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Mobile version and searchable archives available at fbi.bulletinintelligence.com.
;161 News Briefing
DATE: FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 2021 6:30 AM EDT
TODAY'S TABLE OF CONTENTS
• Senate Passes Asian American Hate Crimes Bill On 94-1 Vote.
• Federal Prosecutors Expect At Least 100 More Arrests In Capitol Siege Probe.
• WPost Analysis: Evidence In Trump Supporter's Trial Suggests He Espoused Nazi Ideals.
• New York Man Charged In Capitol Siege Probe.
• New Mexico Man Charged In Capitol Siege Probe.
• New York Man Arrested After Posting On Dating App Of Storming Capitol During Riot.
• Kentucky Man Charged In Capitol Siege Probe After Undercover Agents Recorded Him At His Job.
• Parties Divided Over Scope Of Proposed Capitol Riot Commission.
PROTESTS
• Alternate Juror Says She Would Have Convicted Chauvin.
• New York Subway Pipe Bomber Sentenced To Life In Prison.
• US Postal Service Reportedly Tracking Americans' Social Media Posts.
• AFRICOM Chief: Somalia Withdrawal Made Counterterrorism Missions Riskier.
• Michigan Woman Convicted In Tennessee Of Stealing Trade Secrets For China.
• NIH: Hundreds Of US Scientists Feared Compromised By China.
• Alabama A&M Closing Confucius Institute.
• MTA Pulls Security Cameras From Subway Due To Links To Chinese Facial Recognition Company.
• Haines: Climate Must Be At "Center" Of Security Policy.
• Republicans Offer COVID-19 Origin Act Amid Concerns About Possible Link Between Pandemic,
Wuhan Lab.
• Jordan Releases 16 Allegedly Involved In Sedition Plot.
• UK's MIS Joins Instagram.
• Wright Laid To Rest.
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• Columbus Police Face Growing Criticism Over Bryant Shooting.
• Authorities Believe Remains Found Are Those Of Missing Pennsylvania Amish Teen.
• Virginia Man Pleads Guilty In Cross Burning That Targeted Black Teen.
• Colorado Grocery Store Gunman Charged With Another 43 Counts.
• Kristin Smart's Parents Sue Father Who Is Accused Of Hiding Her Body.
• Reuters Source: Gaetz's Complaints About Iran Hostage Scheme Will Not Distract FBI Probe.
• FBI Probe Nets Two Arrests For Identity Theft Trafficking In Tennessee.
• Reputed Mexican Drug Cartel Leader Sentenced In Washington On Drug, Money Laundering Charges.
• Washington Man Sentenced For Drug Trafficking.
• Father, Daughter Plead Guilty In Shoplifting Scheme.
• Tennessee Man Arrested For Sexual Exploitation.
• Federal Charges Dropped Against Suspected Kidnapper.
• Louisiana Suspected Serial Killer's DNA Found On Shell Casings.
• Texas Kidnapper May Face Federal Charges.
• Surveillance Photo of Illinois Bank Robber Released.
• Three New Yorkers Arrested For International Bank Robberies.
• Case Of Former North Carolina Sheriff Accused Of Corruption Goes To Jury.
• New Mexico Corrections Officer Said To Have Illicit Relationship With Gang Member.
• Indiana Man Sentenced For Sexual Exploitation.
• US Charges Three In Scheme To Get $14M In COVID-Relief Loans.
• North Carolina Man Charged With Fraudulently Obtaining $1.5M In PPP Loans.
• Head Of Shuttered Texas Company Says He Turned Himself In.
CYBER DIVISION
• GCHQ Chief Says West Faces Near-Term Challenges With Cybersecurity.
• CISO Chris DeRusha Discusses Zero Trust.
• Taiwan Authorities Investigating Apple Supplier Hack.
• Officials Welcome CISA's New Authorities To Hunt Cyber Threats.
• Cyber Experts Warn Canada's Aging Critical Infrastructure Strategy A Growing Concern.
• FBI Warns New Englanders Of Fake Government Agent Scams.
• Supreme Court Expands Life Sentencing Guidelines For Minors.
• US Told Colombia That Florida Woman Held In Venezuela Coup Plot Had Links To Arms Ring.
OTHER FBI NEWS
• Sen. Paul Criticizes FBI's "Suicide By Cop" Classification Of Baseball Park Shooting.
• Suspect In Governor-Related Massachusetts Case Wants Monitoring Bracelet Off.
• Walensky And Murthy Discuss Approach To Vaccine Hesitancy.
• CDC Panel Expected To Recommend Resumption Of J&J Vaccine Use.
• CDC Faces Pressure Over Outdoor Mask Guidance.
• Study Suggests COVID Reinfections Are Very Rare.
• Study Finds COVID Infection Can Increase Pregnancy Complications.
• Fort Meade Says 800 Moderna Doses Were Improperly Stored.
• Studies Find Vaccines Effective Against New York Variant.
• NBC Looks At Ongoing Child Vaccine Trials.
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• Hospitalizations Drop 80% Among Senior Citizens.
• Los Angeles County Infection Rates Now Among Lowest In US.
• Women Vaccinated At Higher Rates Than Men.
• Biden Opens Climate Summit With Pledge To Halve US Carbon Emissions By 2030.
• Harris Hosts Meeting Of Foundation Heads To Discuss Causes Of Migration.
• WPost Slams Administration's "Disingenuous Explanations" On Refugee Admissions.
• Biden Will Lay Out Childcare And Education Plan In Address To Congress.
• Harris Breaking Senate Ties At Faster Pace Than Any Other Vice President.
• HUD Withdraws Trump-Era Rule Restricting Transgender People's Access To Homeless Shelters.
• House Passes DC Statehood Measure On Party-Line Vote.
• Barrett Asked To Recuse In Case Involving Nonprofit Linked To Group That Pushed Her Confirmation.
• IG Report: Trump Administration Obstructed Investigation Into Delays Of Hurricane Aid For Puerto
Rico.
• SCOTUS Cuts FTC's Ability To Seek Monetary Awards For Consumers.
• Biden To Nominate Spinrad To Head NOAA.
• Ties To Epstein Slow Science Office Nominee's Confirmation Path.
• India Posts Highest Daily New Case Total.
• EU Reportedly Set To Sue AstraZeneca Over Vaccine Shortfall.
• South Africa To Resume Use Of Ai Vaccines.
• Russian Vaccine Developer Signs Deals To Produce 40M Vaccine Doses Annually In Egypt.
• US Sanctions Exacerbate Pandemic In Iran.
• German Officials Set To Impose Nationwide Lockdowns.
• WHO Director General Urges Wealthy Countries To Share Doses.
• Rogin: China Leveraging Vaccines For Influence In Latin America.
• NYTimes Analysis: Taliban Poised To Regain Control Of Afghanistan As US Exits.
• US Increasingly Concerned About Taiwan's Security.
• WPost Says US Must Cripple Burma's Economy To Save Its People.
• Ignatius: US Recognition Of Armenian Genocide Will Force A "Reckoning."
• Russian Patrol Planes Spotted Harassing Fishermen Near Alaska.
• Russian Troops To Pull Back From Ukrainian Border Region.
• Navalny's Own Doctors Urge Him To End Hunger Strike.
• US Ambassador Leaves Russia.
• Israeli Officials Will Reportedly Lobby Administration Against JCPOA Reactivation.
• Israel Attacks Syrian Military Sites After Missile Fell Near Nuclear Facility.
• Israeli Police Clash With Palestinians, Far-Right Israelis Outside Jerusalem.
• Jordan Releases 16 Involved In Palace Controversy Involving King's Brother.
• Children Of Exiled Former Top Intelligence Official Remain Jailed In Saudi Arabia.
• UNSC Issues Statement Over Ethiopia's Tigray Region.
• New Ruling Council Promises Democratic Elections In Chad.
THE BIG PICTURE
• Headlines From Today's Front Pages.
WASHINGTON'S SCHEDULE
• Today's Events In Washington.
Senate Passes Asian American Hate Crimes Bill On 94-1 Vote.
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NBC Nightly NewsVI (4/22, story 6, 0:10, Holt, 4.83M) reported that "by a vote of 94-1, the
Senate passed a bill" on Thursday "aimed at protecting Asian-Americans from hate crimes,
which have soared during the pandemic." The AP (4/22, Jalonick) describes the vote as "a
bipartisan denunciation of such violence during the coronavirus pandemic and a modest step
toward legislating in a chamber where most of President Joe Biden's agenda has stalled." The
measure will "expedite the review of hate crimes at the Justice Department and provide support
for local law enforcement in response to thousands of reported violent incidents in the past
year."
Reuters (4/22) reports that the legislation must now pass the House, "where Democrats
hold a clear majority." The Washington Post (4/22, Kane, 10.52M) reports that Rep. Grace Meng
(D-NY), the bill's lead sponsor in the House, said in a statement after the vote that the chamber
expects to vote on the legislation next month. The New York Times (4/22, Edmondson, 20.6M)
reports that the measure "was the first legislative action either chamber of Congress has taken
to bolster law enforcement's response to rising attacks on people of Asian descent." Senate
Majority Leader Schumer said, "By passing this bill, the Senate makes it very clear that hate
and discrimination against any group has no place in America. By passing this bill, we say to
the Asian-American community that their government is paying attention to them, has heard
their concerns and will respond to protect them."
The Los Angeles Times (4/22, Haberkorn, 3.37M) reports that Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO),
"the only senator to vote against the bill, said it was 'too broad:" Hawley is quoted as saying,
"As a former prosecutor, my view is it's dangerous to simply give the federal government open-
ended authority to define a whole new class of federal hate crime incidents." The Times notes
that "the bill originally only addressed hate crimes related to the pandemic, a link that
Republicans and others viewed as potentially too onerous for law enforcement to make."
CNN (4/22, Rogers, 89.21M) reports on its website that "some Republicans were initially
skeptical about the legislation," but Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) "and others teamed up with"
Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-HI) "to strike an agreement broadening its support." Hirono on Thursday
"said...that the bill's passage 'sends a clear and unmistakable message of solidarity' to the
Asian American and Pacific Islander community. Collins said it 'affirms our commitment to stand
with' them against hate crimes." The New York Daily News (4/22, Sommerfeldt, 2.51M) reports
that Schumer "said the rare bipartisan feat is proof the usually gridlocked chamber can 'work to
solve important issues."
USA Today (4/22, Behrmann, 12.7M) reports that the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act would
"designate an official at DO) to oversee" the review of hate crimes and "task the department
with coordinating with local law enforcement groups and community-based organizations to
facilitate and raise awareness about hate crime reporting, including establishing an online hate
crime reporting system in multiple languages." The legislation "underwent several bipartisan
changes before its final passage," including the addition of "grants to aid local and state
governments to encourage more training on hate crimes for law enforcement, establish hate
crime hotlines and allow for a 'rehabilitation' effort for perpetrators of hate crimes."
The Houston Chronicle (4/22, Wermund, 982K) reports that "before the final vote,
Democrats rejected" a handful of amendments by Republicans, including one Sen. Ted Cruz (R-
TX) "offered focused on anti-Asian bias in college admissions, which Republicans have pointed
to as they oppose affirmative action policies." Roll Call (4/22, Ruger, 130K) reports that an
amendment from Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) "would have required the Justice Department to report
to Congress about the restrictions on religious exercise imposed by states during the COVID-19
pandemic," and another from Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) would have required "the reporting
only of hate crimes and not hate crime incidents," among other things.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (4/22, Mitchell, 1.46M) reports that the vote follows the
shootings in Atlanta, Georgia "that killed six women of Asian descent" in March. Sen. Jon Ossoff
(D-GA) "noted that the names of those killed in the spa shootings are included in the bill's
language, which he said will help ensure that what happened last month is never forgotten."
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CNBC (4/22, Pramuk, 7.34M) reports on its website that "Anti-Asian hate crimes jumped by
about 150% last year in 16 of the largest U.S. cities, according to a study released last month
by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San
Bernardino."
Politico (4/22, Wu, 6.73M) reports that advocates, including Advancing Justice-AAJC and
the National Council of Asian Pacific Americans, "hailed the bill's passage," but "also urged
solutions to violence outside of law enforcement." ABC World News TonightVi (4/22, story 8,
0:20, Muir, 6.07M), the Wall Street Journal (4/22, Peterson, Subscription Publication, 8.41M),
and The Hill (4/22, Carney, 5.69M) provide additional coverage.
Federal Prosecutors Expect At Least 100 More Arrests In Capitol Siege Probe.
Reuters (4/22, Wolfe) reports that the Justice Department "expects to charge at least 100 more
people for taking part in the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol, signaling prosecutors are far
from finished investigating an attack that a judge on Thursday called an act of terrorism. 'Over
400 individuals have been charged in connection with the Capitol attack,' federal prosecutors
said in a court filing on Thursday. 'The investigation continues and the government expects that
at least one hundred additional individuals will be charged." The Justice Department "made the
disclosure in a set of similar court filings asking judges to postpone deadlines in pending
prosecutions. 'The investigation and prosecution of the Capitol attack will likely be one of the
largest in American history, both in terms of the number of defendants prosecuted and the
nature and volume of the evidence,' the court filings stated."
WPost Analysis: Evidence In Trump Supporter's Trial Suggests He Espoused Nazi
Ideals.
The Washington Post (4/22, Jacobs, 10.52M) reports from New York, "An impassioned
supporter of former president Donald Trump, on trial for allegedly advocating the 'slaughter' of
influential Democrats after the U.S. Capitol riot, also espoused Nazi ideology and suggested to
his father that Trump should override the election results and declare the United States a
dictatorship as Adolf Hitler did in Germany generations ago, according to evidence presented by
federal authorities in a Brooklyn courtroom Thursday." The Post adds that the evidence
suggests that Brendan Hunt "was fixated on extremist ideas and conspiracy theories — including
that Democrats falsely portrayed covid-19 as a deadly epidemic to gain political advantage over
Trump - when on Jan. 8 he posted a video titled 'KILL YOUR SENATORS: Slaughter them all."
Hunt's trial "is believed to be the first related to the insurrection since the Justice Department
opened its sweeping investigation into the attack." Courthouse News (4/22, Pullano, 21K) also
reports.
New York Man Charged In Capitol Siege Probe.
The Watertown (NY) Daily Times (4/22, Muir, 58K) reports that a second Syracuse, New York
man "is facing charges for his alleged role in the January assault on the U.S. Capitol, according
to the Federal Bureau of Investigation." Matthew Greene, 33, "faces more than a half-dozen
charges for allegedly intending to stop, delay or hinder Congress' certification of the Electoral
College votes, 'by force if necessary,' according to an indictment against him and his co-
conspirators. 'His actions were deliberate, dangerous and illegal,' Special Agent Thomas Relford
with the FBI in Albany said in a statement. 'Now he must face the consequences:" Relford
"went on to say that the FBI Albany bureau will continue to work with colleagues in
Washington, D.C., and partners in the U.S. Attorney's Office to pursue charges against anyone
who broke the law on Jan. 6, adding that they remain grateful to the public for their assistance
in this investigation."
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New Mexico Man Charged In Capitol Siege Probe.
The Albuquerque (NM) Journal (4/22, Alves, 188K) reports from Santa Fe, "A Santa Fe man was
recently arrested and charged for his alleged participation in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol
in Washington." Matthew Martin, 42, "was federally charged with unlawful entry, disorderly
conduct impeding the conduct of government business, and parading, demonstrating or
picketing in the capitol buildings, according to court documents." Martin "has a security
clearance and worked at a defense contracting company in Santa Fe, according to court
documents. One of Martin's coworkers told law enforcement that Martin had asked to take Jan.
6 off from work." The Journal adds, "Court documents indicate the FBI got a hold of Martin's
cellphone records and found that he used his cell service in and around the U.S. Capitol building
the day of the insurrection."
New York Man Arrested After Posting On Dating App Of Storming Capitol During Riot.
WNBC-TV New York (4/22, 289K) reports, "Another New York man was arrested for his role in
the siege at the U.S. Capitol back in January, after law enforcement learned that he talked
about storming the Capitol on social media and a dating app, according to prosecutors." Robert
Chapman, "from the Putnam County town of Carmel, was arrested Thursday by the FBI in
connection with the events of Jan. 6 in Washington, D.C., prosecutors said. He was charged
with trespassing and disorderly conduct on restricted government property. The FBI was
provided information regarding Chapman's social media posts in the days following Jan. 6 in
which he is pictured in Statuary Hall in the Capitol. He also told a woman he had matched with
on the dating app Bumble that `I did storm the capitol' and that he `made it all the way into
Statuary Hall,' court papers allege."
Kentucky Man Charged In Capitol Siege Probe After Undercover Agents Recorded Him
At His Job.
Insider (4/22, Hall, 2.74M) reports, "A man from Kentucky who rioted at the US Capitol on
January 6 was arrested a week after undercover FBI agents secretly recorded him, according to
a recent Department of Justice filing." Stephen Randolph "was charged with assaulting,
resisting, or impeding an officer causing bodily injury, obstruction of law enforcement during
civil disorder, and obstruction of justice/Congress. Randolph appeared in several video
recordings and photographs from the Capitol riots where prosecutors allege he attacked police
officers behind barricades." Investigators "were unable to determine Randolph's identity for
three months before the FBI identified him using facial-recognition software to link images from
the riots to photographs on his girlfriend's Instagram account. The DOJ said undercover FBI
agents followed Randolph to work on March 3 where they captured photos of him wearing the
same hat, jacket, and jeans he wore at the Capitol."
Parties Divided Over Scope Of Proposed Capitol Riot Commission.
CNN (4/22, 89.21M) reports on its website that House Speaker Pelosi "is making concessions in
a bid to revive her effort for a 9/11-style commission to investigate the January 6 attack on the
Capitol, but the two parties still don't appear to be resuming serious negotiations amid a
dispute over the scope of what the commission would investigate." Republicans want the
commission to "also investigate violence from far left groups surrounding last year's protests of
police brutality, something Democrats say is an effort to distract from the role that former
President Donald Trump played in the lead-up to the insurrection."
Greg Sargent writes in the Washington Post (4/22, 10.52M) that in an effort to come to an
agreement, Pelosi has reportedly "suggested ways Republicans might have more influence on
decisions about subpoenas." Sargent says Pelosi has not offered any concessions on "the scope
of what's examined," and "Democrats should not concede an inch on this. Because what
Republicans are asking for in terms of scope is not only absurd, it's designed to frustrate any
real accounting into the insurrection."
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Capitol Police Respond To Lofgren Allegation. Politico (4/22, 6.73M) reports, "The
Capitol Police pushed back forcefully" Thursday against a claim by Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) that
a "commanding official directed officers on Jan. 6 to pursue only agitators against (Trump) and
ignore potential pro-Trump troublemakers." The department said the radio communication cited
by Lofgren was "misquoted" and lacked "full and necessary context."
NYTimes Examines GOP's Response To Cheney. The New York Times (4/22, Draper,
20.6M) runs a 6,600-word magazine feature titled "Liz Cheney Vs. MAGA" on how Republicans
"turned on" Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) in the wake of her call for her party "to turn away from
Trump after Jan. 6."
PROTESTS
Alternate Juror Says She Would Have Convicted Chauvin.
NBC Nightly NewsVI (4/22, story 4, 1:55, Holt, 4.83M) reported about its interview with Lisa
Christensen, who "was one of the alternate jurors who did not get to deliberate over Derek
Chauvin's fate." Christensen "listened to the 14 days of testimony and took extensive notes,"
and she said she would have voted to convict him on the charges. ABC World News TonightVi
(4/22, lead story, 2:30, Muir, 6.07M) reported Christensen said of the trial, "It was
overwhelming. And then to see it day after day or, you know, over and over again, it never got
any easier."
The CBS Evening NewsVi (4/22, story 2, 3:00, O'Donnell, 3.71M) reported Christensen
discussed her decision-making behind her opinion of Chauvin's guilt. She said, "I just felt like
the prosecution made a really good, strong argument. Dr. Tobin was the one that really did it
for me. He explained everything, I understood it, down to the moment where he said this is the
moment he lost his life. That really got to me. I felt like all the doctors pretty much supported
each other."
New York Subway Pipe Bomber Sentenced To Life In Prison.
The New York Times (4/22, Weiser, 20.6M) reports that Akayed Ullah, "who detonated a pipe
bomb in a crowded subway tunnel near Times Square in the name of ISIS in 2017," has been
sentenced to life in prison. ABC World News TonightVi (4/22, story 9, 0:20, Muir, 6.07M) said
the bomb "malfunction[ed), leaving him seriously injured."
The Washington Post (4/22, Jacobs, 10.52M) reports that Ullah, "a Bangladeshi immigrant
who in 2017 set off a bomb in a busy subway artery beneath Manhattan's Port Authority bus
terminal was sentenced Thursday to life in prison for the attack, which authorities said was
inspired by his devotion to the Islamic State terrorist group." Ullah, 31, "wanted to kill as many
Americans as possible, officials said, but would-be victims were spared because his explosive
device malfunctioned. One person sustained a shrapnel wound to the leg, and two other victims
were left with hearing damage. Ullah also was injured in the incident."
Reuters (4/22, Stempel) reports, "No one died and four people were injured in the
explosion, which led to the temporary closure of the station and the adjacent Port Authority Bus
Terminal during the morning rush. Ullah was burned in what prosecutors called a 'lone wolf'
attack." US Circuit Judge Richard Sullivan, "who imposed the sentence, told Ullah he had
committed a 'truly barbaric and heinous crime' without regard for the humanity of those in his
way. 'They were just people on the way to work, or school,' Sullivan said. 'People who maybe
had finished the night shift. ... To you, these people were expendable."
Fox News (4/22, Norman, 23.99M) reports that Ullah "apologized before hearing the
sentence." Prosecutors "earlier this month had argued that Ullah should spend the rest of his
life behind bars for the 'premeditated and vicious' Dec. 11, 2017 terror attack committed on
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behalf of the Islamic State terrorist group." Fox News adds, "After growing angry at American
foreign policy in the Middle East, Ullah grew consumed by online Islamic State propaganda
'glorifying brutally violent stabbings, shootings, and bombings targeting Americans,'
prosecutors had written in papers filed in federal court in Manhattan. 'He ultimately answered
ISIS's call for its supporters to carry out 'lone-wolf' terrorist attacks in the United States,' the
memo added, according to the Associated Press. 'Ullah's attack was premeditated and vicious."
Also reporting are WABC-AM New York (4/22, 18K) and the Rutherford (NJ) Daily Voice (4/22).
US Postal Service Reportedly Tracking Americans' Social Media Posts.
The New York Post (4/22, O'Neill, 7.45M) reports, "The US Postal Service is running a shadowy
surveillance program that tracks Americans' social media posts - including ones about planned
right-wing protests, a report revealed Thursday." The Post adds, "The so-called Internet Covert
Operations Program enlists the law enforcement arm of the USPS to hunt down 'inflammatory'
posts - made by groups ranging from the Proud Boys to demonstrators protesting coronavirus
lockdowns, according to documents obtained by Yahoo News. Posts deemed threatening are
then sent to federal, state and local law enforcement agencies to be monitored, the outlet
reported. 'Locations and times have been identified for these protests, which are being
distributed online across multiple social media platforms, to include right-wing leaning Parler
and Telegram accounts,' says a government bulletin, marked as law enforcement-sensitive on
March 16. 'No intelligence is available to suggest the legitimacy of these threats:"
AFRICOM Chief: Somalia Withdrawal Made Counterterrorism Missions Riskier.
The Hill (4/22, Kheel, 5.69M) reports the top US general for the region "said Thursday the
withdrawal of most US troops from Somalia has hindered intelligence gathering, making
continued US counterterrorism operations more difficult." US Africa Command chief Gen.
Stephen Townsend told the Senate Armed Services Committee, "There's no denying that the
repositioning of forces out of Somalia has introduced new layers of complexity and risk. Our
understanding of what's happening in Somalia is less now than it was when we were there on
the ground physically located with our partners." In the final months of his tenure, former
President Trump "ordered almost all of the 700 US troops that were in Somalia to withdraw.
"The troops were in Somalia "to help local security forces fight al Qaeda affiliate al-Shabaab and
the local ISIS affiliate."
Michigan Woman Convicted In Tennessee Of Stealing Trade Secrets For China.
The Washington Examiner (4/22, Dunleavy, 888K) reports, "A Chinese-born, naturalized U.S.
citizen was convicted Thursday of stealing trade secrets worth up to $120 million from
companies that developed a safer coating for the inside of beverage cans and trying to sell the
technology to the Chinese Communist Party." Xiaorong You, "who began working in the United
States nearly 30 years ago, was employed by Coca-Cola and Eastman Chemical Company when
she stole trade secrets related to formulations for bisphenol-A-free coatings. She was found
guilty following an April jury trial of conspiracy to steal trade secrets, economic espionage, and
wire fraud."
The Kingsport (TN) Times-News (4/22, Lane, 103K) reports from Greenville, Tennessee
that Dr. You, "also known as Shannon You, 59, of Lansing, Michigan, was convicted of
conspiracy to commit economic espionage, conspiracy to steal trade secrets, possession of
stolen trade secrets, economic espionage and wire fraud. You is scheduled for sentencing Nov
1." According to the Times-News, "The trade secrets stolen belonged to multiple owners and
cost an estimated $119,600,000 to develop, according to a press release from the U.S.
EFTA00150523
Attorney's Office. According to court records, the stolen information was related to formulations
for bisphenol-A-free, or BPA-free, coatings."
WATE-TV Knoxville, TN (4/22, Holder, 157K) reports, "The stolen trade secrets belonged
to major chemical and coating companies including Akzo-Nobel, BASF, Dow Chemical, PPG,
Toyochem, Sherwin Williams, and Eastman Chemical company, and cost nearly $120,000,000 to
develop." WATE-TV adds, "You stole the trade secrets for the purpose of establishing the
manufacturer in China with a Chinese chemical company called the Weihai Jinhong Group."
WBIR-TV Knoxville, TN (4/22, Salvemini, 269K) reports, "Officials said that because of
education and experience with BPA-free technologies, she was one of a limited number of Coca-
Cola employees with access to the trade secrets around the technologies." WBIR-TV adds,
"Witnesses at a 12-day trial in Greeneville said that developing the alternatives was an
expensive process. Officials said that Dr. You also had access to the trade secrets from
September 2017 through June 2018 as a packaging application development manager for
Eastman Chemical Company in Kingsport." Also reporting are Law360 (4/22, Subscription
Publication, 9K) and WJHL-TV Johnson City, TN (4/22, Teague, 158K).
NIH: Hundreds Of US Scientists Feared Compromised By China.
The Washington Times (4/22, Lovelace, 626K) reports, "More than 500 federally funded
scientists are under investigation for being compromised by China and other foreign powers,
the National Institutes of Health revealed Thursday." The Times adds, "The federal health
officials told a Senate committee that they are fighting to keep up with large-scale Chinese
efforts to corrupt American researchers and steal intellectual property that scientists hope will
lead to biomedical advances." The NIH "has contacted more than 90 institutions about more
than 200 scientists they're concerned about, said Dr. Michael S. Lauer, NIH deputy director for
extramural research," but "the investigations' workload is weighing down the nation's top
medical research agency, and new cases are turning up constantly across the government," the
Times reports.
Alabama A&M Closing Confucius Institute.
Alabama Live (4/22, 497K) reports Alabama A&M University's executive committee has "voted
to close the Confucius Institute at the university after notification from the federal government
that it could lose eligibility for some federal funds." Congressman Mo Brooks of Huntsville
"applauded the decision and urged Troy University, which also has a Confucius Institute, to do
the same." Troy University "said no decision has been made." An April 6 letter from the Under
Secretary of Defense to Alabama A&M President Andrew Hugine Jr., "said the Defense
Department would not provide grants, contracts, or other funds to universities hosting
Confucius Institutes, which are based in China."
MTA Pulls Security Cameras From Subway Due To Links To Chinese Facial Recognition
Company.
The New York Daily News (4/22, Guse, 2.51M) reports the MTA on Thursday "abruptly halted a
program to test new security cameras on subway cars - a day after the Daily News raised
questions about the ties the company providing the technology has to a Chinese firm that
specializes in facial recognition technology." Transit managers last week "sent a memo to
subway crews alerting them of new video cameras installed on a four-car G line train." But the
vendor contracted "to provide the system's technology - Suzhou Huaqi Intelligent Technology —
raised major security flags that prompted officials to suddenly pull the camera-filled train from
service on Thursday."
Haines: Climate Must Be At "Center" Of Security Policy.
In remarks delivered at the first day of the White House virtual climate summit, The Hill (4/22,
Schnell, 5.69M) reports DNI Haines "said that climate change must be 'at the center' of
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countries' national security and foreign policy to address the issue properly." Haines said, "To
address climate change properly, it must be at the center of a country's national security and
foreign policy, and as such it needs to be fully integrated with every aspect of our analysis in
order to allow us not only to monitor the threat but also critically think to ensure that
policymakers understand the implication of climate change on seemingly unrelated policies, and
then identifying opportunities to mitigate the challenge that we face."
CBS News (4/22, Gazis, 5.39M) reports that Haines "noted the U.S. intelligence
community's initial focus on climate change dated back several decades, when the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) first offered scientists access to classified information and asked them
to review satellite images of environmental changes on the continents." She added, "Ever since,
our services have been raising increasing alarms about the impact that climate change has,
across every aspect of our work, as geophysical features of the earth are being reshaped —
whether through the changing boundary lines of the tropics or the shrinking sea ice, centrally in
the Arctic."
Huffington Post (4/22, Visser) reports that Haines "added that as director of national
intelligence, she intended to make climate action 'a whole of government effort, working not
just to protect national security for America but to protect human security around the world."
Republicans Offer COVID-19 Origin Act Amid Concerns About Possible Link Between
Pandemic, Wuhan Lab.
The Washington Times (4/22, Blake, 626K) reports, "Republican senators introduced legislation
Thursday requiring the US government to declassify any information about potential links
between the coronavirus pandemic and a Chinese laboratory." These senators "proposed the
COVID-19 Origin Act of 2021 amid lingering questions involving the provenance of the
pandemic more than a year since it started." The piece adds, "If successful, their bill would
compel the DNI, currently Avril Haines, to declassify 'any and all information' involving potential
links between the lab and virus."
Fox News (4/22, Conklin, 23.99M) reports Sens. Josh Hawley (R-MO) and Mike Braun (R-
IN) "introduced the bill to declassify intelligence related to COVID-19 origins." Hawley said in a
Thursday statement, "For over a year, anyone asking questions about the Wuhan Institute of
Virology has been branded as a conspiracy theorist. The world needs to know if this pandemic
was the product of negligence at the Wuhan lab but the CCP has done everything it can to block
a credible investigation." He added that the "Eiden Administration must declassify what it knows
about the Wuhan lab and Beijing's attempts to cover up the origin of the pandemic."
Jordan Releases 16 Allegedly Involved In Sedition Plot.
The Los Angeles Times (4/22, 3.37M) reports more than a dozen alleged plotters "were freed
over their involvement in a royal feud between King Abdullah II and his half-brother and
onetime crown prince, Prince Hamzah." The 16 detainees, "many of them members of Prince
Hamzah's staff or his circle of friends from Jordan's powerful tribes, had been captured in a blitz
operation involving multiple strike teams dispatched across the kingdom." The release had
come "after families of the accused petitioned the palace for forgiveness."
UK's MI5 Joins Instagram.
Forbes (4/22, Hart, 10.33M) reports Britain's secretive domestic intelligence service, known as
MI5, "joined Instagram Thursday in a bid to boost transparency, bust myths and appeal to a
more diverse range of recruits, something the agency's director said will need to be balanced
against the need to operate in the shadows." Ken McCallum, the agency's head, "said 'being
more open' is critical to MI5's approach to the 2020s but that does not mean the organization
will 'become an open book." MI5 intends to use the account to "debunk popular myths about
the agency, promote career opportunities, highlight historical exhibits from its museum and
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host Q&As with its officers." The agency's first post, "an image of its London headquarters, said
the secret to successful spying is to 'consider all angles. It'll give you a better view."
Wright Laid To Rest.
NBC Nightly NewsVI (4/22, story 3, 1:40, Holt, 4.83M) reported that the family of Daunte
Wright laid him to rest on Thursday, He was "remembered as a former high school star athlete
who always made people laugh and as the doting father of toddler Daunte Jr." His mother Katie
Wright said, "He was loved by so many. He's going to be so missed."
The AP (4/22) reports Al Sharpton spoke at the funeral, and his eulogy "included a
stinging rebuke of the possibility that Wright was pulled over for having air fresheners dangling
from his mirror." Katie Wright "said her son called her after he was stopped and told her that
was the reason," but the police challenge the claim. The Minneapolis Star Tribune (4/22, 855K)
reports Sharpton said in his remarks, "We came to bury the prince of Brooklyn Center. We came
from all over the country because you hurt one of our princes. You thought he was just some
kid with an air freshener. He was a prince. All of Minneapolis has stopped today to honor the
prince of Brooklyn Center."
USA Today (4/22, Miller, Yancey-Bragg, Ortiz, 12.7M) reports that hundreds of mourners
"were inside Shiloh International Ministries for the service, 11 days after Wright's death in
nearby Brooklyn Center and two days after the police officer who killed George Floyd last May
was convicted of murder in a Minneapolis courtroom." Reuters (4/22) reports Minnesota Gov.
Tim Walz (D), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), and Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) attended the funeral.
The CBS Evening NewsVi (4/22, story 3, 2:05, O'Donnell, 3.71M) reported Wright "was
stopped for an expired tag and found to have an outstanding misdemeanor warrant, when
former officer Kim Potter jumped in to assist the arrest, she grabbed her gun instead of a taser,
firing the fatal shot." ABC World News TonightVi (4/22, story 2, 1:15, Muir, 6.07M) reported
Potter "was charged with second degree manslaughter and is scheduled to appear in court
again next month."
The New York Times (4/22, Bogel-Burroughs, 20.6M) and the Washington Post (4/22,
Bellware, 10.52M) provide additional coverage of the funeral.
Columbus Police Face Growing Criticism Over Bryant Shooting.
NBC Nightly NewsVi (4/22, story 5, 2:10, Holt, 4.83M) reported that the Columbus, Ohio,
Police Department is facing growing furor over the fatal shooting of 16-year-old Ma'Khia Bryant,
who was shot and killed this week. Police Officer Nicolas Reardon "was placed on administrative
leave pending this investigation," but the latest incident is fueling a groundswell of anger "felt
by communities across the nation who are calling for police reform."
The Washington Post (4/22, Ludlow, Firozi, Fahrenthold, Hawkins, 10.52M) reports Bryant
"was fatally shot by a Columbus police officer responding to a call for help at her foster home in
the city's southeast." The city has released the body camera footage, which "shows Bryant
swinging what appears to be a knife at two people during an altercation outside the property
before an officer arrives and fires four shots at her torso."
Christy E. Lopez writes in the Washington Post (4/22, 10.52M) that to end the "cycle of
traumatic police violence, we have to recognize that we have turned policing into an impossible
endeavor - one that underprotects communities even as it needlessly provokes conflict. It is
not realistic, and perhaps not even reasonable, to expect that police will ever be able to carry
out the multiple, often conflicting tasks we've given them in a manner that is consistently
lawful, ethical and effective."
WSJoumal: Administration Heeds Politics Over Facts Regarding Recent Police
Shootings. The Wall Street Journal (4/22, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) criticizes
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President Biden and his staff, such as White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki, who have
repeatedly taken to commenting on recent police shootings before authorities had the
opportunity to confirm what has happened. The Journal refers to Psaki's decision to label the
shooting of Bryant as a racist incident as well as Biden's decision to generalize the issue of
systemic racism as an issue within every police department in the US.
Authorities Believe Remains Found Are Those Of Missing Pennsylvania Amish Teen.
The AP (4/22) reports from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, "Authorities strongly believe that remains
found a day earlier in a grave along railroad tracks in southern Pennsylvania are those of a
young Amish woman who disappeared last summer, a county prosecutor said Thursday."
Lancaster County District Attorney Heather Adams "told a news conference that a coroner has
not made a positive forensic identification," but, "Adams said, the remains appear to be those of
a female of the same age as 18-year-old Linda Stoltzfoos, and were buried with a dress, bonnet
and shoes like those Stoltzfoos wore the day she disappeared. She was last seen walking home
from church in the Bird-in-Hand area on June 21, 2020." Justo Smoker, 35, of Paradise, "was
charged with homicide in December and a county judge ruled in March that there was enough
evidence for a homicide trial. Smoker was initially arrested in August, and also faces charges of
kidnapping and false imprisonment."
WGAL-TV Lancaster, PA (4/22, 177K) reports, "The remains were recovered Wednesday in
Gap behind the previous place of employment of" Smoker, and "an autopsy is scheduled for
Friday to help confirm the identity and determine the cause and manner of death, but a
preliminary review indicates the remains are those of a female of a relevant age. Investigators
also found a dress, bonnet and shoes consistent with the clothing worn by Stoltzfoos on the day
she disappeared." Police "believe Smoker killed Stoltzfoos within hours of allegedly kidnapping
her on June 21 and buried her behind a business on Harvest Drive in Ronks, where
investigators found her stockings and bra. It's believed that Smoker then moved the body
several days later."
The LNP Media (PA) (4/22, Nephin, 77K) reports, "The Stoltzfoos family has not spoken
publicly throughout the case and remained silent on Wednesday and Thursday as the news of
the teen's recovery spread." LNP Media adds, "Stoltzfoos' body will likely be released to the
family Friday, after an autopsy to determine cause and manner of death is completed, Dr.
Stephen Diamantoni, the Lancaster County Coroner, said Thursday."
Virginia Man Pleads Guilty In Cross Burning That Targeted Black Teen.
The AP (4/22) reports from Abingdon, Virginia, "A southwest Virginia man pleaded guilty
Thursday to a federal offense in connection with the burning of a cross last summer on the
front lawn of a Black teenager who had recently organized a civil rights protest." James Brown,
41, of Marion, Virginia "will remain free on bond until his sentencing in August on one count of
criminal interference with federally protected housing rights based upon the victim's race,
according to court records. Federal prosecutors said Brown admitted to burning the cross to two
witnesses and also was known to use racial epithets when referring to the African-American
family, who court documents describe as his neighbors."
The Washington Post (4/22, Duggan, 10.52M) reports, "The incident occurred June 14 in
Marion, Va., near the Tennessee border. Authorities said James Brown, now 41, covered a
wooden cross in cloth, doused it with a flame accelerant, placed it in a barrel and set it on fire.
'There is absolutely no room for racial intimidation or injustice occurring in our communities,'
Stanley M. Meador, special agent in charge of the FBI's Richmond Division, said in a statement
Thursday after Brown appeared in U.S. District Court in Abingdon."
The Bristol (VA) Herald Courier (4/22, Sorrell) reports, "Brown admitted to burning the
cross to two witnesses and also was known to use racial epithets when referring to the African-
American family, prosecutors said."
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Colorado Grocery Store Gunman Charged With Another 43 Counts.
Fox News (4/22, Conklin, 23.99M) reports, "Colorado prosecutors have charged the man who
fatally shot 10 people at a Boulder grocery store on March 22 with an additional 44 counts of
attempted murder, weapons and assault charges." Ahmad Al Aliwi Alissa, 21, "was initially
facing 10 counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted first-degree murder when
he was apprehended on March 23; he now faces 54 total charges. The additional charges
include 32 additional counts of attempted first-degree murder, 10 counts of unlawful use of a
high-capacity magazine and one count of first-degree assault, according to a motion filed
Wednesday in Boulder County District Court." Alissa "had bought a Ruger AR-556 pistol, which
resembles an AR-15 rifle, six days before killing the 10 victims, including Boulder Police Officer
Eric Talley. He passed a background check conducted by the Colorado Bureau of Investigation."
Kristin Smart's Parents Sue Father Who Is Accused Of Hiding Her Body.
The AP (4/22, Melley) reports from Los Angeles, "The parents of missing California college
student Kristin Smart on Thursday sued the father of the man charged with killing their
daughter nearly 25 years ago." The AP adds, "The lawsuit filed in San Luis Obispo County
Superior Court said Smart's body was buried in Ruben Flores's backyard and he moved the
body "under cover of darkness" to another location a few days after investigators searched his
property in February 2020." Ruben Flores, 80, "pleaded not guilty to accessory after murder on
Monday and his son, Paul Flores, 44, pleaded not guilty to murder. The father and son were
arrested last week after investigators said they found 'biological evidence' indicating Smart had
been buried under Ruben Flores' deck behind his home in nearby Arroyo Grande and was
recently moved, according to a court document."
Suspect In Smart Killing Was Previously Suspected In 2007 Rape Allegation.
NBC News (4/22, Blankstein, 4.91M) reports, "A man charged with murder in the death of
Kristin Smart, a California college student who vanished walking home from a party in 1996,
was investigated in the alleged rape of a woman in Southern California a decade after Smart's
disappearance." Paul R. Flores, "now 44, became the subject of the investigation in 2012 when
his DNA profile matched a profile collected from the woman, who was given a forensic
examination at a hospital the morning after the alleged January 2007 assault, according to a
report from the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office. But the alleged incident was never
prosecuted. The woman said she blacked out at a bar in Redondo Beach and later woke up
naked and disoriented in a stranger's bed."
Reuters Source: Gaetz's Complaints About Iran Hostage Scheme Will Not Distract FBI
Probe.
Reuters (4/22, Hosenball) reports, "A federal investigation into whether U.S. Representative
Matt Gaetz trafficked a minor for sex will not be derailed by his assertion that a veteran asked
his father for money to pay for the release of an American held by Iran, a law enforcement
source familiar with the investigation said." Reuters adds, "Investigators believe the purported
scheme to free Robert Levinson, a former FBI agent who disappeared in Iran in 2007, lacked
credibility, the source said. Another U.S. official familiar with the case noted that Levinson's
family in March 2020 publicly accepted U.S. government assessments that he died in Iranian
custody." Federal investigators "are examining the purported attempt while separately also
looking into whether Gaetz, a Florida Republican, may have violated sex trafficking laws by
paying travel expenses for a 17-year-old female, the law enforcement source said. 'One has
nothing to do with the other,' the source said."
FBI Probe Nets Two Arrests For Identity Theft Trafficking In Tennessee.
WVLT-TV Knoxville, TN (4/22) reports from Knoxville, Tennessee, "Two people were arrested in
Knoxville and accused of identity theft after officers discovered numerous fraudulent debit,
credit and gift cards." WVLT-TV adds, "Officers conducted a search warrant at the home of 36-
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year-old Jessica Sanchez who had been arrested on Tuesday for driving a vehicle that was
reported stolen out of California." Police said Sanchez "was in possession of numerous debit,
credit and gift cards. Five of the prepaid debit cards were verified fraudulent. Police said they
swiped the cards through a card reader which showed the information from the magnetic strip
was different than the information printed on the card. A Detective with the Los Angeles
Sheriff's Department Identity Theft Task Force and the FBI White Collar Crime Task Force
verified the five individuals whose names were printed on the cards were victims of identity
theft."
Reputed Mexican Drug Cartel Leader Sentenced In Washington On Drug, Money
Laundering Charges.
KAPP-TV Yakima, WA (4/22, Slyke) reports that a Pasco, Washington man "described by
prosecutors as a 'leader/organizer of a cell with the Sinaloa Cartel' was sentenced this week to
26 years in prison for drug crimes and money laundering, the Department of Justice announced
Wednesday." Federal prosecutors said Reynaldo Perez Munoz, 41, was sentenced after pleading
guilty on August 28, 2020 to several charges, including conspiracy to distribute 50+ grams
methamphetamine, five or more kilograms of cocaine and at least one kilogram of heroin, two
counts of money laundering, and possession with intent to distribute 400 grams or more of
fentanyl. Senior US District Judge Edward Shea "sentenced Munoz to 26 years of federal prison
time + a seven-year term of court supervision after release. Federal authorities call him a
transnational drug trafficker, and he was living right here in the Tri-Cities."
Washington Man Sentenced For Drug Trafficking.
The Columbia Basin (WA) Herald (4/22, Schweizer, 26K) reports from Spokane, Washington, "A
Quincy man was sentenced Thursday to more than 11 years in federal prison after pleading
guilty to conspiracy to possess and distribute methamphetamine." Euesebio Olvera Ruiz, 27,
"was sentenced to 140 months in federal prison and five years of court supervision following
that, according to a press release from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of
Washington. Ruiz pleaded guilty Jan. 14 to conspiracy to possess with Intent to distribute and
distribution of 50 grams or more of actual (pure) methamphetamine." Ruiz "was in a 'drug-
trafficking organization' in Quincy and Moses Lake, according to information in court
proceedings. Ruiz participated in a drive-by shooting in Moses Lake at the direction of leaders of
his organization, the press release said. He also was booked in the Grant County Jail Jan. 28,
2020, on drug charges, according to Herald archives."
Father, Daughter Plead Guilty In Shoplifting Scheme.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (4/22, Abusaid, 1.46M) reports father and daughter duo
Robert and Noni Whitley of Atlanta, GA pleaded guilty Thursday to an "elaborate multi-million
dollar" shoplifting scheme. The Whitleys "reportedly operated out of a southwest Atlanta
warehouse, paying shoplifters cash for trash bags filled with over-the-counter prescription
drugs, shaving razors and beauty products" from 2011 to 2019. FBI Atlanta Special Agent Chris
Hacker said, "For more than eight years, the Whitleys profited off the backs of legitimate
retailers by encouraging theft of their products for resale online."
Tennessee Man Arrested For Sexual Exploitation.
The Bristol (VA) Herald Courier (4/22) reports Dalton Slemp of Bluff City, TN was arrested April
20 after being indicted on a charge of aggravated sexual exploitation of a minor for uploading
and sharing child pornography. The sheriff's office acted on a tip received from the FBI.
Federal Charges Dropped Against Suspected Kidnapper.
The Miami Herald (4/22, Teproff, Neal, 647K) reports self-proclaimed witch Shannon Ryan of
Muscle Shoals, AL "was charged Thursday by Miramar police with child neglect" in Florida.
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Kidnapping charges against him in connection with the disappearance of Leila Cavett have been
dropped. The FBI "confirmed that investigators were searching Monarch Hill Landfill...in
connection with [Cavett's] disappearance" in October, but found nothing.
WTVJ-TV Miami (4/22, Hamacher, Shepard, 123K) reports on its website that Ryan "was
arrested this past August following an FBI investigation into [Cavett's] disappearance." The FBI
said "video evidence didn't support Ryan's claims that he saw Cavett and her son get into
another person's vehicle at a RaceTrac gas station in Hollywood, [FL]" July 25.
WTVT-TV Tampa, FL (4/22, 476K) reports the FBI "released new security video showing
the last known images of missing mom Leila Cavett." Her 2-year-old son "was found wandering
the streets of South Florida alone in July."
WPLG-TV Miami (4/22, Batchelor, Forney, 271K) reports "surveillance video showed Ryan's
car directly in front of an apartment complex shortly before the woman's 2-year-old son,
Kamdyn, was found there." Ryan "told the FBI he was...examining a nail in his tire."
Louisiana Suspected Serial Killer's DNA Found On Shell Casings.
The Baton Rouge (LA) Advocate (4/22, Gyan, 255K) reports an expert testifying at the trial of
suspected serial killer Kenneth Gleason on Thursday said Gleason's "DNA was found on shell
casings recovered from the scene of a Black homeless man's slaying at a Baton Rouge bus stop
in September 2017." Gleason is accused of several racially-based killings and shootings. An FBI
agent "testified Wednesday that Gleason searched the internet between Sept. 1, 2017, and
Sept. 16, 2017, for topics such as White nationalism, genocide, Nazi propaganda and gun
silencers."
Texas Kidnapper May Face Federal Charges.
The Huntsville (AL) Times (4/22, Thornton, 623K) reports Florence, AL police "say they are
working closely with the FBI to pursue federal charges" against Daniel Skipworth of Tyler, TX.
Skipworth is accused of "third degree kidnapping, aggravated sexual assault and trafficking of
persons" in Texas in connection with the kidnapping of Abbygail Moody from Alabama.
Surveillance Photo of Illinois Bank Robber Released.
The Northbrook (IL) Patch (4/22, DeGrechie, 1.44M) reports FBI Public Affairs Officer for the
Chicago Division Special Agent Siobhan Johnson said a photo was released of the man who
robbed a TCF Bank in Arlington Heights, IL on April 7. The surveillance photo was taken from
behind.
Three New Yorkers Arrested For International Bank Robberies.
CNN (4/22, Williams, 89.21M) reports on its website that three men from Brooklyn, NY were
arrested Tuesday "on money laundering conspiracy charges in connection with an elaborate,
international bank robbery operation that netted more than $30 million over several years." FBI
Assistant Director-in-Charge Sweeney said in the statement, "The crimes we allege in this
indictment read like something straight out of Hollywood fiction. ... The thieves used
sophisticated tools to thwart security systems at foreign banks and tried to cover their tracks by
laundering money through US banks."
Case Of Former North Carolina Sheriff Accused Of Corruption Goes To Jury.
Raleigh (NC) News & Observer (4/22, Monk, Dys, 396K) reports arguments in the trial of
former Chester County, NC Sheriff Alex "Big A" Underwood and Chief Deputy Robert Sprouse
and Lt. Johnny Neal concluded Thursday. They are "charged with being part of a multi-pronged
conspiracy involving a variety of different alleged illegal acts." Defense lawyer Stanley Myers
said FBI lead case agent Rodney Naramore "'doesn't even have the guts' to get on the witness
stand and tell the jury what he knows" about the undisclosed facts of the case.
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New Mexico Corrections Officer Said To Have Illicit Relationship With Gang Member.
In an opinion piece, the Albuquerque (NM) Journal (4/22, 188K) points out the "troubling"
personal relationship between Syndicato de Nuevo Mexico prison gang member Jody Rufino
Martinez and corrections officer Santana Bustamante. Jail employees "told the FBI that
Bustamante entered Martinez's cell alone on numerous occasions, provided him with outside
food, and they spent time alone outside the view of surveillance cameras." In addition, the FBI
"says Bustamante waited in a truck outside the victim's home while Martinez went inside and
shot" an informer after Martinez was released from prison. Bustamente has not been fired from
her prison job.
Indiana Man Sentenced For Sexual Exploitation.
The Kokomo IN Tribune (4/22, Juranovich, 58K) reports Bradley M. Cox of Kokomo, IN "was
sentenced to 35 years in prison Wednesday" after being convicted in December of "sexual
exploitation of children, extortion and production and attempted production of child
pornography and receipt of child pornography." FBI Indianapolis Special Agent in Charge Paul
Keenan said in a statement, "Mr. Cox thought he could hide behind the anonymity of the
internet to terrorize his young victims, causing them untold mental anguish, but this sentence
is a clear message that those who engage in sextortion will be held accountable for their
heinous actions. ... The FBI and our partners are dedicated to rooting out these perpetrators
and ensuring they can never impose such terror on their victims and their families ever again."
US Charges Three In Scheme To Get $14M In COVID-Relief Loans.
The Hill (4/22, Oshin, 5.69M) reports, "Three men from Texas and Oregon were charged in an
apparent scheme to get $14 million from COVID-relief loans." The Hill adds, "According to a
Thursday press release sent out by the United States Attorney's Office of the Southern District
of New York, the three men - Apocalypse Bella, Mackenzy Toussaint, and Amos Mundendi -
were charged for trying to obtain government guaranteed loans designed to provide relief to
small businesses during the pandemic. `As alleged in the indictment, the defendants in this case
are charged with fraudulently securing loans intended to help honest small businesses and their
employees deal with the pandemic's economic effects,' FBI Assistant Director William F.
Sweeney Jr. said in the statement."
Law360 (4/22, Subscription Publication, 9K) reports, "In a case pending before U.S.
District Judge Paul A. Engelmayer," the defendants "are charged with four counts each of
conspiracy and fraud for allegedly receiving millions and engaging in `large transfers of funds'
abroad last year." The men "and others targeted the Small Business Administration's
coronavirus pandemic programs - the Paycheck Protection Program and the Economic Injury
Disaster Loan - using two unnamed straw companies to make their applications, according to
the indictment. Bella transferred more than $729,000 into an account he controlled, while
Toussaint moved $138,000 into one of his accounts, the indictment says. Other money was
transferred aboard and into an investment account, the indictment says."
North Carolina Man Charged With Fraudulently Obtaining $1.5M In PPP Loans.
The Hill (4/22, Oshin, 5.69M) reports, "A federal grand jury indicted a North Carolina man
Thursday accused of fraudulently obtaining $1.5 million in Paycheck Protection Program (PPP)
loans." The Hill adds, "In a Department of Justice press release William T. Stetzer, acting U.S.
attorney for the Western District of North Carolina, stated that Maurice Kamgaing had allegedly
collected the sum in COVID-19 relief funds by submitting fraudulent PPP loan applications on
behalf of two businesses." In April 2020, Kamgaing "allegedly filed a fraudulent loan application
for Apiagne Inc., for $856,463 and another for AKC Solutions for $650,000. He allegedly used
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the amount disbursed for improper purposes and personal expenses, according to the
statement." Kamgaing, 41, "is charged with wire fraud in relation to a disaster benefit, two
counts of making false statements to a bank and two counts of engaging in monetary
transactions in criminally derived property."
Head Of Shuttered Texas Company Says He Turned Himself In.
Reuters (4/22, Khan) reports Christopher Bentley was the founder of Bellatorum Resources,
which bought mineral rights in Texas shale fields before Bentley shut it down on April 9 and
"acknowledged in a Reuters interview that he had squandered investors' cash." Bentley sent an
email to investors saying he was turning himself in to authorities. The FBI "said it does not
confirm or deny the existence of any investigations."
CYBER DIVISION
GCHQ Chief Says West Faces Near-Term Challenges With Cybersecurity.
The Guardian (UK). (4/23, 5.53M) reports that, according to the head of the spy agency GCHQ,
Britain and its allies "face a `moment of reckoning' in which secure encryption and other future
technologies may no longer be `shaped and controlled by the west.' In a speech on Friday,
Jeremy Fleming "will say the UK has to 'develop sovereign technologies' and work with allies to
'build better cyberdefenses' to prosper in the future." Although the spy chief "does not mention
China by name, his remarks are largely aimed at Beijing's growing strength in high technology,
revealed recently by the row over the deployment of Huawei kit in Britain's 5G mobile phone
networks." There are also "growing concerns about Russian state-sponsored hacking." This is
showing "signs of increasing sophistication, as demonstrated by the recent exploitation of a
vulnerability in SolarWinds software used in several US government departments."
Reuters (4/22) reports Britain's spies "believe that China could within decades dominate
all of the key emerging technologies of this century, particularly artificial intelligence, synthetic
biology and genetics." In an unusually blunt speech, Fleming "said that the UK's cyber power
could not be taken for granted and that the rules were changing in ways that states did not
always control." Fleming said in a lecture at London's Imperial College, according a text of his
speech released ahead of delivery, "Without action it is increasingly clear that the key
technologies on which we will rely for our future prosperity and security won't be shaped and
controlled by the West."
CISO Chris DeRusha Discusses Zero Trust.
NextGov (4/22) reports that, "amid a swarm of industry offerings that employ the cybersecurity
buzzword, Federal Chief Information Security Officer Chris DeRusha described the essential
components of what he considers zero trust." He said, "I really believe it's rooted in three core
principles: verifying every user, validating every device, and then within that, limiting access
intelligently. This is obviously a shift away from the prior trust model that assumed if a user is
behind a firewall, then you know they can be trusted. Obviously, this isn't bearing out
anymore." DeRusha headlined the Billington Cybersecurity Defense Summit Thursday "where
current and former federal officials stressed that the term 'zero trust' refers to a plan of action
or policy, not something any one product can claim they provide and advocated smart
budgeting."
Taiwan Authorities Investigating Apple Supplier Hack.
BBC News (4/22, 876K) reports authorities in Taiwan "say they are looking into a ransomware
cyber-attack on a major technology firm there." Quanta Computer is a "manufacturer of many
flagship Apple products, including its MacBook line." The hackers, known as Revil, "have
published stolen blueprints for unreleased products, and are threatening to release more."
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Taiwanese officials "said they are 'taking an initial step to look into and understand' the
incident." On their darknet website, the anonymous hackers "are attempting to extort a ransom
from Apple directly, writing, 'We recommended that Apple buy back available data by 1 May:" It
is understood they are "asking for tens of millions of pounds."
Officials Welcome CISA's New Authorities To Hunt Cyber Threats.
NextGov (4/22) reports new authorities "allowing the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security
Agency (CISA) to look for threats across federal agencies' networks will boost work some
departments have already been doing to spot and remove threats outside their perimeter,"
according to a leading chief information security officer. Department of Education CISO Steve
Hernandez said, "We're very excited about (CISA's) threat hunting authorities, simply because
it gives us more folks out in the wilderness looking for those bad actors. We see this as an
absolute win, it's only going to supplement and help reinforce the work we're already doing."
Hernandez, who co-chairs the Federal Chief Information Security Officers Council, "detailed the
agencies' threat-hunting activities, which grew in response to fraudsters trying to take
advantage of the pandemic."
Cyber Experts Warn Canada's Aging Critical Infrastructure Strategy A Growing
Concern.
The National Post (CAN) (4/22, 75K) reports the 2019 budget "said monies would go to protect
Canada's critical cyber systems including in the finance, telecommunications, energy and
transport sectors." The $144.9 million earmarked in the 2019 budget for cybersecurity of
Canada's critical infrastructure "still hasn't been put to use after two years, despite warnings
that systems such as energy grids and telecom networks could be targeted by hostile actors."
The funding was "dependent on new legislation to 'introduce a new critical cyber systems
framework,' which still hasn't materialized." Benjamin Fung, Canada research chair in data
mining for cybersecurity at McGill University "said that critical infrastructure has become more
vulnerable to attacks in the past 10 or 15 years because it is now connected to the internet to
allow it to be operated remotely, which 'opens up another dimension of cyber threats."
FBI Warns New Englanders Of Fake Government Agent Scams.
The AP (4/22) reports from Boston, "The FBI's Boston office is warning New Englanders about
scammers claiming to be a government official and using intimidation or threats to get money
from victims. It says the scammers typically claim to be calling from a government agency.
They threaten to confiscate property, freeze bank accounts, or have people arrested unless
payment is made through a wire transfer or prepaid or gift cards." The FBI "stressed that
federal agencies do not call or e-mail people threatening arrest or demanding money. The
agency said residents should hang up and report the call, even if it appears to be coming from
an agency's legitimate phone number."
The Portland (ME) Press Herald (4/22, 174K) reports, "The FBI's Boston Division said it is
seeing an increase in reports about scammers targeting residents of Maine and other New
England states through unsolicited, often spoofed, telephone calls, according to a news release
issued by spokeswoman Kristen M. Setera. A scammer claims to a be representative of a
government agency, including the FBI, while trying to intimidate the victim into making
immediate payment to avoid arrests. 'Nobody wants to be the subject of a law enforcement
investigation, and scammers are using that to their advantage to try and intimidate people into
just handing over their hard-earned money. We're asking you not to fall for it,' said Joseph R.
Bonavolonta, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's Boston Division."
Supreme Court Expands Life Sentencing Guidelines For Minors.
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The AP (4/22) reports that the Supreme Court "made it easier Thursday to sentence minors
convicted of murder to life in prison without the possibility of parole, a ruling that reflects a
change in course driven by a more conservative group of justices." The case, which "involved a
Mississippi inmate and a crime committed when he was 15," had "asked the justices whether a
minor has to be found to be 'permanently incorrigible,' incapable of being rehabilitated, before
being sentenced to life without parole."
The Los Angeles Times (4/22, 3.37M) reports that the 6-3 ruling "retreats somewhat from
a pair of earlier rulings, which said that such life sentences for minors convicted of murder
should be extremely rare and limited to cases in which there was no reason to hope the young
person could be rehabilitated." Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh "said judges are required to weigh
the defendant's age as a mitigating factor before imposing a punishment for a homicide." CNN
(4/22, 89.21M) reports on its website that Kavanaugh wrote, "In a case involving an individual
who was under 18 when he or she committed a homicide, a State's discretionary sentencing
system is both constitutionally necessary and constitutionally sufficient."
The Wall Street Journal (4/22, Bravin, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports Justice
Sonia Sotomayor published a dissent, and she condemned the majority for its decision, which
she said violated the juvenile inmates' protection from cruel and unusual punishment. The
Washington Post (4/22, Barnes, 10.52M) reports Kavanaugh "downplayed Sotomayor's fiery
dissent as reflecting 'simply...a good-faith disagreement' over 'how to interpret relevant
precedents."
The New York Times (4/22, Liptak, 20.6M) reports that the late Justice Anthony Kennedy
had "methodically limited the availability of the harshest penalties for crimes committed by
juveniles, first by striking down the juvenile death penalty and then by restricting sentences of
life without the possibility of parole" in rulings over the past 16 years.
NPR (4/22, Totenberg, 3.69M) reports on its website that Mississippi "is among a handful
of states that allow a life without parole sentence for juvenile crimes without requiring a finding
of 'permanent incorrigibility."
US Told Colombia That Florida Woman Held In Venezuela Coup Plot Had Links To
Arms Ring.
The Miami Herald (4/22, Hall, Delgado, 647K) reports, "The U.S. Department of Homeland
Security warned Colombian law enforcement several times that a Florida resident tangled up in
last year's slapdash failed coup in Venezuela may be part of an international arms smuggling
ring." The Herald adds that in a letter in June, "the Homeland Security Investigations division of
DHS warned Colombia's customs police agency that it had been tracking calls to a cellular
phone from the 305 area code that was registered to Yacsy Alvarez Mirabal," the "Venezuelan
national who owns a home in Tampa, frequents Miami and was arrested last September in
connection to a weapons seizure linked to what became a botched Venezuelan coup launched
from Colombia." The letter "from Julio Magallan, the adjunct attache for Homeland Security
Investigations at the U.S. Embassy in Bogota, alerted about a weapons ring under investigation
for allegedly trafficking arms from the United States and Europe to Colombia."
OTHER FBI NEWS
Sen. Paul Criticizes FBI's "Suicide By Cop" Classification Of Baseball Park Shooting.
Fox News (4/22, Blitzer, 23.99M) reports, "Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., pushed back against the
notion that the 2017 shooting at a congressional baseball practice was merely a case of 'suicide
by cop,' after Rep. Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio, revealed at a hearing this was exactly how the FBI
characterized it at the time." Paul "was there at the time of the incident, during which Rep.
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Steve Scalise, R-La., suffered a gunshot wound that resulted in serious injury and was nearly
fatal. In a statement to Fox News, Paul rejected the idea that the attack was not politically
motivated. `I was present at the baseball practice where a Bernie Sanders supporter nearly
killed Rep. Steve Scalise,' Paul said. 'It would seem that his goal was to kill individual members
of Congress since he had a list of targets in his pocket." Paul added, "To argue that this
assassination attempt was suicide by cop is unsupported by the facts."
Suspect In Governor-Related Massachusetts Case Wants Monitoring Bracelet Off.
The Salem (MA) News (4/22, Manganis, 60K) reports Haverhill District Court Judge Cesar
Archilla has "agreed to listen to a recording or an October hearing that involved Massachusetts
resident Lane Forman, who is "charged with misdemeanor breaking and entering after" he
allegedly walked into Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker's home. This action is being taken
because Forman claims he was never ordered by Archilla to wear a GPS monitoring bracelet
while out on bail. Forman, who wants the bracelet removed, made many comments during a
virtual hearing that preceded Archilla's audio recording decision. Among other things, Forman
said, "The FBI and the DEA needed me at Middleton Jail to take down a couple of major drug
dealers."
Walensky And Murthy Discuss Approach To Vaccine Hesitancy.
In an appearance on NBC's TodayVi (4/22, 2.78M), CDC Director Walensky was asked how the
government intends to encourage the half of Americans who have not been vaccinated for
COVID to do so. Walensky said, "We've been planning for this. ... And I would consider it good
news that we have enough vaccine out there and it is accessible enough. We have vaccine now
within five miles of 90% of Americans. And we knew we were going to hit this point...and here
we are. And now comes the hard work...trying to understand why people might be hesitant."
Walensky added, "This value of herd immunity is very much dependent on how transmissible
the virus is. And with these variants, that may in fact be a moving target."
Surgeon General Murthy said on ABC's GMA DayVi (4/22, 1.36M), "We've got more work
to do if we want to vaccinate the entire country, and what we know is that there is a small
portion of the population that's got questions about the vaccine, and some people also who are
wondering" if it is important to get vaccinated. Murthy continued, "And the answer is absolutely
yes. ... We are recommending that people look strongly at the vaccines, get vaccinated, help
your family members get vaccinated as well. That is ultimately how we're going to turn this
pandemic around."
ABC World News TonightVi (4/22, story 3, 3:30, Muir, 6.07M) reported that "the daily
average number of shots has now fallen below 3 million a day. That's the first time in weeks.
And authorities say that reflects in part some of the hesitancy in folks who have yet to get the
shot." CNBC (4/22, Rattner, 7.34M) says on its website that the US is "reporting nearly 63,000
daily new Covid infections, based on a seven-day average of data compiled by Johns Hopkins
University. That figure is above the nation's most recent low point of 53,600 per day in late
March, but has been trending downward over the past few days."
In the Washington Post (4/22, 10.52M), Jennifer Rubin cites "a new survey conducted by
the Public Religion Research Institute in concert with Interfaith Youth Core," which found that
"among those who attend religious services at least a few times per year, 44% of those who are
hesitant and 14% of those who are resistant say faith-based approaches would make them
more likely to get vaccinated." Rubin writes, "While the more secularized mainstream media is
understandably focused on what politicians say and do, they overlook where real progress in
breaking down vaccine aversion can be made. It's time to take vaccines to church."
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CDC Has Reportedly Reassigned Vaccine Task Force Head. Politico (4/22,
Owermohle, Banco, Cancryn, 6.73M) reports, "CDC respiratory disease chief Nancy Messonnier
has been reassigned from her position heading the agency's Covid-19 vaccine task force,
according to three people familiar with the move," who said she "is being absorbed into an
incident management response team headed by" Walensky. Her duties "will be reassigned to
Henry Walke, the director of the agency's Division of Preparedness and Emerging Infections."
CDC Panel Expected To Recommend Resumption Of J&J Vaccine Use.
The Washington Post (4/22, Al, McGinley, Sun, 10.52M) reports, "Federal health authorities are
leaning toward recommending that use of the Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccine resume,
possibly as soon as this weekend - a move that would include a new warning about a rare
complication involving blood clots but probably not call for age restrictions." According to the
Post, "The position would be similar to one taken by Europe's drug regulator, the European
Medicines Agency, which said this week the Johnson & Johnson vaccine should carry a warning
but placed no restrictions on its use." The Post says, "The fate of the Johnson & Johnson
vaccine is scheduled to be discussed publicly in a pivotal meeting Friday of an influential
advisory group to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."
The CBS Evening NewsVi (4/22, lead story, 4:30, O'Donnell, 3.71M) reported that use of
the vaccine could resume "as early as" Friday, adding it "has learned the decision will come
after scientists advising the government meet in emergency session." However, "the decision
may be too late to change the public opinion, as more and more appointments for shots go
unfilled. ... In the last week alone, the number of Americans getting vaccinated every day has
dropped by more than 10% nationwide." CBS' Janet Shamlian added that "another case of
blood clotting related to the Johnson & Johnson vaccine" was reported in Texas.
The New York Times (4/22, Al, Weiland, LaFraniere, 20.6M) quotes FDA Center for
Biologics Evaluation and Research Director Peter Marks as saying, "We know that it's not a good
thing to leave the pause going for any longer than it absolutely has to go for. ... Once,
essentially, the adequate discussion has occurred, we're prepared to move as quickly as we
possibly can." Marks and Acting FDA Commissioner Woodcock "said the clotting disorder
appeared to be nearly as rare as they had hoped it would be when they recommended the
pause." However, according to the Times, even if the pause is lifted, "the company will still face
manufacturing hurdles at a Baltimore plant that regulators have refused so far to certify."
Politico (4/22, Banco, Cancryn, Owermohle, 6.73M) reports that "the Biden administration
has stood by Johnson & Johnson as the vaccine maker struggled to deliver promised doses of
its Covid-19 vaccine — but privately, frustrated senior health officials have largely written off the
shot, according to seven people with knowledge of the matter." However, "officials are hopeful
that HQ can iron out its problems and still be of use for booster shots down the line, and for
immunization in other countries as the U.S. ramps up its vaccine diplomacy."
The AP (4/22, Choi) reports that suspending "distribution of the shots without setting off
alarm about their safety" was "just the latest challenge in crisis messaging for" health officials
during the pandemic, with the nature of the virus, public health measures, and local restrictions
"marked by public confusion, changing guidance and squabbling." According to the AP, "by
promptly notifying the public that they were investigating clots, officials were following a
fundamental rule in the crisis playbook: transparency, even when the answers aren't yet clear."
Surgeon General Murthy is quoted as saying, "We want people to know what we know."
Asked on ABC's GMA DayVI (4/22, 1.36M) about confidence in the Johnson & Johnson
vaccine after the pause, Murthy said, "What we...know is that the safety system stopped
immediately, picked up that signal and went to investigate. That's actually evidence of what you
want in a safety system, which is responsiveness, and we'll see where the investigation from
the CDC and FDA leads. I anticipate we'll have data...and a decision within just a few days."
In his Washington Post (4/22, 10.52M) column, Fareed Zakaria argues the pause, and
Europe's temporary suspension of the AstraZeneca vaccine, "are fueling many people's fears
EFTA00150536
about vaccine safety, perpetuating conspiracy theories and wasting precious time at a moment
when the crucial imperative is to get people vaccinated." Zakaria writes, "We need to think
more closely, carefully and rationally about risk and remember to balance it with that other half
of the equation: reward."
CDC Faces Pressure Over Outdoor Mask Guidance.
On NBC Nightly NewsVi (4/22, lead story, 2:55, Holt, 4.83M), Miguel Almaguer reported that
"the CDC faces growing pressure and questions over its long-standing guidance on face masks
outdoors," as 24 states have repealed "that very mandate" and "even scientists agree the risk
of transmission is much lower outside," depending on crowd size and vaccination status. CDC
Director Walensky "says the agency is looking into the matter, but notes COVID cases are on
the rise again." Almaguer added, "Because most Americans are not fully vaccinated, easing the
restriction that saves lives won't happen overnight."
Study Suggests COVID Reinfections Are Very Rare.
The Washington Post (4/22, Johnson, 10.52M) says, "In the early days of the pandemic, one of
the frightening mysteries stemmed from anecdotes about people previously stricken with the
disease, getting sick again a few months later. ... But an analysis of 63 million medical records
by data scientists show that while reinfection is possible, it is rare. Out of about 400,000 people
with positive tests for the coronavirus," only 0.4% tested positive twice more than 90 days
apart.
Study Finds COVID Infection Can Increase Pregnancy Complications.
The AP (4/22) reports that "a multi-country study suggests pregnant women who get COVID-19
have higher risks for death, intensive-care stays, preterm birth and other complications. ...
Pregnant women can gain some protection by getting vaccinated; recent evidence suggests the
Moderna and Pfizer vaccines are safe to use in pregnancy." The AP says "the results were
published on Thursday in the Journal of the American Medical Association Pediatrics, which echo
smaller studies."
Fort Meade Says 800 Moderna Doses Were Improperly Stored.
The Baltimore Sun (4/22, Mongilio, 629K) reports that Fort Meade's Kimbrough Ambulatory
Center said in a statement that 80 vials, or approximately 800 doses, of Moderna vaccine
administered on April 7 and April 12 were stored outside of the recommended temperature
range. The facility said the Department of Defense employees and other military community
members who received the doses will be provided with the opportunity to receive a third shot.
Studies Find Vaccines Effective Against New York Variant.
The New York Times (4/22, Mandavilli, 20.6M) reports that two independent studies suggested
that both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are effective in preventing serious illness and death
from the COVID variant first identified in New York. While "the results are based on laboratory
experiments with blood samples from small numbers of vaccinated people and have not yet
been peer-reviewed," both "are consistent with what is known about similar variants, several
experts said, and they add to a growing body of research that suggests that the two main
vaccines in the United States are protective against all of the variants identified so far."
NBC Looks At Ongoing Child Vaccine Trials.
On NBC Nightly NewsVi (4/22, story 10, 1:55, 4.83M), Tom Costello profiled two nine-year-old
twins who "were the first [children) in the country to receive the Pfizer vaccine" as "part of a
nationwide trial testing vaccine safety and efficacy on children between six months and 12
years." Costello added, "While severe COVID-related illness and death are low in children, kids
EFTA00150537
still account for 13.6% of all cases, 3.6 million so far, 88,000 cases last week alone." According
to experts, "vaccinating kids...is critical to building herd immunity" and "the ultimate goal [is]
to vaccinate every elementary school child by this time next year."
Hospitalizations Drop 80% Among Senior Citizens.
The AP (4/22, Perrone, Johnson) reports, "COVID-19 hospitalizations among older Americans
have plunged 80% since the start of the year, dramatic proof the vaccination campaign is
working." According to the AP, "the drop-off in severe cases among people 65 and older is so
dramatic that the hospitalization rate...is now down to around the level of the next-youngest
category, Americans 50 to 64." The numbers are "especially encouraging because senior
citizens have accounted for about 8 out of 10 deaths from COVID-19 since the virus hit the
United States." Overall fatalities in the US have since "plummeted to about 700 per day on
average, compared with a peak of over 3,400 in mid-January."
Los Angeles County Infection Rates Now Among Lowest In US.
The Wall Street Journal (4/22, Ansari, Lovett, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports that Los
Angeles County, which once reported three times more COVID cases per day than any other in
the US, now has one of the lowest per capita infection rates of the nation's ten most populous.
Researchers theorize that the turnaround, which has occurred despite lower vaccination rates,
comes as a result of high immunity.
Women Vaccinated At Higher Rates Than Men.
The New York Times (4/22, Steinhauer, 20.6M) reports, "As the Biden administration seeks to
get 80 percent of adult Americans immunized by summer, the continuing reluctance of men to
get a shot could impede that goal." Women have been vaccinated "at a far higher rate - about
10 percentage points - than men," a "worrisome" trend, "as vaccination rates have dipped a bit
recently." The Times goes on to report that the reasons behind the gap reflect "the role of
women in specific occupations that received early vaccine priority, political and cultural
differences and long standing patterns of women embracing preventive care more often
generally than men," even though COVID deaths worldwide are "about 2.4 times higher for
men."
Biden Opens Climate Summit With Pledge To Halve US Carbon Emissions By 2030.
ABC World News TonightVi (4/22, story 4, 2:20, Muir, 6.07M) reported, "On this Earth Day,
President Biden is making news" with "his summit with world leaders and the President
pledging to cut carbon emissions here in the US by 50% in less than a decade, by 2030, and to
reach zero net emissions by 2050." That pledge came "at the start of his two-day climate
summit with 40 world leaders, including China and Russia." ABC's Mary Bruce: "In a sharp
departure from the previous Administration," Biden sent "a clear message to the world on
climate change, saying America is back." Biden: "The cost of inaction keeps mounting. The
United States isn't waiting. We are resolving to take action." Bruce: "Calling it a moral
imperative, Biden announcing a new lofty goal to cut carbon emissions from record-high 2005
levels in half by the end of the decade. The target: to reach net zero emissions by 2050."
Norah O'Donnell said on the CBS Evening NewsVi (4/22, story 5, 2:15, 3.71M), "In what
may have been the most powerful Zoom call ever, President Biden marked Earth Day today by
hosting a virtual conference on the world's climate, and making a bold vow to cut carbon
emissions." CBS' Nancy Cordes: "Biden came armed with an ambitious pledge to cut US
greenhouse emissions in half by the end of this decade. ... To reach that goal, the US would
need to cut fossil fuel use in every sector of the economy. How can you realistically make this
pledge to the rest of the world when there's no guarantee that Republicans will get on board
with your plan once you release it?" White House National Climate Adviser Gina McCarthy: "You
know, wind and solar had the biggest year they've ever had last year, and what we saw last
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year was continuation of tax credits that passed through a Republican-controlled Congress. So
we all know where this is heading."
Peter Alexander said on NBC Nightly NewsVi (4/22, story 7, 1:30, Holt, 4.83M) that
Biden's goal is "nearly double the target set by former President Obama, including a new pledge
to make the US power grid 100% carbon pollution-free by 2035." Biden is "looking to
reestablish American leadership on the issue after former President Trump withdrew the US
from the Paris Climate Accord and mocked climate science. ... But critics argue the President's
commitments will make America less competitive globally, noting China, the world's largest
polluter, says for now, its emissions will keep going up." Senate Minority Leader McConnell:
"The DNA of the far-left Green New Deal is all over President Biden's spending bills."
McCarthy said on MSNBCVi (4/22, 2.43M), "If you look at already available climate
solutions, if you look at the ways that we can move our country forward and reduce our
emissions, we still will be able to get at 50% reduction by 2030 because clean energy is
winning everywhere." McCarthy continued, "There's lots of opportunity, but investing in
innovation is going to be important. So the American Jobs Plan is a great strategy to actually
move forward to grab that clean energy future."
Asked on BBC News' World News AmericaVi (4/22, 286K) how the US intends to meet the
new target, White House Deputy National Climate Adviser Ali Zaidi said, "The way we meet it is
by bringing everybody along. For the last several years, we've seen a growing chorus of folks
calling out for bold climate action. We've seen states and cities lead, we've seen businesses and
workers seize the economic opportunity that tackling the climate crisis represents. So that's
how we do it."
Transportation Secretary Buttigieg said on Bloomberg TVVi (4/22, 3.57M), "This is going
to take an extraordinary, unprecedented national effort, but it's also something we can't afford
not to do. ... We know what we have to do, and we know that that's going to require concrete
specific steps in every part of the economy." Buttigieg said on MSNBCVi (4/22, 1.49M), "The
President is challenging all of us to make sure that we meet these goals and as he so often
says, this is also the moment when we can put away the old false framework of climate versus
jobs and demonstrate, especially in sectors like transportation where I work, that job creation
through climate action is the way forward."
The AP (4/22, Knickmeyer, Madhani) reports Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian
President Vladimir Putin "put aside their raw-worded disputes" with Biden on Thursday "long
enough to pledge international cooperation on cutting climate-wrecking coal and petroleum
emissions." However, neither leader "immediately followed the United States and some of its
developed allies in making specific new pledges to reduce damaging fossil fuel pollution." The
New York Times (4/22, Friedman, Sengupta, Davenport, 20.6M) reports, "In rapid succession,
Japan, Canada, Britain and the European Union committed to steeper cuts. But China, India
and Russia made no new emissions promises." The New York Post (4/22, Moore, 7.45M) reports
Xi, "who didn't announce he would participate in the summit until Wednesday, claimed his
country - one of the world's top polluters - will cut down on the use of coal and other fossil
fuels and will work with the US."
The Washington Post (4/22, Dennis, Eilperin, Mufson, 10.52M) reports that the event,
"one of the most surreal summit meetings ever," was aimed in large part "at shining a spotlight
on Biden's renewed push at home to transform the U.S. economy, moving it away from fossil
fuels and setting in motion far-reaching changes that would affect everything from how
Americans power their homes to what cars they drive." The New York Times (4/22, Plumer,
20.6M) says that under Biden's vision, by 2030, "more than half of the new cars and S.U.V.s
sold at dealerships would need to be powered by electricity, not gasoline. Nearly all coal-fired
power plants would need to be shut down" and "the number of wind turbines and solar panels
dotting the nation's landscape could quadruple."
NPR (4/22, Detrow, 3.69M) reports on its website, "As he's repeatedly done, Biden framed
the proposed dramatic shift not as a collective sacrifice, but rather, a chance to grow industrial
EFTA00150539
jobs across the country." Biden said, "I see auto workers building the next generation of electric
vehicles. I see the engineers and the construction workers building new carbon capture and
green hydrogen plants."
The Los Angeles Times (4/22, 3.37M) reports, "Even as the virtual summit hosted by
President Biden accomplished his goal of restoring the United States to a position of global
leadership on the issue, it also revealed the limits of his ability to build support for the more
aggressive action that experts say is needed." Bloomberg (4/22, 3.57M) reports Biden's "vow to
spend $5.7 billion annually helping developing nations deal with climate change and propel
clean energy has disappointed environmental activists who say it falls far short of what the U.S.
should be spending. ... Financial aid to vulnerable countries has underpinned the Paris climate
agreement," but the US "in particular is woefully behind on meeting former President Barack
Obama's pledge of $3 billion for the United Nations Green Climate Fund."
The New York Times (4/22, Plumer, Popovich, 20.6M) says in another analysis that Biden's
goal is "one of the more aggressive near-term targets among wealthy industrialized nations,
although the cuts are arguably not quite as large as what the European Union and Britain have
already promised." Still, the Washington Post (4/22, Gearan, 10.52M) says, "the overriding
sentiment from the global leaders was one of relief and receptivity to having the United States
back in the fold after four years. ... Biden collected plaudits for recommitting the United States
to focus on the crisis of a warming planet and reversing the policies of his predecessor" Politico
(4/22, Colman, Wolff, 6.73M) reports, "Leaders of several nations welcomed the U.S. back into
the global climate diplomacy realm in their remarks."
CNBC (4/22, Macias, 7.34M) reports on its website that Defense Secretary Austin
"described the climate crisis as one of the nation's existential threats with the potential to
profoundly destabilize global security." Austin said at the summit, "From coast to coast and
across the world, the climate crisis has caused substantial damage and put people in danger,
making it more difficult for us to carry out our mission of defending the United States and our
allies."
The Week (4/22, 2.17M) reports Director of National Intelligence Haines said at the
summit that "on order to tackle climate change, it has to be `at the center of a country's
national security and foreign policy." Haines said the US "is taking this approach moving
forward, adding that climate change `needs to be fully integrated with every aspect of our
analysis in order to allow us not only to monitor the threat but also, critically, to ensure that
policymakers understand the importance of climate change on seemingly unrelated policies."
The Wall Street Journal (4/22, Restuccia, Puko, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports
that in 2019, the most recent year for which complete data is available, US emissions were
down about 13% from 2005 levels. Emissions in 2020 were projected to be down 21% from
2005, but that progress was due in large part to the pandemic-related economic and industrial
slowdown. The Philadelphia Inquirer (4/22, Kummer) says global energy demand "is expected
to increase by 4.6% in 2021, offsetting the 4% decrease in 2020 because of the pandemic,
according to the International Energy Agency."
Fox News (4/22, Blitzer, 23.99M) reports on its website that climate activists with
Extinction Rebellion, who say Biden's plan is insufficient, dumped "cow manure in front of the
White House" on Thursday morning. Demonstrators "could be heard chanting...'no more climate
crisis' while marching down the street with wheelbarrows full of dung. They eventually unloaded
their cargo in front of the White House."
In an editorial, the Wall Street Journal (4/22, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) says
Biden's 10-year climate proposal is reminiscent of the five-year plans of China's centralized
planned economy, arguing that Biden and Democrats in Congress will push through massive
spending intended to reorient the economy that will have little effect on global temperature
increases. Henry Olsen writes in the Washington Post (4/22, 10.52M) that the climate summit
"will predictably attract fawning headlines as world leaders trip over themselves to promise
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massive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Less covered will be how extraordinarily
difficult it will be to keep those promises."
Reuters (4/22), Axios (4/22, Knutson, 1.26M), Vox (4/22, 1.88M), The Hill (4/22, 5.69M),
Roll Call (4/22, 130K), and the CNN (4/22, 89.21M) and Voice of America (4/22, 85K) websites
also report, while ABC World News TonightVi (4/22, story 5, 3:05, Muir, 6.07M) aired a feature
on how climate change is impacting migration patterns and exacerbating the situation at the
US-Mexico border.
DOT Ends Trump-Era Effort To Block Stricter State Emissions Standards. The
Washington Post (4/22, Eilperin, 10.52M) reports the Transportation Department said Thursday
that it will no longer attempt to block California and other states from setting stricter emissions
standards. The Biden Administration "will give the liberal state more leverage in discussions
between the auto industry and federal and state officials over national mileage and greenhouse
gas emission standards for cars and SUVs." The San Francisco Chronicle (4/22, Alexander,
2.44M) says the "feud over vehicle emissions between California and the federal government
that started during the Trump administration appears to be coming to an end" with the
announcement.
Thunberg Testifies Before House Panel. USA Today (4/22, Santucci, 12.7M) reports,
"Teen climate activist Greta Thunberg called tax breaks for the fossil fuel industry a 'disgrace' in
testimony to Congress at an Earth Day hearing on subsidies." The New York Daily News (4/22,
McAuliff, 2.51M) reports Thunberg said "none of Washington's current efforts are enough to
meet the Paris Climate Agreement's goal[s)." Thunberg said, "Either you do this, or you're
going to have to start explaining to your children and the most affected people why you are
surrendering on the 1.5 degree target, giving up without even trying. To be honest, I don't
believe for a second that you will actually do this."
The Cleveland Plain Dealer (4/22, 1.22M) reports "self-described 'fracking refugee" Jill
Antares Hunkler also testified before the House Oversight and Reform Committee environment
subcommittee, urging Congress "to abandon subsidies to the fossil fuel industry when Congress
passes its next infrastructure bill." Fox News (4/22, 23.99M) reports on its website that Rep.
Ralph Norman (R-SC) "accused Democrats, who brought in Thunberg for testimony, of playing
up 'dooms