 2015." The Journal-Constitution quotes
US Attorney Byung Pak, who said, "My office and the Office of National Drug Control Policy's
HIDTA program are committed to ensuring that drug dealers and traffickers like Lewis are held
to account for their crimes."
Border Patrol Agent Facing Drug Charges.
The Arizona Republic (8/10, Carranza, 869K) reports the DEA was involved with a drug
trafficking investigation that led to the recent arrest of Carlos Victor Passapera Pinott, a Border
Patrol agent who was stationed in Tucson, Arizona. The suspect "faces four felony counts: one
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each for the possession of cocaine, heroin and fentanyl, and one for conspiracy to distribute the
drugs." The KYMA-TV Yuma, AZ (8/10) website publishes a similar article. The AP (8/10) and
the Washington Times (8/10, Dinan, 492K) do not directly mention the DEA in their coverage of
this story.
Ally Of Ohio House Speaker Contributed To Campaigns, Supported FirstEnergy.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer (8/10, Caniglia, 895K) reports, "As Larry Householder ascended to
power in the Ohio Statehouse, he had a powerful ally from Cleveland who backed his work and
contributed to his campaigns." According to the Plain Dealer, "Prominent Cleveland businessman
Tony George and his family gave nearly $120,000 in contributions to Householder over the past
four years, just as Householder returned to state politics and rose to become the speaker of the
Ohio House, records show. George, 63, of Westlake, is involved in a number of businesses. For
years, he has sought the role of a political rainmaker by raising and contributing money to
candidates of both parties. In Householder's case, George also supported FirstEnergy Corp. and
its subsidiaries. The company and its affiliates are accused of paying $60 million in bribes to
Householder and four allies in a federal racketeering indictment that has left the Statehouse
reeling."
FBI Arrests Two In Probe Of Wisconsin Moving Company.
WLUK-TV Green Bay, WI (8/10, 199K) reports, "The FBI has announced the arrests of two
people in connection with a fraudulent moving company claiming to be located in Green Bay."
According to WLUK-TV, "Yakov Monoz, president of Great Moving, and Tal Ohana, an employee,
both of New York, were charged with wire fraud and wire fraud conspiracy by misrepresenting
estimated charges for moving services and then requiring customers to pay additional fees that
far exceeded the original estimate in order to recover their belongings, according to the FBI.
The two were arrested on Aug. 5 and made their initial court appearances in Federal Court in
New York." WLUK-TV adds, "Investigators began looking into the company in January of 2020
after receiving 49 complaints from consumers in 26 states. According to the complaints, the
company would double or triple the quoted estimate on the day of the move by adding extra,
and often unnecessary fees, such as a shuttle service fee."
Minnesota Man Is Third Charged In Probe Of Magazine Sales Scam.
The Minneapolis Star Tribune (8/10, Montemayor, 1.04M) reports, "Federal authorities in
Minnesota charged a third man with helping to run a multimillion-dollar nationwide magazine
sales scam, arresting him as he tried to leave the country over the weekend." The Star Tribune
adds, "According to charges unsealed on Monday, Brian James Williams, 51, of Orono, used
companies in South St. Paul and San Diego to allegedly bilk thousands of 'elderly or otherwise
vulnerable' consumers out of $2.4 million over five years. Williams was arrested Saturday
before he could board a Los Angeles flight to Canada, making him the third defendant in an
ongoing federal fraud probe that has so far publicly outlined more than $100 million in losses to
victims around the country."
Former Texas Southern University Law School Employee Charged With Stealing
Funds.
KTRK-TV Houston (8/10, 431K) reports from Houston, Texas, "A former Texas Southern
University dean has been charged with theft after being accused of stealing from the
university." KTRK-TV adds, "According to authorities, 52-year-old Edward Wayne Rene is
accused of awarding double tuition scholarships to at least two students and then making them
return the extra money, which he allegedly took. Rene, who is a former assistant dean at TSU
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law school, has been charged with theft by a public servant of $30,000 to $150,000, which is a
second-degree felony."
KTBC-TV Austin, TX (8/10, 16K) reports that Rene "is charged with theft by a public
servant, a second-degree felony. The Harris County District Attorney's Office says he stole
between $30,000 and $150,000 starting in 2017 and continuing through September 11, 2019.
TSU regents brought the case to the Harris County District Attorney's Office, who worked with
the FBI to investigate Rene's alleged abuse of power. 'Public corruption is the top criminal
priority for the FBI,' said Perrye K. Tuner, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's Houston Division.
'While rooting out public corruption is exceptionally difficult, the FBI's success in investigating
this violation is due largely to the cooperation and coordination from our federal, state and local
law enforcement partners, and the communities we serve- whose intolerance of the abuse of
public office prompts them to come forward and report it,' he said."
The Houston Chronicle (8/10, Tedesco, Britto, 730K) reports, "Controversies at the law
school's admissions office led to months of friction between TSU's regents and Austin Lane,
TSU's president at the time. Lane said in past interviews that school officials and auditors were
investigating improprieties in the admissions office when the regents intervened. Lane
ultimately reached a settlement with the board to end his contract with the school. Lane
received $560,000, which included a $100,000 payment for emotional distress. Lane said he
was also owed $80,000 in vacation time and nearly $240,000 in deferred compensation."
KHOU-TV Houston (8/10, Homer, 207K) reports, "The TSU Board of Regents alerted the
DA's office following an internal investigation. The FBI took over from there."
Federal Prosecutors Recommend Probation For Ex-Rep. Hayes.
The AP (8/10) reports from Charlotte, North Carolina, "Prosecutors asked a judge on Monday to
give a former North Carolina congressman no prison time for lying to the FBI about his role in a
plan to try to bribe the state's top insurance regulator with large political contributions." The
federal prosecutors "made the probation recommendation for Robin Hayes, who pleaded guilty
in October to making a false statement in 2018 to FBI agents conducting an investigation while
Hayes was state Republican Party chairman. The recommendation is in keeping with sentencing
guidelines, the government said, and the request of Hayes' lawyers in June." Hayes "was among
four men indicted last year on charges involving efforts to give campaign money to help state
Insurance Commissioner Mike Causey in exchange for Causey removing an official in his
department. Hayes entered a plea agreement."
WCNC-TV Charlotte, NC (8/10, 194K) reports, "In September of last year, Hayes pleaded
guilty to lying to the FBI. The agency was investigating bribery allegations against prominent
Durham businessman Greg Lindberg and two of his associates." The Rock Hill (SC) Herald
(8/10, 89K) also reports.
Michigan Woman Defrauded By Fake FBI Employee.
MLive (MI) (8/10, 925K) reports from Lapeer County, Michigan, "A 60-year-old Lapeer County
woman lost $17,000 as part of a fraud case under investigation." According to MLive, "Deputies
with the Lapeer County Sheriff's Office were dispatched Aug. 6 after a call to Lapeer County 911
for a fraud complaint in Marathon Township. The victim told police she was contacted on the
phone by an unidentified male who claimed to be with the Federal Bureau of Investigations."
MLive adds, "Three calls were received by the victim from three different phone number with
area codes 810, 202, and 210, police said. A text message was also sent from the 210 area
code phone number, along with a picture of an FBI identification card and badge. The person
claimed they had already arrested the victim's ex-husband, ex-uncle, and she would be
arrested if she didn't provide $17,000 in gift card codes."
Massachusetts Man Pleads Guilty To Wire Fraud In Foreign Student Recruitment Case.
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The Boston Globe (8/10, 972K) reports that a Weston, Massachusetts man "pleaded guilty
Monday in federal court in Boston to one count of wire fraud in a scheme to defraud
international students and private schools out of millions in tuition and fees, authorities said."
Keenam "Kason" Park, 59, "entered his plea before US Senior District Court Judge Mark L. Wolf,
who set a sentencing date of Nov. 2, according to a joint statement from US Attorney Andrew
E. Lelling and Joseph R. Bonavolonta, Special Agent in Charge of the Boston bureau of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation." The Globe adds, "Through his company, EduBoston, Park
helped dozens of private high schools across Massachusetts and the United States recruit
international students, mostly from China, placing many at Catholic schools struggling with
shrinking enrollments. But last year the firm abruptly announced that it would close amid a
tangle of lawsuits, accusations of fraud, and a mountain of debt."
CYBER DIVISION
White House Announces Plans For Spectrum Auction To Step Up 5G Growth.
Reuters (8/10, Alper) reports the White House has announced "plans to auction off 100
megahertz of midband spectrum for use starting in mid-2022, part of U.S. efforts to ramp up
fifth-generation network coverage." White House adviser and US Chief Technology Officer
Michael Kratsios told reporters in a briefing call that the FCC will be able to auction the
spectrum starting in December 2021 and the wireless industry could be using it by the summer
of the next year.
Microsoft Faces "Complex Technical Challenges" From TikTok Carveout.
Reuters (8/10, Wang, Dave) reports Microsoft's bid to "carve out" parts of TikTok from "its
Chinese owner ByteDance will be a technically complex endeavor that could test the patience of
President Donald Trump's administration, according to sources familiar with the setup." Trump
has given Microsoft "until Sept. 15 to put together a blueprint for an acquisition that
safeguards" Americans' data and has "issued an order to ban it if there is no deal by then."
Microsoft is negotiating a "transition period that will give it time to ringfence TikTok
technologically from ByteDance after they agree to a deal, Reuters reported on Aug. 2." The
clean break that "Trump and lawmakers envision could take a year or more, some of the
sources said." To ensure uninterrupted service, "Microsoft would likely need to rely on
ByteDance's code while it reviews and revises the code, and moves to a new back-end
infrastructure to serve users, according to cyber security expert Ryan Speers at River Loop
Security."
In a video interview with CNBC (8/10, 3.62M), Stanford University cybersecurity analyst
Alex Stamos discusses the engineering challenge of transferring Tik Tok's back-end code within
a year. In a video interview with Bloomberg (8/10, Bn, 4.73M), Steptoe & Johnson LLP Counsel
Stewart Baker also addresses TikTok data concerns.
Former MI6 Head Urges Ministers To Keep Children From Using TikTok. The Daily
Mail (UK) (8/10, Wilcock, 5.27M) reports a former head of MI6 "warned ministers today that
allowing their children to use TikTok could put them at the mercy of Chinese spies." Nigel
Inkster "said that the controversial social media app could provide a backdoor for Beijing to
steal secrets from high-ranking members of the Government." Inkster "said that as long as its
owners were based there, it would be seen as a risk." He told the Telegraph separately, "Where
the Chinese intelligence services are very strong is in identifying non-obvious entry points to
certain targets. They have shown a lot of skill in this regard."
Senators Seek To Include National Cyber Director In 2021 NDAA.
The Wall Street Journal (8/10, Uberti, Rundle, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports
Congressional lawmakers say that stand-alone legislation to create a national cyberdirector will
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be difficult to pass as Congress is deadlocked on coronavirus relief aid. Instead, Sen. Angus
King (I-ME) and other supporters are seeking to include the position in the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 currently being crafted in Congress. The current proposal
would provide for as many as 75 staffers in the new office, but the White House believes such
an office may conflict with existing cyber capabilities.
US Cyber Command Employing Unclassified Networks "To Fight Election
Interference."
C4ISR & Networks (8/10, Pomerleau) reports US Cyber Command is using "unclassified
networks and publicly available communication platforms as it works to prevent foreign
interference in the next presidential election, a CYBERCOM official has revealed." During an
August 7 DEFCON panel, US Cyber Command Cyber National Mission Force head Brig. Gen.
William Hartman said, "From a CYBERCOM standpoint, one of the big changes for us is we
historically had been focused working inside [sensitive compartmented information facilities]
SCIFs. One of the things we've done in support of 2020 is we have organizations now that live
outside SCIFs." Hartman "said forces are now working on unclassified networks, Slack channels
and other platforms to communicate with the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and
private industry."
FBI Among Those Monitoring Iranian "Fox Kitten" Hacking Group.
National Interest (8/10, Suciu, 81K) reports sources "reportedly told ZDNet on Monday" that a
group known as "Fox Kitten" has been "tracked by the cybersecurity community under the
codenames Fox Kitten and Parisite, and that its primary task is providing an 'initial beachhead'
for other Iranian hacking groups, such as APT33 (Shamoon), Oilrig (APT34) or Chafer." The FBI
issued the alert "last week and warned companies that Fox Kitten has upgraded its attack
arsenal to include an exploit for CVE-2020-5902, a vulnerability disclosed in July that could
impact BIG-IP, which is a popular multi-purpose networking device manufactured by F5
Networks." The technology is "widely used in data centers and cloud environments." The FBI
has instructed companies "to patch their on-premise BIG-IP devices as a preventative measure
against such cyberattacks." While the FBI warning didn't "indicate whether any companies have
been breached in a recent cyberattack, sources told ZDNet that Fox Kitten has been successful
in cyberattacks against BIG-IP devices in at least two companies this year."
LABORATORY
North Dakota Authorities Hope New Science Can Help ID Man Found Dead In 1982.
The Williston (ND) Herald (8/10, Kelly, 13K) reports, "Investigators with the Williams County
Sheriff's Office hope cutting-edge forensic science can help them identify a man whose body
was found in the Missouri River nearly 40 years ago." The Herald adds, "On Monday, Aug. 10,
Williston Public Works employees and staff from the sheriff's office disinterred the remains of a
man who police say was found by boaters in June 1982. After the body was disinterred, the
plan is to perform an autopsy on the remains and extract a DNA sample, according to Sgt.
Detective Caleb Fry with the Williams County Sheriff's Office. The DNA will be entered into
CODIS, the FBI's national DNA database, to try and find a match. Othram Labs, the company
the county is working with, will also perform a genealogical search using his DNA to try and
locate possible family members."
Gun Seizures Are Up At US Airports.
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The Dallas Morning News (8/10, Grigsby, 946K) reports, "With air traffic nearing a five-month
high, airport security is finding guns in passenger carry-on bags at three times the rate
recorded before the pandemic. And 80% of the guns are loaded." According to the Morning
News, "The discoveries at airports comes at a time when U.S. gun sales are surging, and
analysts believe many of those purchases are being made by first-time buyers. DFW
International Airport tied for second nationally with 13 gun seizures last month, while Dallas
Love Field ranked fifth with Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport at nine seizures
each. Officers found 15.3 guns for every million people screened in July, compared with 5.1 per
million people in July of last year, the Transportation Security Administration said Monday. There
has been a significant increase in loaded guns at checkpoints, said TSA Administrator David
Pekoske."
The Los Angeles Times (8/10, Martin, 4.64M) reports, "The total number of firearms
uncovered by the TSA dropped to 304 last month from 401 in July 2019, according to the
agency. During the same period, the pandemic has reduced the number of passengers being
screened by TSA officers by nearly three-quarters, to 20.7 million last month from 79.5 million
passengers in July 2019. 'Travelers must understand that firearms are prohibited items at
airports and in the passenger cabins of aircraft,' Pekoske said. 'As hard as we are working to
mitigate other risks at this time, no one should be introducing new ones:"
OTHER FBI NEWS
Wray Taps Jones As FBI General Counsel.
Behind a paywall, Law360 (8/10, Subscription Publication, 8K) reports, "The FBI announced
Monday that it has tapped a former King & Spalding LLP attorney with a decade of experience
as a federal prosecutor to serve as the agency's general counsel." Director Wray "has named
Jason A. Jones as the general counsel of the FBI. Jones was a partner at King & Spalding on the
firm's special matters and government investigations team, advising companies on white collar
investigations and government regulatory enforcement."
White-Collar Prosecutions In Decline During Trump Administration.
Bloomberg (8/10, Hurtado, Dolmetsch, Roth, Voreacos, 4.73M) reports, "Donald Trump calls
himself the 'law and order' president, but when it comes to white collar crime, he has overseen
a significant decline in enforcement." Bloomberg adds, "The prosecution of securities fraud,
antitrust violations and other such crimes has hit a record low as the pandemic slows the
courts, according to one tracking service. But even before the coronavirus, the numbers were
falling under the Trump administration. The average annual number of white collar defendants
was down 26% to 30% for Trump's first three years in office from the average under President
Barack Obama, according to data from the Justice Department and Syracuse University,
respectively. The trend also shows up in fines on corporations, which fell 76% from Obama's
last 20 months to Trump's first 20 months, according to Duke University law professor Brandon
Garrett."
Barr: Left Believes In "Tearing Down the System."
The Washington Times (8/10, Sherfinski, 492K) reports that in an interview Sunday on Fox
News, Attorney General Barr "said many people on the left have gradually morphed into
representing" a "revolutionary" party that believes in "tearing down the system" and regards
their political opponents as "evil." Barr said the left represents a "Rousseauian revolutionary
party that believes in tearing down the system" and are interested in "complete political
victory." Barr said, "It's a secular religion. It's a substitute for religion. ... They view their
political opponents as evil that because we stand in the way of their progressive utopia that
they're trying to reach."
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Trump: Pelosi And Schumer Ready For Stimulus Deal After Executive Orders.
As most mainstream media analyses continue to pound his executive actions this weekend, the
President on Monday indicated his moves are already giving him and GOP leaders leverage in
their dispute with Speaker Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Schumer. As the Washington
limes (8/10, Miller, 492K) reports, the President "said Democratic leaders suddenly want to
make a deal...after he blew past the stalled negotiations with executive orders to send aid to
Americans." The Washington Post (8/10, Al, Kim, Werner, Dawsey, 14.2M) also says "White
House officials believe Trump gained leverage on Saturday." Trump said on Twitter, "So now
Schumer and Pelosi want to meet to make a deal. Amazing how it all works, isn't it. Where
have they been for the last 4 weeks when they were `hardliners', and only wanted BAILOUT
MONEY for Democrat run states and cities that are failing badly? They know my phone
number!"
Appearing on Fox News' Fox & Friends (8/10, 831K), White House Press Secretary
Kayleigh McEnany was asked if the President intends to implement the orders, or if they are
just a "negotiation tactic." McEnany said, "He most certainly intends to implement the four
executive orders pertaining to unemployment insurance, student loans, the payroll tax holiday
and evictions. The American people need relief and, you know, Chuck Schumer, it's funny
listening to him there talk about these executive orders as not being enough. Well, what have
Democrats put forward? Precisely nothing, except rejecting at least on two occasions a $600
clean extension of unemployment insurance. President Trump has acted in the American
people's best interests."
In an interview with CNBC's Squawk On The StreetVi (8/10, 316K), Treasury Secretary
Mnuchin said, "I think there is a compromise if the Democrats are willing to be reasonable.
There is still a lot of things that we need to do and that we've agreed on. ... The President
wants to make sure that there is enough money to open schools safely. That's something that is
very important. ... We've agreed on more money for PPP for businesses that are particularly
hard hit getting a second check. We've agreed on more direct payments like we sent out last
time. ... We offered more money for state and local, but we're not going to give $1 trillion to
state and local. That's just not a reasonable approach. ... Let's not hold up everything over a
few things that we disagree on."
CNBC (8/10, Pramuk, 3.62M) reports, meanwhile, that on Monday, Schumer "told MSNBC
that Trump's action are `unworkable, weak and far too narrow." CNBC adds that Pelosi and
Schumer "said the White House rejected an offer to meet in the middle with roughly $2 trillion
legislation." Schumer told MSNBC's Morning JoeVi (8/10, 1.41M), "We came up with a strong
plan. But we even were willing, because we so much want to get this done, we said to the
President's negotiators last week, `we'll meet you in the middle. We'll cut a trillion, you raise a
trillion.' They said, 'absolutely not.' I said, `it's your way or the highway?' `Yep."
The Washington Post (8/10, Werner, 14.2M) reports, however, that Mnuchin "argued that
the administration already had compromised and Democrats were the ones who needed to
compromise." Mnuchin said, "We're not the ones who are holding this up." The Democrats'
"demand for nearly $1 trillion in aid to state and local governments" is "a major roadblock," and
the Administration is "unwilling to agree to more than $150 billion in additional aid to cities and
states, after they already received $150 billion in the Cares Act in March." Mnuchin "argued
Monday that much of that money remains unspent, and that demanding $1 trillion more is
'absurd." CNBC (8/10, Pramuk, 3.62M) reports Mnuchin indicated that the Administration is
"open to resuming coronavirus aid talks with Democratic leaders and would offer more aid
money to try to reach a compromise." Mnuchin said, "The president is determined to spend
what we need to spend. ... We're prepared to put more money on the table."
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With reports casting both parties are trading blame on the failure of the talks, the tenor of
the coverage remains markedly unfavorable toward Trump's executive orders. Reuters (8/10,
Cornwell) says "it was not immediately clear whether" Trump's actions "would provide relief,"
and the New York Times (8/10, Rappeport, Cochrane, 18.61M) that the President "stretched the
bounds of his executive powers and ordered a patchwork of coronavirus relief measures" after
having "largely sidelined himself during talks on Capitol Hill." On Monday, however, he
"proclaimed that his gambit to obtain more leverage in the talks had been a success." However,
according to the Times, "top congressional Democrats said they had not reached out to the
White House since their last meeting on Friday with" Mnuchin and Chief of Staff Meadows.
The Hill (8/10, Samuels, 2.98M) quotes Schumer as saying, "Fables from Donald Trump.
Fables. That's what he seems to specialize in. I didn't call him. Speaker Pelosi didn't call him.
No, we didn't call him." The Washington Times (8/10, Boyer, 492K) reports that in her interview
on Monday, however, "McEnany cited a joint statement by Mrs. Pelosi and Mr. Schumer 'in the
aftermath' of Mr. Trump issuing the executive actions indicating that they `would like to meet
halfway.'
At any rate, Bloomberg (8/10, Litvan, Wasson, 4.73M) reports that "two days
after...Trump moved to implement scaled-down coronavirus relief without congressional
approval, there's no indication the tactic will get Republicans and Democrats back to the
negotiating table for a comprehensive stimulus." Along those lines, Weijia Jiang reported on the
CBS Evening NewsVi (8/10, Story 2, 2:10, Brennan, 4.37M) that "Congressional and White
House negotiators continued blaming each other for collapsed talks." Senate Majority Leader
McConnell was shown saying, "Democrats said, `Our way or the highway.' Schumer said,
meanwhile, said, "Rather than compromise, Republican counterparts said take a hike." In the
meantime, added Jiang, "the President vowed to act alone signing four executive measures
over the weekend."
NBC Nightly NewsVi (8/10, lead story, 2:34, Kristen Welker, 6.23M) said "Democrats and
even some Republicans are blasting the move." Trump's "actions include a new weekly
unemployment bonus payment of $400. That's less than the $600 people were initially
receiving and that Democrats have pushed to extend since it expired last month. The directive
also requires states to contribute $100 of the total amount, something Democrats say is not
possible." To NBC, "It is a sharp contrast to the days when...Trump accused President Obama of
a major power grab for taking action on his own, just as the President is doing now."
Fox News (8/10, Stirewalt, 27.59M) says that while "the parts of the president's unilateral
economic stimulus that are constitutional would not be very effective and the parts that might
be effective are not constitutional," the fact is "almost no one involved cares. ... The pressing
question in Washington is about whether President Trump's fiats will work in changing the
politics of what had become the latest agony of 2020 for Republicans." To Fox, "the problem is
that the White House is much closer on policy to House Democrats than Senate Republicans,"
because "Trump's re-election bid depends on an economic turnaround and growing public
confidence as the fall begins. Democrats are always down for more federal spending, so aside
from a few specifics, Trump and Nancy Pelosi are on the same philosophical page."
The New York Times (8/10, 18.61M) reports, "Americans hit hard by the coronavirus
recession saw no relief in sight on Monday as presidential directives announced by...Trump on
Saturday caused confusion and prompted criticism from some governors. ... Because Congress
controls the federal budget, the measures will almost certainly be challenged in court. 'You
can't do with an executive order that which would be required by legislation,' Gov. Andrew M.
Cuomo of New York said on Monday." According to the AP (8/10, Barakat), "Whether...Trump
has the constitutional authority to extend federal unemployment benefits by executive order
remains unclear. Equally up in the air is whether states, which are necessary partners in
Trump's plan to bypass Congress, will sign on."
To Politico (8/10, Rainey, Cassella, 4.29M), "Tens of millions of jobless Americans are
unlikely to see their weekly unemployment checks grow anytime soon - despite...Trump's
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executive action promising an extra $400 a week." His "order depends on already cash-poor
states being able to create and implement a new system and fund one-fourth of the aid, which
for many governors would be a difficult if not impossible task."
Politico (8/10, Levine, Bresnahan, 4.29M) also reports McConnell on Monday "accused
Pelosi and Schumer of using the economic hardships being felt by tens of millions of Americans
to pressure Trump and Senate Republicans into a deal. `They think they have political leverage
over the president of the United States and so they're willing to personally increase the pain for
vulnerable families unless they get their way on matters not related to Covid,' McConnell
claimed on the Senate floor." Politico adds, "As for House Democrats, House Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) announced on the Monday that there will be no votes until the week of
Sept. 14, unless an agreement on more Covid relief is reached." The Hill (8/10, Jagoda, 2.98M),
the New York Post (8/10, Nelson, 4.57M) and the Washington Times (8/10, Swoyer, 492K),
among other news outlets, also report on yesterday's statements from party leaders blaming
the other side of the aisle for the stalled talks.
Sean Hannity said on Fox News' Hannity, "For weeks, President Trump is working
overtime. Why? To help people that are unemployed continue to get coronavirus funding so that
their unemployment doesn't run out. And guess what? Congress is nowhere to be found. Pelosi-
Schumer stonewalling these negotiations for weeks at every turn.... It's always about politics,
all about 2020. ... They obviously don't care about you or your life or your family. They only
care about beating...Donald Trump in 85 days." Hannity added that Trump "is not willing to
sacrifice your quality of life for an election. So late last week, the President announced his
Administration will extend coronavirus relief benefits through executive action. Democrats are
shocked, they're outraged."
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) said on Fox News Your World (8/10, 1.04M), "I think the way
the President and his legal team have crafted this, pretty narrow in scope and so my guess,
they probably have the authority under disaster relief. ... Past Congresses have given
Presidents all kinds of different authority to act on their own. My guess - and I haven't looked
at the exact legal description of this - but my guess is the legal team has done a pretty good
job of looking at exactly what legal authority he has. He's using it to the extent that he can. But
that is part of the problem, he's constrained in terms of what he can do."
Stefanie Miller of Fiscalnote Markets said on CNBC's Power LunchVi (8/10, 260K), "I think
that most people don't really want to pay attention to Washington, not just Wall Street but kind
of everybody. They kind of want Washington to take care of you when you need help and then
leave you alone the rest of the time. So, right now, most people are actually polling saying they
want to see more stimulus or aid or something to individuals. So, we watch Congress and to
the extent you were paying attention, you saw Congress wasn't doing anything, they couldn't
come to an agreement. So the President did what he really does best, which is to get a deal. I
think that is exactly the kind of character trait that a lot of people supported in 2016 when they
voted for him. And so to give him this opportunity to come in and sort of save the day with a
deal, I think is a really lucky opportunity for the President."
Democrats Blame Meadows For Failed Talks, Examine Their Negotiating
Strategy. The Washington Post (8/10, Al, Kim, Werner, Dawsey, 14.2M) reports on "the
outsized presence Meadows brought" to the "coronavirus negotiations" that "collapsed in
acrimony on Friday." The Post adds that "in private, Pelosi began to refer to Meadows as `The
Enforcer,' the implication being he was there to ensure Mnuchin didn't make a deal with the
Democrats." And "now, Democrats are facing questions about their tactics and whether playing
hard ball will continue to work when someone like Meadows is intimately involved." A "senior
administration official disputed the Democrats' complaints about Meadows' role, calling it
`comical' to suggest that he or anyone else in the administration didn't want a deal. Instead,
this person said, Democrats were to blame." Added the "senior administration official," "It's
obvious they've made a political calculation that they won't be held accountable for obstructing
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during a weak economy, and therefore they have no interest in a deal unless they land a bunch
of policy wishlist items along the way."
Trump Accuses "RINO Ben Sasse" Of Playing "Right Into The Hands" Of
Democrats. Politico (8/10, Forgey, 4.29M) reports that on Monday, Trump "accused Sen. Ben
Sasse of being a 'RINO' who had 'gone rogue' by scolding the White House for a recent
collection of executive actions meant to provide assistance to Americans amid the coronavirus
pandemic." Politico says Trump's "admonishment of Sasse comes after the Nebraska Republican
issued a scathing statement in response to the president's announcement of four relief
measures after a breakdown in talks between White House negotiators and congressional
Democrats. ... 'The pen-and-phone theory of executive lawmaking is unconstitutional slop'
Sasse said Saturday night." The President tweeted yesterday, "RINO Ben Sasse, who needed
my support and endorsement in order to get the Republican nomination for Senate from the
GREAT State of Nebraska, has, now that he's got it (Thank you President T), gone rogue, again.
This foolishness plays right into the hands of the Radical Left Dems!" USA Today (8/10, Jackson,
10.31M) and The Hill (8/10, Samuels, 2.98M), among other news outlets, also cover Trump's
tweet.
NYTimes Analysis: Businesses Cool To Trump's Payroll Tax Holiday. The New
York Times (8/10, Rappeport, Friedman, 18.61M) reports that although the White House has
touted its payroll tax holiday "as a boon to American workers that would fatten their paychecks
and provide a jolt to the economy," for "companies large and small, the presidential
intervention poses difficult legal and logistical questions that only add to the uncertainty that
executives and workers are contending with during the pandemic." Because Trump "is only
suspending the tax, not cutting it, the money that companies would cease to withhold from
their employees' earnings would have to be paid next year, barring legislative action."
Companies wold face "some complex accounting maneuvering," and employees could face "an
unwanted tax bill in 2021, making the break more of a headache." According to the Times,
"businesses have been cool to the idea."
Yesterday's Stock Gains Attributed To Trump's Executive Actions. The AP (8/9,
Choe) reports that "US stock indexes closed mostly higher Monday, nudging the S&P 500 within
striking distance of its all-time high set in February." The AP adds, "The gains came on the first
trading day since...Trump announced several stopgap moves to aid the economy in response to
the collapse of talks on Capitol Hill for a bigger rescue package." The S&P "gained 9.19 points to
3,360.47. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 357.96 points, or 1.3%, to 27,791.44. The
Nasdaq composite lost 42.63 points, or 0.4%, to 10,968.36."
The AP (8/9, Choe) also reports that "bets on a potential coronavirus vaccine, historic
fiscal and monetary support, and more recently, a better-than-expected second-quarter
earnings season have brought the S&P 500 close to its February record closing high." Moreover,
"Trump signed executive orders that partly restored enhanced unemployment benefits after
talks between the White House and top Democrats in Congress about fresh stimulus broke
down last week."
Trump To Propose Further Tax Cuts This Fall. The Washington Times (8/10, Boyer,
Sherfinski, Swoyer, 492K) reports that "at an evening news conference, also said he will
propose more tax cuts this fall for middle-class families and to reduce capital gains taxes."
Trump "contrasted his plans with presumptive Democratic nominee Joseph R. Biden, whom he
said would triple taxes on most Americans and businesses if elected."
Fauci "Cautiously Optimistic" A Vaccine Will Be Available In Early 2021.
NIAID Director Fauci was asked in an interview with ABC World News TonightVi (8/10, story 3,
9:04, Muir, 7.2M) what can be expected in terms of efficacy if a vaccine becomes available by
the end of the year. Fauci said, "I think that's part of the good news of thing. If you look at the
now at least half a dozen vaccines that we are directly involved with, a couple of them have
already, last week or a week and a half ago, gone into a phase three trial, which means you're
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determining if it is effective as well as additional safety. The initial preliminary work on that in
phase one trial have me be cautiously optimistic. I believe there is quite a good chance we will
and that should take probably by the end of this calendar year with vaccine available as we go
into 2021."
Fauci Hopeful Rapid Testing Will Soon Be Widely Available.
NIAID Director Fauci was asked in an interview with ABC World News TonightVi (8/10, story 3,
9:04, Muir, 7.2M) when there will be rapid testing of Americans. Fauci said, "I hope they'll be
widely available soon but make sure people understand the difference is that if we can have
screening with those tests and leave the burden of the very accurate tests to be able to do the
identification, isolation and contact tracing, those are two separate tracks and two separate
pathways and I think we can do both of them."
Fauci: It Is Possible To Get Virus To A Controlled Level.
NIAID Director Fauci, asked in an interview with ABC World News TonightVi (8/10, story 3,
9:04, Muir, 7.2M) about the President's claim that the pandemic will disappear, said, "There
would have to be an addition to that. We could get it to be under control if we do the things
that we're talking about. It's not going to spontaneously by its own devices. We're going to
have to act with public health effort. That's the way you get it. I believe it's achievable to get to
a level that's quite controlled so that we can open up the country and get the economy back."
Fauci added that the virus currently is not disappearing. He said, "All you've got to do is look at
the data. The virus is telling us what it can and will do if we don't confront it properly."
Cuomo Dismisses Calls For Probe Of Nursing Home Deaths.
The Washington Examiner (8/10, Dibble, 448K) reports that on Monday, New York Gov. Andrew
Cuomo (D) "said there is no need for an independent investigation into his policy on nursing
homes that critics say led to thousands of deaths during the coronavirus pandemic." Cuomo
"told reporters during a teleconference on Monday that Democrats and Republicans will never
agree on the examination of his now-reversed March 25 directive that prohibited nursing homes
from turning away recovering coronavirus patients." Cuomo said, "There is no such thing as a
person who is trusted by all Democrats and Republicans. That person doesn't exist. ... And, as
you know, the Department of Health review was then reviewed by credible industry experts ...
So to your point about why don't you get independent experts to review the numbers - we did.
Well, people don't think they're independent experts, yea, I know, because nobody is ever
going to agree on who an independent expert is."
NYTimes Analysis: Critics Fear FDA's Hahn Unable To Withstand Political Pressure.
The New York Times (8/10, Kaplan, 18.61M) reports that "many medical experts - including
members of his own staff — worry about whether" FDA Commissioner Hahn "has the fortitude
and political savvy to protect the scientific integrity of the F.D.A. from" President Trump. The
Times says Hahn was "a Washington outsider" when picked to lead the agency. The Times adds,
"now seven months into his tenure...the push for a (coronavirus) vaccine is intensifying," and
last week, Trump "speculated that one could be ready by Election Day - a timeline that is
unrealistic, according to scientists, and shows the strain Dr. Hahn may be under." According to
the Times, "Critics point to a series of worrisome responses to the coronavirus epidemic under
Dr. Hahn's leadership, most notably the emergency authorization the agency gave to the
president's favorite drug, hydroxychloroquine, a decision it reversed three months later."
Federal Officials Undertaking Vaccine Distribution Pilot Program.
CQ Roll Call (8/10, Kopp, 154K) reports that the Administration is "quietly piloting [vaccine]
distribution working groups, CQ Roll Call has learned." Officials from the CDC, the Pentagon and
the Administration's Operation Warp Speed effort "plan to conduct site visits and develop
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'model approaches' for other states based on what they learn, according to a CDC description of
the project shared exclusively with CQ Roll Call. The states involved include California, Florida,
North Dakota and Minnesota." CQ says the start of the distribution plans "come amid calls by
public health experts for a national strategy. Distributing any authorized vaccines effectively will
be crucial to stemming the coronavirus pandemic. Normal life can't begin to resume in the
United States until a large proportion of residents are immune."
Officials Struggling To Address Racial Disparities In COVID-19 Information, Testing.
The Wall Street Journal (8/10, Scott, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports health officials,
physicians, and activists are facing a myriad of challenges addressing racial disparities in terms
of sharing coronavirus information, increasing access to testing and treatment.
Trump Urges Universities Not To Cancel Football Season.
The Washington Post (8/10, Boren, 14.2M) reports that as cancellation of the college football
season is being seriously considered, "President Trump joined congressmen and athletes,
amplifying their calls to save the season." Monday afternoon, Trump tweeted, "The student-
athletes have been working too hard for their season to be cancelled. #WeWantToPlay." In a
tweet 51 minutes later, he wrote, "Play College Football!" White House Press Secretary Kayleigh
McEnany "echoed that message." she told reporters, "These college athletes work their whole
lives for this moment...and he would like to see them have a chance to live out their dreams."
Politico (8/10, Perez, 4.29M) reports that Sens. Ben Sasse (R-NE) and Marco Rubio (R-FL),
and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) "are also pressing for the show to go on, while a growing number
of conferences, schools and two of the NCAA's three divisions have already upended their
seasons or canceled competitions."
ABC World News TonightVI (8/10, story 6, 0:26, Muir, 7.08M) reported, "University
presidents and conference commissioners representing the five largest athletic conferences
were all meeting this week to determine whether to play in this pandemic." NBC Nightly NewsVi
(8/10, story 2, 4:19, Almaguer, 6.23M) reported that "the Mid-American conference is delaying
its season until spring 2021."
Top California Health Official Resigns Amid Testing Backlog Controversy.
Politico (8/10, Colliver, 4.29M) reports that on Sunday, California Public Health Director Sonia
Angell resigned "without explanation, an abrupt departure that came amid a major data glitch
affecting hundreds of thousands of Covid-19 test records, which has hampered counties'
response to the virus." According to Politico, "Two top state leaders managing the pandemic -
Health and Human Services Secretary Mark Ghaly and Gov. Gavin Newsom - may have been
left in the dark about the test problems despite Angell's department knowing about them." On
Friday, Ghaly "detailed problems with the California Reportable Disease Information Exchange,
known as CaIREDIE, that have led to a backlog of 250,000 to 300,000 records," and "explained
that he did not learn of the issue until Monday afternoon - after Newsom announced the state's
seven-day average daily case