EFTA00135867.pdf
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From:
Bulletin Intelligence
Subject:
[EXTERNAL EMAIL[ - FBI Public Affairs News Briefing Monday, April 19, 2021
To:
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April 19, 2021 6:27 AM (UTC-04:00)
Mobile version and searchable archives available at fbi.bulletinintellicience.com.
x
TO
:
THE
DIRECTOR
AND
SENIOR
STAFF
DATE
:
MONDAY,
APRIL
19,
2021
6 : 30
AM
EDT
TODAY'S TABLE OF CONTENTS
LEADING THE NEWS
• Police Say Indianapolis Gunman Legally Bought Guns Used In Shooting.
CAPITOL VIOLENCE NEWS
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• Capitol Siege Probe Sees Progress, Roadblocks After 100 Days.
• Indiana "Oath Keepers" Leader Pleads Guilty In Capitol Siege Probe.
• Prosecutors Say Men Arrested For Attempted Theft Of Gun From DC Officer During Capitol Riot.
• FBI Arrests Michigan Man In Capitol Siege Probe.
• Prosecutors Say Nazi Sympathizer Who Stormed Capitol Poses Threat To Jews.
• Capitol Rioter Who Allegedly Ransacked Pelosi's Office Is Released From Jail.
• Pennsylvania Man Faces Federal Charges Over Capitol Riot.
• Judge Threatens To Hold Woman Charged In Capitol Riot In Contempt For Wearing Mesh Mask.
• Ohio Is High On List Of Capitol Siege Indictments.
• Olen: CA Teacher Who Marched On Jan. 6 Should Not Lose Job.
• Politico Analysis: Congressional Security Spending Has "Surged" Since Capitol Riot.
• Pittman Reflects On Toll That Jan. 6 Riot Has Taken On Capitol Police.
• Independent Investigation Of Capitol Riot Facing Difficult Odds.
PROTESTS
• Demonstrators Nationwide Protest Against Police Brutality.
• Protesters Demonstrate In Chicago Following Release Of Body Cam Video From Police Shooting Of
13-Year-Old.
• More Than 130 Individuals Arrested As Demonstrations Over Wright Killing Continue.
• Brooklyn Center, MN Officials Criticizing Police Response To Protesters.
• Minneapolis National Guard Members Injured In Drive-By Shooting.
• Alleged Police, FBI Infiltration Of Portland Protests Raises Concerns.
• Group: Albuquerque Police Department Asked DEA For Protest-Related Help.
COUNTER-TERRORISM
• Senators Call On Biden To Close Guantanamo.
COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE
• DO) Investigating If "Russiagate" Inquirer Kash Patel Leaked Classified Information.
• Russia Retaliates After Imposition Of New US Sanctions.
• Cotton: Intelligence On Russia Bounties "Selectively Leaked" To Aid Biden Campaign.
• DNI Highlights Top US Challenges In Annual Threat Assessment.
• Finnish Startup ICEYE Collaborating With In-Q-Tel.
• Nunes Warns Intel Chiefs Against Targeting Americans.
• CIA Intelligence Network In Afghanistan Likely Will Be Dismantled With Withdrawal.
• State's Disinformation-Fighting Arm Tapping AI For Support.
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
• Police Identify Austin Gunman As Former Sheriff's Detective Accused Of Child Sexual Assault.
• Wisconsin Police Arrest Suspect For Shooting At Kenosha Bar
• Florida Nurse Charged For Threatening To Kill Harris.
• Maxwell Has To Stand Trial After Judge Turns Down Dismissal Request.
• Family Of Tamir Rice Asks Garland To Reopen Probe Into Rice's Killing.
• Medical Expert: Police Actions Did Not Cause Prude's Death.
• Fairfax County, Virginia Prosecutors Move To Dismiss Hundreds Of Convictions Stemming From Work
Or Testimony Of Ex-Officer.
• WPost Analysis Discusses Fatal Shooting In Maryland By Off-Duty Officer.
• Wisconsin Man Drops Extradition Appeal In Whitmer Kidnapping Plot Case.
• Connecticut Man Faces Federal Arson Charges After Allegedly Tossing Molotov Cocktail At Officers.
• Federal Prosecutors Confirm 2016 Decision Not To Pursue Jeffrey Epstein.
• Teacher's Killing Reveals Drug Cartels' Growing Footprint In North Carolina.
• NYPD Arrests Man With Assault Weapon In Times Square Subway Station.
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• Two Farmworkers In Fresno, CA Killed In Shooting.
• Anti-Prostitution Operation In Columbus Nets 93.
• FBI Investigates Money Missing From New Jersey Prosecutor's Office.
• San Francisco Daycare Worker Arrested For Child Pornography.
• NYPD Officer Charged With Trying To Hire Hitman.
• Texas Man Arrested For Kidnapping 13-Year-Old Girl.
• White Supremacists Charged With Animal Cruelty In Sacrifice Of Ram.
• FBI Seeking Information From Public In Minnesota Bank Robbery.
• West Virginia Men Charged As Accessories To Bank Robbery.
• Two Arrested In Murders Of South Carolina Transgender Women.
• Reward Offered In 2017 Killings In North Carolina.
• Washington Doctor Charged With Trying To Kidnap Ex-Wife.
• California Man Charged With Kidnapping Wife.
• FBI Arrests 22 In Connection With Texas Drug Investigation.
• Officials: Twenty From Texas Indicted On Drug Trafficking And Firearms Charges.
• Former Mayor Heading To Trial In Marijuana-Related Case.
• Leader Of Drug Trafficking Organization Gets 45-Year Prison Sentence.
• Drug Suspect Arrested In Pennsylvania.
• Massachusetts Drug Suspect Arraigned.
FINANCIAL CRIME & CORPORATE SCANDALS
• Law Enforcement Warns Of Growing Vaccine Card Scams.
• Federal Grand Jury Probing Dark Money In US Steel Industry.
• Former Temple Business Dean Lied To Inflate Rank, Attract Students, Federal Prosecutors Say.
• FBI Probing Pension Fund's $14M In Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Projects.
• DO) Sues Roger Stone Over Alleged Tax Evasion.
• Man Sentenced In Robocall Scheme That Victimized Elderly.
• Scammer Takes Pennsylvania Widow For Entire Savings.
• Administration Faces Challenges In Combatting Money Laundering.
CYBER DIVISION
• The Untold Story Of The SolarWinds Hack.
• Biden Administration Is Improving Cyber Defenses Against Russia And China.
• Hacking Alert Measure May Be Possible.
• US Investigating Breach At Code Testing Company.
• FBI Exchange Remediation Action May Set A Precedent.
• New Jersey Combating Hackers That Threaten Water Systems.
• MSU's Holt Discusses Pakistani Counterfeiter Who May Have Aided Russian Trolls.
• Medtronic Partners With Sternum On Device Cybersecurity.
• Carmakers Confront Challenges In Staying A Step Ahead Of Hackers.
• Ron Wyden Proposing New Data Privacy Legislation.
LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES
• Garland Moves To Allow DO) To Impose Changes On Police Departments.
• LAPD Posted More Than Twofold Increase In Amount Of Hate Crimes Against Asian Americans In
2020.
• Bass Optimistic About Passage Of National Police Reform Legislation.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
• Lopez Obrador To Propose Migration Agreement This Week.
LAWFUL ACCESS
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• WPost: Encryption Debate Is Not "Between Two Bad Choices."
OTHER FBI NEWS
• NYTimes Profile: Monaco Will "Quickly Be Tested" As Deputy Attorney General.
• Montana Freeman Dies In Prison.
• Massachusetts Drug Dealer's Car Rammed During Chase.
• Varsity Blues Conspirator Released.
• Oregon Man Charged With Selling Guns, Fake Drugs On Snapchat.
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
• Blinken And Sullivan Defend Planned US Withdrawal From Afghanistan.
• Fauci Says He Anticipates "Some Form" Of 3843 Vaccine Resumption By Friday.
• CDC Says Half Of US Adults Have Had At Least First Vaccine Shot.
• Whitmer Discusses COVID Surge In Michigan.
• DeSantis Explains Order Prohibiting Vaccine Passports.
• Colorado Warns Of New COVID Wave.
• Independent Pharmacies Struggling To Acquire Vaccine Doses In New York.
• WPost: COVID Booster Shots Will Ensure US Resilience Going Forward.
• WPost Details "Inordinately Complex" Task Of Crafting Infrastructure Legislation.
• Administration Officials Defend Biden's Stance On Admitting Refugees.
• Bush Urges Congress To Set Aside "Harsh Rhetoric" On Immigration.
• Administration Preparing New Campaign To Transform Coal Counties.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
• Officials Say Chileans Overestimated Effectiveness Of Chinese Vaccine After First Dose.
• Macron: France Will Lift Restrictions For Vaccinated Travelers Starting In May.
• COVID Deaths, New Cases Declining In Britain.
• Ontario To Expand Use Of AstraZeneca Vaccine This Week.
• Brazil's Daily COVID Death Toll Is World's Highest.
• India Records 200K New COVID Cases For Ninth Straight Day.
• Iran's Daily COVID Death Toll Climbed Past 400 Sunday.
• Turkey Reports Record Daily COVID Death Toll.
• Israel Lifts Outdoor Mask Mandate.
• More Than 60% Of Bhutan's Population Has Received First Vaccine Dose.
• WPost: Peruvian Election Undermined By COVID And Corruption.
• Islamist Group Takes Six Pakistani Security Personnel Hostage.
• Hiatt: World Must Stand Up For Chinese Uyghurs.
• Sullivan Warns Russia Of "Consequences" If Navalny Dies In Prison.
• Report: Israeli Intelligence Predicts US Will Reactivate JCPOA.
• Thomas-Greenfield Says More Needs To Be Done With Tigray.
• US Warns Citizens To Leave Chad.
THE BIG PICTURE
• Headlines From Today's Front Pages.
WASHINGTON'S SCHEDULE
• Today's Events In Washington.
LEADING THE NEWS
Police Say Indianapolis Gunman Legally Bought Guns Used In Shooting.
The AP (4/18, Smith) reports police have revealed Brandon Scott Hole, 19, the former employee
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"who shot and killed eight people at a FedEx facility in Indianapolis," had "legally bought the two
rifles used in the attack despite red flag laws designed to prevent such purchases." The AP adds
the police "did not say where Hole bought what they described as 'assault rifles,' citing the ongoing
investigation, but said he was seen using both rifles during the shooting "Reuters (4/18) reports
the purchases "were made a few months after Hole was briefly placed under psychiatric detention
in March and a shotgun was seized from his home when his mother contacted law enforcement to
report he might try to commit 'suicide by cop,' according to the FBI."
The Washington Post (4/17, Kornfield, Bella, 10.52M) reported the gunman "who fatally shot
eight people at a FedEx plant Thursday used two legally purchased assault rifles, police said
Saturday, raising new questions as many call for tighter restrictions on powerful firearms and
more safeguards on who can own them." The Post adds police "said the shooter, a former
employee at the facility, bought rifles legally last July and September - months after his mother
said she feared her son would attempt 'suicide by cop.' That led authorities to question Brandon
Hole, temporarily detain him for mental health reasons and seize his shotgun. The gun was not
returned, officials say."
The New York Times (4/18, Robertson, Watkins, Martinez, 20.6M) reports Hole's case
"appeared, at first, to be exactly the kind of situation" that "so-called red flag laws, which allow
the authorities to temporarily take away guns from people declared by a judge to be too unstable
to have them," are "designed to address," but "while many details are still unclear, Mr. Hole's case
is a sobering example of how even states with widely supported safeguards can fail to prevent
dangerous people from obtaining firearms." According to the Times, "experts say [the laws] are
often used only as short-term solutions."
However, asked on ABC World News Tonight
(4/18, story 2, 2:20, Davis, 4.85M) whether
the system failed, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Chief Randal Taylor said, "Only from the
standpoint, if he would have been found in violation of that law, maybe he wouldn't have been
able to purchase these weapons legally. But I don't know enough about it that I can say that
anyone dropped the ball, per se."
In addition, Nikki Battiste reported on the CBS Evening News
(4/18, story 2, 1:55, Duncan,
1.24M) that the deputy chief of the IMPD "says authorities had not deemed Hole's subject to
Indiana red flag law." Battiste continued, "The deputy chief told us Branden Hole agreed to let
police keep the shotgun they took from him in March 2020. The prosecutor's office told us it is
reviewing its records from that incident."
CNN (4/18, Holcombe, Kaur, Levenson, 89.21M) reports on its website that the shooting
"shows how easy it can be to buy and use deadly weapons of war in the United States." CNN adds
the attack "marks at least the 45th mass shooting - defined as four or more casualties, exduding
the shooter - since the Atlanta-area spa shootings March 16."
Indianapolis Police Identify Shooter As 19-Year-Old Former FedEx Employee. The
Indianapolis Star (4/16, Evans, 662K) reported Indianapolis police on Friday identified "the man
who shot and killed eight people Thursday at a FedEx facility in Indianapolis and then killed
himself' as Brandon Scott Hole, 19, but "it remains unclear why Hole...shot and killed the eight
workers at the facility near Indianapolis International Airport." However, the Star adds that Hole
"was a former FedEx employee. He last worked for the company in 2020, Indianapolis
Metropolitan Police Department Deputy Chief Craig McCartt said."
On ABC World News Tonight (4/16, lead story, 3:39, Muir, 6.23M), Victor Oquendo
reported the shooting occurred at "FedEx's second largest hub in the world, roughly 100 workers
present at the time." Oquendo added, "Authorities say he drove to the facility, got out and started
shooting randomly, making his way into the building. The massacre taking just one to two
minutes. Police say he killed himself before officers arrived."
Meanwhile, Oquendo continued on ABC World News Tonight
(4/16, story 2, 0:25, Muir,
6.23M) that the FBI, which is "assisting local police in the case, saying that the suspect's mom
reported he might try to commit suicide by cop. He was held by police. They removed a shotgun
from his house and say that gun was not returned to him." Likewise, Catie Beck reported on NBC
Nightly News
(4/16, lead story, 2:34, Holt, 4.83M) that Hole "was known to local police and FBI
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for a mental health condition." The Washington Pact (4/16, Molloy, Bella, Berman, Witte, 10.52M)
reports that as Hole's shotgun was "seized and not returned, it was unclear how he had obtained
the rifle used Thursday night." The Wall Street Journal (4/16, Mendell, Subscription Publication,
8.41M) provides similar coverage.
Coroners Identify Four Sikhs Among The Victims Of Indianapolis Shooting. The AE
(4/16, Smith, Callahan) reported coroners "released the names of the victims late Friday, a little
less than 24 hours after the latest mass shooting to rock the U.S." and "four of them were
members of Indianapolis' Sikh community." According to the AP, "The attack was another blow to
the Asian American community a month after six people of Asian descent were killed in a mass
shooting in the Atlanta area and amid ongoing attacks against Asian Americans during the
coronavirus pandemic " Reuters (4/16, Kalia, Caspani, Hosenball) reported law enforcement
officials "said they had not immediately determined whether racial or ethnic hatred was behind the
killings. But a Sikh civil rights advocacy group called for an investigation of any possible hate bias
involved in the crime."
The New York Times (4/16, Mervosh, Bahr, Chokshi, Chiarito, 20.6M) said the victims "were
identified by the police as Matthew R. Alexander, 32; Samaria Blackwell, 19; Amarjeet Johal, 66;
Jaswinder Kaur, 64; Jaswinder Singh, 68; Amarjit Sekhon, 48; Karli Smith, 19; and John Weisert,
74. Some family members of victims who were Sikh provided different spellings and ages:
Jasvinder Kaur, 50; Amarjit Sekhon, 49; and Jaswinder Singh, 70."
Four Victims Remain Hospitalized As Sikhs Call For Thorough Investigation Into
Shooter's Motives. On NBC Nightly News' (4/18, story 2, 2:15, Snow, 6.41M), Kathy Park
reported four of the victims "are still hospitalized. Everyone is in stable condition and are expected
to survive." USA Today (4/18, Herron, Bacon, 12.7M) reports those who lost their lives "were
identified as Amarjeet Johal, 66; Jasvinder Kaur, 50; Amarjit Sekhon, 48; Jaswinder Singh, 68;
Karli Smith, 19; Samaria Blackwell, 19; Matthew R. Alexander, 32; [and] John Weisert, 74."
The Detroit Free Press (4/18, Terranella, Warikoo, 2.16M) reports that as police are seeking
to understand Hole's motives, "four of the eight shooting victims belonged to the Sikh community,"
a loss that the Washington Pact (4/18, Kornfield, 10.52M) says "cuts deep in this tightknit
community, connected by faith and a common heritage tied to the Punjabi region of India." Aasees
Kaur, a representative of the Sikh Coalition, "said the deadly assault in Indianapolis underscores
the bigotry that Sikhs have faced and the need for more-robust efforts to track hate crimes, which
are underreported and difficult to prosecute." According to the Post, while authorities "have not yet
offered a motive for the shooting, Kaur said it feels like her community was targeted." The Walt
Street Journal (4/18, Naughton, O'Brien, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) provides similar
coverage.
Operations At FedEx Facility Temporarily Suspended As Investigation Continues.
On NBC Nightly News
(4/17, story 3, 2:27, Diaz-Balart, 3.44M), Kathy Park reported the
gunman's motive is "still under review." Park added that "most of the crime-scene tape that
surrounded the facility where the shooting took place has since been removed," though
"operations at the site have been temporarily suspended." In a more than 2,500-word article, the
Washington Pact (4/17, Al, 10.52M) said that the facility "is a sprawling, nondescript warehouse
with multiple shifts of workers - a popular workplace for recent high school graduates starting
their adult lives, but also a gathering place for older Indian immigrants searching for community in
addition to a paycheck." The Post profiles the victims who died in the mass shooting.
Families Of FedEx Employees Unable To Reach Their Loved Ones Due To Company's
Cell Phone Policy. On the fRS Fvening News
(4/16, lead story, 3:42, O'Donnell, 3.77M),
Nikki Battiste reported FedEx "doesn't allow cell phones inside during work, so some frantic family
members have been unable to reach those here during the attack." Battiste added the cell phones
of "some employees...are still in their cars." Likewise, the New York Times (4/16, Al, Bahr,
Robertson, 20.6M) said the "chaos within the facility, and in the homes of the employees, was
intensified by the fact that many employees did not have cellphones with them." The Times adds
that a FedEx spokesman "confirmed on Friday that cellphone access is limited within the
warehouse, where packages are sorted for shipping, to minimize distractions. Such policies are
common in the industry. But for family members, not hearing from their loved ones was
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agonizing." The Wall Street Journal (4/16, Gryta, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) provides similar
coverage.
Gunman's Family Apologizes For His Actions. On ABC World News Tonight
(4/17,
story 2, 2:17, Johnson, 3.89M), Will Carr reported the gunman's family on Saturday "released a
statement. They say they're devastated and they tried to get him help. They're also offering their
apologies to the victims and their families." The Indianapolis Star (4/17, Rudaysky, 662K) reports
the family "fervently apologized and notes that the family had tried to get...Hole, 19, help."
However, Nikki Battiste reported on the CBS Weekend News
(4/17, story 2, 2:04, Diaz, 1.74M)
that a relative "said Hole simply did not get the help he needed."
Biden Condemns "Epidemic" Of Gun Violence As A "National Embarrassment" In
Wake Of Indianapolis Mass Shooting Bloomberg (4/16, Fabian, Jacobs, 3.57M) reported that
"a day after a gunman opened fire at a FedEx Corp. facility near Indianapolis International Airport,
killing eight people and wounding several others before apparently taking his own life," President
Biden on Friday "called the spate of mass shootings in the U.S. a 'national embarrassment," while
Politico (4/16, Leonard, 6.73M) reported that he "called gun violence an 'epidemic' in the U.S. and
renewed calls on Congress to bring gun reform legislation to his desk in the wake of yet another
mass shooting, this one at a shipping center in Indianapolis."
Biden also tweeted, "Vice President Harris and I have been briefed on the mass shooting at a
FedEx facility in Indianapolis. God bless the eight individuals we lost and their loved ones, and we
pray for the wounded for their recovery. We can, and must, do more to reduce gun violence and
save lives."
On the CBS Evening News
(4/16, story 2, 1:49, O'Donnell, 3.77M), Weijia Jiang reported
the President "hosted a foreign leader in person for the first time at the White House, Japanese
Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga. But it was a domestic challenge that set him off - gun violence."
Biden: "Who in God's name needs a weapon that can old 100 rounds, or 40 rounds, or 20 rounds?
It's just wrong. And I'm not going to give up until it's done." Jiang added that the President "grew
defensive when asked why he is prioritizing infrastructure legislation over police reform and gun
control." Biden: "I've never not prioritized this. No one has worked harder to deal with the
violence used by individuals using weapons than I have. I'm the only one ever to have passed an
assault weapons ban." Jiang continued, "That was 27 years ago, the last time Congress passed
significant gun reform. Today marked the third time the Biden White House has lowered flags to
honor victims of gun violence."
USA Today (4/16, Garrison, 12.7M) reported the US over the past month has "mourned eight
killed March 16 at three spas in the Atlanta and 10 people killed less than a week later inside a
supermarket in Boulder, Colorado. The White House also lowered flags after a driver April 2
rammed his car into two officers and a barricade near the U.S. Capitol, killing Capitol Police Officer
William 'Billy' Evans."
Meanwhile, The Hill (4/16, Samuels, 5.69M) reported Vice President Harris on Friday "called
for an end to gun violence in the wake of yet another mass shooting after eight people were killed
at a FedEx facility in Indianapolis." Reuters (4/16, Bose, Psaledakis) reported the Vice President
"said there is 'no question this violence must end."
However, although The Hill (4/16, Chalfant, 5.69M) reported White House Press Secretary
Jen Psaki said the White House is "horrified by the shooting overnight at a FedEx facility," the New
York Times (4/16, Thrush, 20.6M) said she "rejected calls to appoint a gun czar to more forcefully
confront the crisis." and "argu[ed] that the main impediment for addressing the crisis rests with
congressional Republicans, not a lack of will in the West Wing." Psaki said, "Advocates should
pressure Republicans in the Senate...all of you should pressure Republicans in the Senate and ask
them why they are opposing universal background checks." In addition, Reuters (4/16) reported
Psaki called on Congress to "act to end immunity for gun manufacturers and deal with assault
weapons."
The AP (4/16) said the shooting "follows a lull in mass killings during the pandemic in 2020,
which had the smallest number of such attacks in more than a decade, according to a database
compiled by The Associated Press, USA Today and Northeastern University" that "tracks mass
killings defined as four or more dead, not including the shooter," but the New York Times (4/16,
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Hauser, 20.6M) reported Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett (D) in January "confronted another
shooting with multiple victims, which the city's police chief said was the worst mass casualty
shooting in more than a decade in Indianapolis. A youth was later arrested in the killing of five
people who were found in a home in Indianapolis."
In addition, the New York Timec (4/16, Taylor, 20.6M) reported Indianapolis "saw an
increase in criminal homicides in 2020, a year already racked with death caused by the pandemic."
The Times adds Indianapolis reported 215 criminal homicides, "the most recorded in a single year,
according to an analysis of Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department data by The Indianapolis
Star. There were also another 30 noncriminal homicides, usually episodes where the authorities
considered a killing justified, such as in self-defense. The city's previous record was 159 criminal
homicide cases in 2018, according to The Associated Press. The police investigated 154 criminal
homicides in 2019."
The Washington Mgt (4/16, 10.52M) in an editorial provides a list of the victims of mass
shootings in the US dating back to 1999, and argues that if the US "confronted the epidemic of gun
violence with resolve and common sense, lives could - and would - be saved. No single law will
prevent all gun deaths, but there are common-sense measures that would help."
As Indianapolis Mourns, White House Faces More Pressure To Act On Gun Violence.
The Indianapolis Star (4/17, Herron, 662K) reported Indianapolis "is still reeling from the shock of
a mass shooting at a FedEx facility that left eight people dead and several others wounded." The
Star added Mayor Joe Hogsett (D) on Saturday joined Rep. Andre Carson (D-IL) "and other
officials as well as co-workers, family and friends of those whose lives were lost at a candlelight
vigil at Krannert Park on the Westside." According to the Star, those present "offer sympathy and
prayers," and "some issued calls for stronger gun laws in the wake of the tragedy at the FedEx
Plainfield Ground Operations Center." The Wall Street Journal (4/17, Naughton, O'Brien,
Subscription Publication, 8.41M) provides similar coverage.
On NBC Nightly News
(4/17, story 4, 0:43, Diaz-Balart, 3.44M), Kelly O'Donnell reported
that President Biden on Friday "called these repeated tragedies 'a national embarrassment' that
must end." On ABC World News Tonight
(4/17, story 3, 2:00, Johnson, 3.89M), White House
correspondent MaryAlice Parks described Biden as "sounding increasingly frustrated," yet also
"defensive when asked if he should be prioritizing passing new gun laws." Biden: "I've never not
prioritized this. No one has worked harder to deal with violence used by individuals using weapons
than I have." Parks added that while "on the campaign trail, Biden promised to take the issue head
on," but so far there has been "no big push for gun control. And with 29 mass shootings so far this
month, the White House now saying it's on congressional Republicans to come to the bargaining
table." Parks said that the President "has taken some initial steps, including targeting so-called
ghost guns that can be assembled at home," but "advocates say he could do more right now on his
own, including cracking down on gun dealers who have violations, limiting some private sales, and
perhaps appointing a director to coordinate the federal response to gun violence."
A Washington Post (4/17, Olorunnipa, Sotomayor, 10.52M) analysis describes the White
House as under "growing pressure to act," even as "the routine has become so predictable that
some gun-control activists see the familiarity of tragedy as their biggest obstacle to achieving the
change they've been seeking for the past decade." The Post adds the recent mass shootings have
"encouraged activists to make a concerted push for fresh legislation restricting access to guns. But
with no dear consensus on how to achieve an elusive goal - and with the White House reluctant to
spend limited political capital on a prospect with long odds - there's a palpable fear among gun-
control groups that their best chance in years to change the nation's gun laws could once again end
in failure."
CAPITOL VIOLENCE NEWS
Capitol Siege Probe Sees Progress, Roadblocks After 100 Days.
CNN (4/16, Cohen, Schneider, 89.21M) reported, "One hundred days after the January 6
insurrection at the US Capitol, the unprecedented progress and unexpected roadblocks of the
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investigation are becoming clear." According to CNN, "Prosecutors have moved full speed ahead
with hundreds of cases against rioters but haven't made use of the much-discussed sedition laws,"
and have "rounded up dozens of extremists and militia members yet failed to convince judges that
most are too dangerous to release pre-trial." The investigation "is still in its early stages.
Prosecutions in the backlogged court system could stretch on for years, even if most rioters
ultimately plead guilty."
Indiana "Oath Keepers" Leader Pleads Guilty In Capitol Siege Probe.
The Indianapolis Star (4/16, Magdaleno, 662K) reports, "A heavy metal guitarist from Columbus,
Indiana who was armed with bear mace and wore a tactical vest as he joined a mob storming the
U.S. Capitol building Jan. 6 has pleaded guilty in federal court." Jon Schaffer, 52, "admitted in
Washington DC District Court to obstructing an official proceeding and entering a restricted building
with a weapon when he tried to forcibly stop Congress' certification of the U.S. presidential election
results. 'These actions are disgraceful and unacceptable,' FBI Deputy Director Paul M. Abbate said
in a prepared statement from the United States Department of Justice." The Star adds, "In his plea
agreement submitted to Judge Amit P. Mehta on Friday Schaffer admitted to being one of the
founders of the Oath Keepers, a national organization that describes itself as 'a non-partisan
association of current and formerly serving military, police, and first responders' at its website."
CNN (4/16, Cohen, 89.21M) reports that Schaffer "pleaded guilty Friday to two crimes related
to the US Capitol insurrection, making him the first rioter to do so." Schaffer "pleaded guilty to
obstruction of an official proceeding and entering a building with a dangerous weapon. He admitted
to carrying bear spray into the Capitol complex during the formal certification of the Electoral
College votes." CNN adds, "One hundred days after the January 6 attack, Schaffer is now the first
pro-Trump rioter to plead guilty and admit his crimes. In his plea deal, Schaffer is described as a
'founding lifetime member' of the Oath Keepers, though his lawyers previously claimed in court
that he didn't know much about the paramilitary group."
USA Today (4/16, Mansfield, Johnson, 12.7M) reports, "The cooperation agreement is a key
turning point for prosecutors who have been pursuing a broad conspiracy case against groups of
rioters, including the paramilitary Oath Keepers group and the far-right Proud Boys organization."
USA Today adds, "In court documents in March, prosecutors said the ongoing conspiracy inquiry
involves 'a large number of participants.' Prosecutors also have indicated that they have significant
information on Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes actions during the attack." On Thursday, FBI
Director Wray "described the investigation as perhaps the largest inquiry since the 9/11 attacks."
The AE (4/16, Balsamo, Durkin Richer) reports that Schaffer "has agreed to cooperate with
investigators in hopes of getting a lighter sentence, and the Justice Department will consider
putting Schaffer in the federal witness security program, U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta said. This
signals that federal prosecutors see him as a valuable cooperator as they continue to investigate
militia groups and other extremists involved in the insurrection on Jan. 6."
The Washington Post (4/16, Hsu, Barrett, 10.52M) reports, "The plea marks a new stage in
the historic investigation, as prosecutors seek to work up the chain of defendants to gather
evidence and better understand the full scope of any planning and organizing of the violence —
particularly among groups like the far-right Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys. Dozens of members
from both groups appeared to act in concert to storm the building, prosecutors have alleged. Peter
Skinner, a former federal prosecutor, called it a 'huge' development, saying such cooperation
deals are 'what the government needs to investigate and possibly prosecute the leaders of the
organization."
The New York limes (4/16, Al, Feuer, 20.6M) reports Schaffer's cooperation "could prove
instrumental in helping prosecutors pursue a separate and much broader conspiracy case against
12 other members of the Oath Keepers who stand accused of some of the most serious charges in
the sprawling investigation into the storming of the Capitol." The Wall Street Journal (4/16,
Viswanatha, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) provided similar coverage as did brief CBS Evening
News (4/16, story 5, 0:22, O'Donnell, 3.77M) and NBC Nightly News. (4/16, story 5, 0:43,
Holt, 4.83M) segments.
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Prosecutors Say Men Arrested For Attempted Theft Of Gun From DC Officer During
Capitol Riot.
The Washingtnn Pact (4/16, Weiner, 10.52M) reports prosecutors "said Friday they have arrested a
man who attempted to grab a service weapon from a D.C. police officer during the attack on the
U.S. Capitol in January." According to the Post, "Kyle J. Young, 37, of Redfield, Iowa, was arrested
Wednesday along with Albuquerque C. Head, 41, of Kingsport, Tenn. Both are accused of
assaulting Michael Fanone, a D.C. officer who was dragged down the steps of the Capitol, attacked
with an electroshock weapon and beaten unconscious by the mob." The Post adds that also indicted
was "Thomas Sibick, 35, of Buffalo, who was already charged with beating Fanone and stealing the
officer's badge and radio. The indictment, unsealed Wednesday, was made public Friday. Daniel
Rodriguez, 38, of Fontana, Calif., is accused in a separate indictment of using an electroshock
weapon on Fanone."
FBI Arrests Michigan Man In Capitol Siege Probe.
MLive (MI) (4/16, Barrett, 828K) reports, "Facebook messages released to the FBI show a Hancock
man charged with four federal crimes for allegedly entering the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 and enjoyed
a celebratory beer afterward." Jeremy Sorvisto "was arrested on April 7 as part of an investigation
into Karl Dresch, another man from the Upper Penninsula who was charged for breaching the
Capitol. FBI agents identified Sorvisto while seeking to find others who may have traveled to
Washington, D.C. with Dresch." Sorvisto "was charged with entering a restricted building,
disruptive conduct, disorderly conduct in a Capitol building and demonstrating in a Capitol building.
Each is a misdemeanor crime punishable by six months in prison."
Prosecutors Say Nazi Sympathizer Who Stormed Capitol Poses Threat To Jews.
CNN (4/16, Cohen, 89.21M) reports, "The Justice Department said Friday that a Nazi sympathizer
who stormed the US Capitol on January 6 poses a threat to Jewish residents in his native New
Jersey and therefore shouldn't be released from jail." CNN adds, "The alleged Capitol rioter,
Timothy Hale-Cusanelli, was a well-known Nazi sympathizer at the Navy base where he worked in
New Jersey. A federal judge ordered him detained last month while he awaits trial, but he has filed
new motions with the court seeking his release. Opposing those requests, federal prosecutors told
the judge that Hale-Cusanelli poses a danger to the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community in
Lakewood, which is near the Navy base where he worked before his arrest. 'Defendant poses a
more localized threat to the community, particularly the Hassidic community in Lakewood, New
Jersey,' federal prosecutors wrote in a court filing."
Capitol Rioter Who Allegedly Ransacked Pelosi's Office Is Released From Jail.
The Daily Beast (4/18, Nadeau, 933K) reports, "Despite the fact that Capitol insurrectionist William
Robert Norwood III allegedly stole body armor, lied to the FBI, and 'led a pack of rioters through
the inner sanctum of Speaker Pelosi's office space' where he lifted a paper coaster, he has been
released pending his trial, according to Department of Justice documents seen by The Daily Beast.
He is charged with two felonies: obstruction of an official proceeding and theft of government
property." The Daily Beast adds that Norwood "petitioned the court last week to be released to
home detention which was granted Saturday, according to Department of Justice documents which
lay out the extent of Norwood's involvement in the Jan. 6 riots," and "as a result of Norwood's lack
of criminal history, the D.C. court determined that he is not a threat so society."
Pennsylvania Man Faces Federal Charges Over Capitol Riot.
The Erie (PA) Times-News (4/19, 35K) reports Jeremy J. Vorous of Venango, PA "has been indicted
in federal court in Washington, D.C." on "five counts, including obstruction of an official
proceeding." The FBI charged Vorous with the same counts in a criminal complaint in March.
Judge Threatens To Hold Woman Charged In Capitol Riot In Contempt For Wearing
Mesh Mask.
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The Washington Post (4/16, Hsu, 10.52M) reports US District Judge Royce Lamberth on Friday
"ordered a Pennsylvania woman charged in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot to show why she should not be
jailed pending trial or held in contempt of court for allegedly flouting a requirement that she wear
a mask when leaving her home while on bond." According to the Post, "Rachel Marie Powell, a
mother of eight who lives in Mercer County, Pa., just east of the state line and Youngstown, Ohio,
has pleaded not guilty to eight counts including felony destruction of federal property and
obstruction of a congressional proceeding after allegedly carrying an ice ax and large wooden pole
into the Capitol." The Post says the FBI had "previously alleged that Powell, wearing a pink hat and
carrying a bullhorn, helped shatter a window with a battering ram and appeared to direct others at
the scene."
Ohio Is High On List Of Capitol Siege Indictments.
The Cincinnati Enquirer (4/16, Knight, 223K) reports, "Ohio ranks sixth in the country when it
comes to federal indictments in the Jan. 6 breach of the U.S. Capitol, according to the U.S.
Department of Justice." The Enquirer adds that "20 Ohioans have been arrested on federal charges
related to the infiltration, about 5.3% of the total. Among those arrested, four are associated with
an extremist group called the Oath Keepers, whose members "believe that the federal
government has been co-opted by a shadowy conspiracy that is trying to strip American citizens of
their rights," according to court documents. At least five photographed or filmed themselves during
or after the breach. One is charged with assaulting a police officer."
Olen: CA Teacher Who Marched On Jan. 6 Should Not Lose Job.
In her Washington Post (4/16, 10.52M) column, Helaine Olen argues that while fourth-grade
teacher Kristine Hostetter "joined her husband in marching on the Capitol on Jan. 6," she should
not lose her job "as much as I disagree with just about every political opinion Kristine Hostetter is
known to hold. That many think otherwise speaks to the tenor of our times, when people across
the political spectrum are increasingly intolerant of the beliefs of those who differ with them." Olen
says the district "found no proof that Hostetter had entered the Capitol on Jan. 6," so "she was
returned to her classroom," but "many petition-signers want Hostetter fired not because of
anything she was proven to have done but because 'canceling' her would assuage some of their
hostility toward Trump, right-leaning extremism and fury over racist incidents in the school
district."
Waldman: Trump's Presidency "Began And Ended With Two Of The Most Profound
Attacks On American Democracy." In his Washington Post (4/16, 10.52M) column, Paul
Waldman asserts that as the US continues to "grapple with the fallout of the Trump era, a
disturbing fact is becoming more and more clear, one whose effects are still being felt: Donald
Trump's presidency began and ended with two of the most profound attacks on American
democracy in our history." According to Waldman, "There's a straight line running from the 2016
Russia scandal through the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6. And in both cases, almost the entire
GOP decided to defend, justify and use those attacks for whatever advantage it could gain. Indeed,
that through line runs from both of those right into the GOP campaign of voter suppression and
cultural panic now underway."
Politico Analysis: Congressional Security Spending Has "Surged" Since Capitol Riot.
Politico (4/16, Ferris, Payne, 6.73M) reports "more than one third of the 17 GOP lawmakers who
voted to impeach of convict" former President Donald Trump "used campaign funds to install
security systems or hire private details within weeks of their votes - for an eye-popping total of
nearly $200,000 over the first three months of this year, according to an analysis of filings with the
Federal Election Commission this week." Politico adds Congressional spending on private security
"has surged among members of both parties since the deadly riot on Jan. 6, amid an alarming
spike in death threats against lawmakers and their families." According to Politico, the spending
"spotlights a challenge many lawmakers are eager to tackle this month: how to update the strict
rules that govern personal security costs for members of Congress."
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Pittman Reflects On Toll That Jan. 6 Riot Has Taken On Capitol Police.
In an interview with NBC Nightly Newc
(4/16, story 6, 3:47, Holt, 4.83M), Lester Holt
interviewed acting US Capitol Police Chief Yogananda Pittman discussed "the enormous toll the
attack has taken on her department and respond[ed] to criticism over the agency's preparedness."
Asked about the criticism of the Capitol Police's response, Pittman said it has "created an
overwhelming opportunity for this agency to improve and get better." He added Pittman "says she
accepts the IG's assessments but argues they were aware of the intelligence." He also reported
Pittman "acknowledges her department is about 200 officers below the authorized strength and
remains reliant on the National Guard as it works to recruit new officers."
Independent Investigation Of Capitol Riot Facing Difficult Odds.
The Washington Post (4/18, Demirjian, 10.52M) reports "an independent investigation into the Jan.
6 insurrection is facing long odds, as bipartisan resolve to hold the perpetrators and instigators
accountable erodes, and Republicans face sustained pressure to disavow that it was supporters of
former president Donald Trump who attacked the U.S. Capitol." House Speaker Pelosi announced
last week that she had drafted a new proposal for an outside commission to examine the causes of
the riot, but, "in a sign of how delicate the political climate has become, she has yet to share her
recommendations with Republican leaders, who shot down her initial approach." The Post says
"rank-and-file Republicans have been forced to walk a political tightrope, as a majority still believe
the election was stolen from Trump," who "still wields outsize influence in the GOP, which is
presently the minority party in Washington but is within striking distance of making a comeback in
2022 - if leaders can hold their ranks together."
Vox (4/18, 1.88M) reports Pelosi sent a "Dear Colleague" letter to House Democrats Friday in
which she "renewed her call for a congressional commission to investigate" the riot. Pelosi wrote,
"Compromise has been necessary; now, we must agree on the scope, composition and resources
necessary to seek and find the truth. ... It is my hope that we can reach agreement very soon. At
the same time, committees in the House and Senate have been holding and planning hearings,
which will be a resource to the commission."
Some Charged In Capitol Riot Claim They Were There As Journalists. The AP (4/18,
Kunzelman, Billeaud) reports supporters of former President Donald Trump "thoroughly
document[ed] their actions and words in videos and social media posts" during the Jan. 6 riot at
the US Capitol. Some of them now "are claiming they were only there to record history as
journalists, not to join a deadly insurrection." At least eight people charged in the riot "have
identified themselves as a journalist or a documentary filmmaker, including three people arrested
this month, according to an Associated Press review of court records in nearly 400 federal cases."
According to the AP, "experts say" it is "unlikely that any of the self-proclaimed journalists can
mount a viable defense on the First Amendment's free speech grounds. ... They face long odds if
video captured them acting more like rioters than impartial observers."
PROTESTS
Demonstrators Nationwide Protest Against Police Brutality.
The Hill (4/17, Castronuovo, 5.69M) reports, "Hundreds of protesters marched throughout
Washington, D.C., on Friday evening, with some engaging in clashes with police, calling for an end
to police brutality following a series of fatal shootings and as the end of former Minneapolis police
officer Derek Chauvin's murder trial nears." Protestors at first assembled "for a rally at Black Lives
Matter Plaza in downtown D.C. before walking through the streets and chanting the names of
individuals killed by police, including 20-year-old Daunte Wright, who was fatally shot by a police
officer during a traffic stop last week, and 13-year-old Adam Toledo, who was shot and killed after
a police officer allegedly saw the boy holding a gun."
The San Francisco Chronide (4/17, Rubenstein, 2.44M) reports, "Hundreds of people marched
through downtown Oakland on Friday night to demonstrate against" the shootings of Wright and
Toledo, "with some breaking away from the main group to smash windows, set fires and
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spraypaint red anarchy symbols, according to police statements and video footage."
Meanwhile, the .AE (4/16, Cline, Flaccus) reports police in Portland, Oregon "said Saturday
they arrested four people after declaring a riot Friday night when protesters smashed windows,
burglarized businesses and set multiple fires during demonstrations that started after police fatally
shot a man while responding to reports of a person with a gun." The vandalism "also was part of
vigils and demonstrations already planned for the night in the name of people killed in police
shootings nationwide."
Bloomberg Analysis: Groundwork For Chauvin Appeal "Has Been Laid." A
Bloomberg (4/17, Lopez, Earls, 3.57M) analysis says, "The groundwork for appealing a possible
conviction of Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer accused of killing George Floyd,
has been laid even before jurors weigh the charges." Ex-public defender Christa Groshek said,
"The defense has really been positioning Chauvin's case for an appeal from day one," with Groshek
also saying, "I think there are a tremendous amount of options they will have on appeal."
Bloomberg adds that closing arguments are slated to commence Monday, and jurors will
subsequently "deliberate Chauvin's fate." He "is charged with second-degree murder, third-degree
murder and manslaughter, all of which have different standards of proof."
NYTimes Analysis: Dozens Of Police Killings Have Occurred Since Testimony In
Chauvin Trial Began. A New York Times (4/17, Al, Eligon, Hubler, 20.6M) analysis says that
since testimony in Chauvin's trial commenced on March 29, no less than 64 individuals "have died
at the hands of law enforcement nationwide, with Black and Latino people representing more than
half of the dead. As of Saturday, the average was more than three killings a day."
AP Analysis: Black Americans "Facing A Collective Sense Of Grief And Trauma." An
AP (4/17, Stafford) analysis says, "Many Black Americans are facing a collective sense of grief and
trauma that has grown more profound with the loss of each life at the hands of police in America.
Some see themselves and their children reflected in the victims of police violence, heightening the
grief they feel." The AP adds that the racial trauma affecting Black Americans is "built upon
centuries of oppressive systems and racist practices that are deeply embedded within the fabric of
the nation."
Capehart: Black Americans "Live Under Siege." Washington Post (4/17, 10.52M)
columnist Jonathan Capehart writes, "There is no one way to be Black in America, but there is one
way we live while Black in America. No matter our gender, age or socioeconomic status, we are
viewed as threats. As a result, we live under siege."
Protesters Demonstrate In Chicago Following Release Of Body Cam Video From Police
Shooting Of 13-Year-Old.
The Chicago
(4/16, Keilman, 2.03M) reports hundreds of people "gathered in Logan
Square Park on Friday evening to demand justice for 13-year-old Adam Toledo and all victims of
police violence, according to organizers." The Tribune describes rally, which "was the first major
demonstration against the Chicago Police Department since the city released the troubling video of
Toledo's killing Thursday," as "peaceful but passionate."
On ABC World News Tonight
(4/16, story 3, 2:49, Muir, 6.23M), Alex Perez reported that in
the video, "you can see Officer Eric Stillman chasing the two suspects, pushing one to the ground,
running after the other. The officer yelling to see the suspect's hands. Toledo's right hand
momentarily out of view as the boy pivots, turns around and raises both hands. Officer Stillman
fires a single shot. Toledo's hands appear to be empty when he was struck. A freeze-frame image
shows Toledo holding what appears to be a gun in that right hand. Authorities say it was less than
one second from when the weapon seems to disappear, and when the boy is shot in the chest. This
nearby security camera capturing the heart-racing moments before the shooting. The 13-year-old
allegedly tossing the handgun behind this wooden fence, where it was recovered by police. The
firearm seen on the officer's bodycam. Stillman, immediately after the shooting, calling for an
ambulance and beginning CPR. Appearing to be emotional, later sitting on the ground, another
officer consoling him. Stillman, seen here in a video for a toy giveaway, joined the force in 2015.
He has three complaints and four use of force reports on his record, but has never been
disciplined. The police union lawyer representing Stillman defending his actions, saying he was,
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quote, `left with no other option.' But the Toledo family attorney says the video speaks for itself."
On NBC Nightly News
(4/16, story 3, 1:35, Holt, 4.83M), Rehema Ellis reported, "No charges
have been filed against the officer, who's been placed on administrative duty."
In an analysis, the Washington Post (4/16, Bump, 10.52M) says that "of the 19 other children
under the age of 16 shot and killed by police in the past six years, most were the police officers'
intended targets." While Toledo "wasn't armed, eight of the 22 children under the age of 16 who
were fatally shot by police since 2015 were armed with guns when they were shot, according to
Post data. Another four were holding other kinds of weapons, like knives. Three were holding toy
guns, like 13-year-old Tyre King, fatally shot in Columbus, Ohio, in 2016. One was driving a car,
and the others, including the three youngest, weren't armed at all." The Post adds, "The number of
young people shot to death by police since 2015 is relatively small, so we should be cautious in
drawing too many conclusions from the pool. It is worth noting, however, that these kids are
mostly non-White. (Adam was Hispanic.)"
Death Of Toledo "Renews The Anguish" Among Chicagoans "Still Pained" By 2014
Killing Of McDonald. The New York Times (4/17, Bosman, 20.6M) reports, "Chicagoans reacted
with horror and grief to body-camera video released on Thursday that showed the killing of Adam
Toledo," 13, on March 29. The footage shows Toledo being pursued "down an alley by a police
officer, who orders him to stop and show his hands. An analysis of the video, slowing down events
that took place in the space of a second, shows the teenager then appearing to toss a handgun
nearby and raise his hands in the air, just before the officer shoots him in the chest." The Times
adds, "For Chicagoans who are still pained by the shooting death of Laquan McDonald by the police
in 2014, Adam's death renews the anguish, particularly in heavily Black and Latino neighborhoods
where residents have long said they are unfairly targeted by the police."
On ABC World News Tonight' (4/17, story 6, 1:55, Johnson, 3.89M), correspondent lanai
Norman reported Toledo's family is mourning Toledo, "telling ABC News he was a kind and funny
kid who loved to laugh, sharing never-before-seen pictures of" him. Norman added that officer Eric
Stillman, who fired the fatal shot, "joined the force in 2014. He's had three complaints of
misconduct but no disciplinary action and no use of force reports indicating he fired his weapon
before this shooting. And the officer's attorney says he faced a life-threatening situation and left
with no other option before opening fire."
Hundreds Call For Accountability Over Toledo Killing. On NBC Nightly Newt'
(4/17,
story 5, 1:17, Diaz-Balart, 3.44M), correspondent Ron Allen reported that in Chicago, hundreds
called for accountability after viewing the body-camera footage of Toledo being shot. Toledo family
attorney Adeena Weiss Ortiz said, "He said show me your hands. The child did and there was
nothing in his hands when he got shot." According to Allen, "Stillman's attorney says the boy was
with an older gang member just after a drive-by shooting and the officer fired, fearing the boy was
armed." In a brief broadcast on the demonstrations in Chicago, the CBS Weekend News
(4/17,
story 4, 0:12, Diaz, 1.74M) reported they "were mostly peaceful, but there were some dashes
with police."
WSJournal Analysis: Toledo Shooting Highlighted Problem Of How Chicago Children
Are Being Fatally Shot. A Wall Street Journal (4/16, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) analysis
said the shooting of Toledo highlighted Chicago's problem of how its children are being fatally shot.
Chicago Mayor Says She Will Not Resign Over Toledo Shooting. The Chicago Tribune
(4/18, Pratt, Byrne, 2.03M) reports Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot (D) on Sunday "blasted
unsubstantiated social media chatter as 'homophobic, racist and misogynistic rumors' and
indicated she is not resigning." The Chicago Sun-Times (4/18, Sdiuba, 970K) reports the claim that
Lightfoot "planned to step down Sunday was apparently fueled by a now-deleted tweet sent by
Ja'Mal Green, an activist and former mayoral candidate who continues to call for her resignation,"
though Fox News (4/18, Fordham, 23.99M) reports on its website that Green "seemed slightly
apologetic for spreading rumors that Lightfoot intended to resign."
CNN (4/18, Bradner, 89.21M) reports on its website that "following last week's release of
video of the police killing of 13-year-old Adam Toledo, the mayor faces a new round of questions
about how Chicago Police Department policies and oversight will change - and why she hasn't yet
delivered on her promise."
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More Than 130 Individuals Arrested As Demonstrations Over Wright Killing Continue.
On NB' Nightly Newc
(4/17, story 6, 1:00, Allen, 3.44M), correspondent Ron Allen reported that
in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, demonstrations against Daunte Wright's killing commenced "with
no curfew in effect for the first time. But authorities say the peaceful gathering changed."
Minnesota Department of Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington said, "We started to see
individuals dressed with helmets, with respirators, and gas masks. We were notified that a part of
the fence had been breathed." According to Allen, "Dozens of officers arresting more than 130
people. The most in six-straight nights of clashes with worried-nearby residents caught in the
middle." The CBS Weekend News
(4/17, story 3, 0:21, Diaz, 1.74M) provided similar coverage
in a brief broadcast.
NYTimes Analysis: Air Fresheners In Car Rearview Mirrors "May Be Treated As
Illegal In A Majority Of States." A New York Times (4/17, Baker, Bogel-Burroughs, 20.6M)
analysis says, "the air fresheners that dangle from rearview mirrors" in cars "may be treated as
illegal in a majority of states, which have laws prohibiting objects near the windshield that can
obstruct motorists' views. They are part of a suite of low-level offenses, such as tinted windows or
broken taillights, that civil rights advocates complain have become common pretexts for traffic
stops that too often selectively target people of color." The encounter that resulted in Wright's
killing "began when officers initiated a traffic stop and raised the issue of a hanging air freshener,
according to Mr. Wright's mother." Pete Orput, "the Washington County attorney, said officers had
noticed an expired registration tab on Mr. Wright's license plate and decided to pull his car over.
One of the officers later noted the air freshener hanging from the mirror, which was a violation of
the law, Mr. Orput said."
Brooklyn Center, MN Officials Criticizing Police Response To Protesters.
The AP (4/16, Richmond, Ibrahim) reports Brooklyn Center, Minnesota Mayor Mike Elliott and
other "elected leaders in the Minneapolis suburb where a police officer fatally shot Daunte Wright
want officers to scale back their tactics amid nightly protests, leaving some law enforcement called
in to assist asking whether the city still wants their help." The Post adds officers on Friday night
"fired irritants into a crowd of several hundred after part of an outer fence was opened.
Demonstrators dissipated shortly after 10 p.m. when officers quickly advanced. Flash bangs and
sponge grenades were fired into the crowd, and several protesters who neared a group of officers
were pepper sprayed. Some demonstrators scrambled through yards and over backyard fences to
evade a perimeter authorities set up for a block around the police department."
Meanwhile, the Washington Post (4/16, Craig, Foster-Frau, 10.52M) in a more than 2,300-
word artide says the "unrest" in Brooklyn Center "offers [a] warning to other U.S. suburbs,
experts say." The Post reports "demographers and sociologists" highlight "the growing ethnic and
economic diversity that continues to sweep into America's suburbs, making those communities the
new front line in the nation's culture clashes over racism and policing." The Post adds that as
"immigrants and people of color move deeper into the suburbs, increasingly shattering historical
stereotypes of White, picket-fence communities, they are redefining politics and contributing to a
rise in non-White officeholders. But even as the political leadership of suburban governments
becomes more diverse, scholars say the police forces and other local government institutions often
lag, creating new flash points for tension among residents."
Minneapolis National Guard Members Injured In Drive-By Shooting.
A 2,700-word Washington Post (4/18, Craig, Bailey, 10.52M) article says the response by Brooklyn
Center police to the protests over the fatal shooting of Daunte Wright "has elevated tensions in
neighboring Minneapolis, a city already on edge as it braces for a verdict in the murder trial of
Derek Chauvin, the former police officer accused of killing George Floyd." The Post says two
members of the Minnesota National Guard "were injured when someone fired on a security team
made up of troops and the Minneapolis Police Department in a drive-by shooting early Sunday,"
but not seriously injured, "according to the Guard's leader, Maj. Gen. Shawn Manke," though he
"said the incident 'highlights the volatility and tension in our communities right now." The
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Minifeafrolls_StarTrilaunt (4/18, Hyatt, 855K) similarly reports on the injured national guard
members.
Meagan Fitzgerald said on NBC Nightly News
(4/18, story 3, 2:20, Snow, 6.41M) that
Minneapolis is "on high alert, windows boarded up. National Guard members on nearly every
block, preparing for unrest as the case...comes to a close." Elwyn Lopez reported on ABC World
News Tonight
(4/18, lead story, 3:20, Davis, 4.85M) that the Twin Cities are "bracing for a
verdict," with "thousands of National Guardsmen coming in to assist local authorities. And schools
in Minneapolis moving to remote learning for part of this week." Lopez added that the jury "will be
sequestered after closing arguments on Monday. The judge telling them how much to consider to
pack for that, he said if I were you, I would plan for long, and hope for short."
Skyler Henry reported on the CBS Weekend News
(4/18, lead story, 3:15, Duncan, 1.24M)
that they jury will have "no smartphones, no computers, and in some cases according to some
legal experts that we've spoken to, that means no TV as well." Henry added that "in terms of
recent cases that have involved Minneapolis police and fatal shootings, juries have deliberated in
as quickly as two days and have taken as long as a week, and of course, the jury has enough time
to come up with what they feel is appropriate for each of the charges against Derek Chauvin."
Alleged Police, FBI Infiltration Of Portland Protests Raises Concerns.
KGW-TV Portland, OR (4/16, Iboshi, 345K) reports from Portland, Oregon, "An unnamed
informant. Plainclothes FBI agents. Tactics typically used in drug cases or serious crimes are being
used by police monitoring protests in Portland, according to court records." KGW-TV adds,
"Activists and civil rights attorneys fear this police surveillance may violate the right to free speech
- a risk they worry outweighs any potential benefit. 'I think it has a potential chilling impact on
First Amendment speech,' said J. Ashlee Albies, a civil rights attorney in Portland." Albies "worries
the tactic may deter law abiding citizens from participating in demonstrations and undermine trust
between law enforcement and the community." On April 13, Portland police "declared a riot after
demonstrators threw fireworks and set a fire at the Portland Police Association building. Officers
arrested one person, 19-year-old Alma Raven-Guido. Court records later revealed that an
unnamed informant within the crowd helped identify Raven-Guido, who faces charges of arson,
criminal mischief and riot."
Group: Albuquerque Police Department Asked DEA For Protest-Related Help.
The Albuquerque (NM) Journal (4/16, Kaplan, 188K) reported, "Last summer, as the movement
against racial injustice swept the country, officials in the Albuquerque Police Department asked the
Drug Enforcement Administration for the assistance of special agents to do undercover operations
and surveillance at protests, according to" the nonprofit, government watchdog group Citizens for
Responsibility & Ethics. In response to questions on Friday, "both the mayor's office and Chief of
Police Harold Medina vehemently denied knowing about the request for assistance from the DEA."
The Journal highlighted that federal agents were deployed to Albuquerque last year as part of
Operation Legend.
COUNTER-TERRORISM
Senators Call On Biden To Close Guantanamo.
NPR (4/16, Pfeiffer, 3.69M) reported that, "in a letter to the White House, 24 senators said the US
military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba 'has damaged America's reputation, fueled anti-Muslim
bigotry, and weakened the US' ability to counter terrorism and fight for human rights and the rule
of law around the world." Two dozen US senators are "urging President Biden to shut it down
quickly and find new homes for the 40 men remaining there." Many of the detainees have been
"confined at Guantanamo for nearly two decades without being tried or charged, and some have
been cleared for release but are still being held." Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick
Durbin and 23 of his Democratic-voting colleagues "outlined immediate steps they believe the
Administration should take to close the secretive, deteriorating island detention facility."
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Fox News (4/16, 23.99M) reported Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) said, "The Democrats' obsession
with bringing terrorists into Americans' backyards is bizarre, misguided, and dangerous." Cornyn
"said Republicans would fight Guantanamo's closing tooth and nail,' just as they did under
Obama." Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin "said in his Senate confirmation he supported shuttering
the prison's doors as well."
COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE
DO) Investigating If "Russiagate" Inquirer Kash Patel Leaked Classified Information.
The Washington Fxaminer (4/16, Chaitin, 888K) reported the Justice Department is "investigating
whether Kash Patel, a former high-ranking Trump Administration official who was instrumental in
revealing secrets behind the `Russiagate' controversy, improperly disclosed classified information."
The alleged inquiry was "revealed in a column Friday by Washington Post columnist David
Ignatius, who cited 'two knowledgeable sources who requested anonymity because of the
sensitivity of the probe." The sources "said the investigation began this year with a complaint
submitted by an intelligence agency, which was not identified." The column "said the sources would
not provide further details, and Patel could not be reached for comment."
Russia Retaliates After Imposition Of New US Sanctions.
Reuters (4/16, Osborn, Balmforth) reports Russia on Friday "asked 10 U.S. diplomats to leave the
country in retaliation for Washington's expulsion of the same number of Russian diplomats over
alleged malign activity and suggested the U.S. ambassador return home for consultations."
Reuters describes the action as "part of a broader retaliatory package...approved by President
Vladimir Putin" in response "to an array of U.S. government sanctions imposed on Moscow a day
earlier, including curbs to its sovereign debt market."
In addition, the AP (4/16, Isachenkov) reports Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
announced the addition of "eight U.S. officials to its sanctions list," and Russia will "move to restrict
and stop the activities of U.S. nongovernment organizations from interfering in Russia's politics."
The Washington Post (4/16, Dixon, 10.52M) reports that AG Garland, FBI Director Wray, DHS
Secretary Mayorkas and DNI Haines were among those sanctioned by the Kremlin.
However, the New York Times (4/16, Kramer, 20.6M) says, "The response, mostly mirroring
the diplomatic rebuke by the United States from the day before, suggested the Russian
government did not intend an escalation that could worsen already dismal relations between the
countries." The Times adds that with the Russian response "largely limited to the expulsions and
travel bans, it appears the Kremlin does not intend to raise the diplomatic stakes and may remain
open to the invitation to a summit meeting, possibly in a European country sometime over the
summer, that Mr. Biden extended to...Putin this week." The Wall Street Journal (4/16, Simmons,
Subscription Publication, 8.41M) and a brief ABC World News Tonight
(4/16, story 8, 0:30, Muir,
6.23M) segment provided similar coverage.
The Guardian (UK) (4/16, Roth, 5.53M) reports that Russian diplomats "have lashed out at
the UK for joining the US in condemning Russia's international cyber-espionage efforts, induding
elections interference and the SolarWinds hack." The New York Times (4/17, Higgins, Goeij,
20.6M) reports that Polan "also expelled Russia diplomats in recent days, ordering three to leave
on Thursday in what Warsaw said was a gesture of 'solidarity' with the United States."
The Wall Street Journal. (4/16, Simmons, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) also reports on the
Russian reaction, as does The Hill (4/16, 5.69M) and Fox News (4/16, McFall, 23.99M), among
others.
Analysts View New US Sanctions On Russia As "Mostly Symbolic." Citing
economists, CNBC (4/16, Smith, 7.34M) reports on its website that "new U.S. sanctions on Russia
are 'mostly symbolic' and will have minimal impact on markets and the macroeconomic outlook."
Likewise, Axios (4/15, Basu, Swan, 1.26M), in a post titled, "Biden's Russian Sanctions Likely To
Achieve Little," says, "Despite bold talk from top administration officials, there's little reason to
think the Russia sanctions...will do anything to alter...Putin's behavior or calculus." Axios points
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out that Biden "did not announce sanctions targeting Nord Stream 2, a nearly complete Russian-
German pipeline that will bypass Ukraine and deliver Russian gas straight to the European Union."
Axios adds, "The reality is nobody expected him to sanction an ally - Germany - which is the type
of action that might actually stop the pipeline from being completed." A Wall Street Journal (4/16,
Donati, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) article titled "Biden Faces New Pressure to Act On Russia's
Nord Stream 2 Gas Pipeline" provides similar coverage.
Russia Sanctions May Impact Space Cooperation. pOLITIrn Spare (4/16) reported
Russia's reaction to recent US sanctions might "impact the relationship between the two nations'
civil space programs." Jeffrey Edmonds, a former director for Russia on the National Security
Council said, "It is not beyond the imagination that at some point Russia could sever all space
cooperation with the United States as a show of its discontent with US policy. I see it as low
probability at this point but definitely something worth keeping an eye on. If Russia wants to
respond strongly to US actions, it may choose to do so in areas where it sees itself in more peer-
to-peer terms, space being one of those." There's precedent, however, "for the close partnership
in space operating independently of terrestrial pressures."
More Commentary. Philip Elliott writes for TIME (4/16, 18.1M) writes that while Russia
(and the USSR before it) has long interfered in US elections, in 2016, Russia's "working so openly
that year to help ensure Donald's Trump's win was something different." He cites this as the
activity really driving the sanctions, adding that where "Biden's aggressive move will act as a
deterrent and stop more than 70 years of Russian meddling in U.S. affairs seems doubtful."
Cotton: Intelligence On Russia Bounties "Selectively Leaked" To Aid Biden Campaign.
Fox News (4/16, 23.99M) reported Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) "told 'The Faulkner Focus' Friday that
intelligence about Russia placing bounties on US soldiers in Afghanistan was 'selectively leaked' to
the media last year to help the Biden campaign." A senior Biden Administration official "said
Thursday that the IC only had 'low to moderate' confidence in the story." Cotton said, "Joe Biden
owes President Trump an apology. Joe Biden used that line of attack multiple times in the
campaign to include in the presidential debate. I remember when it first surfaced last summer, I
was open-minded to it, it sounds like something that Vladimir Putin and the Russians would do. But
I sit on the Intelligence Committee. I reviewed it carefully, and again, I could not see where these
reports in the media were coming from."
DNI Highlights Top US Challenges In Annual Threat Assessment.
Air Force Magazine (4/17) reported DNI Avril Haines "said in the ICs annual assessment of top
threats facing the US that China aims to displace the US as the world's preeminent superpower;
Russia is 'pushing back' against the US, sometimes with force; Iran is a 'regional menace' and
North Korea is a 'disruptive player,' and will be for years to come." The 31-page unclassified threat
assessment "calls China the 'pacing threat' for the US - militarily, politically, and economically --
noting that the other three nations remain active, potent adversaries, particularly in cyber
warfare." The DNI "said the Chinese use coercive foreign loans and 'vaccine diplomacy,' along with
expansive territorial claims, to compete vigorously with the US for world influence."
Finnish Startup ICEYE Collaborating With In-Q-Tel.
Breaking Defense (4/16, Hitchens) reported Finnish startup ICEYE is "partnering with the IC's
venture capital arm In-Q-Tel as US government demand for SAR satellite data skyrockets." Eric
Jensen, president of ICEYE US said, "We are now on contract with multiple customers, both on the
defense and Intel side and on the civil side. We've had humbling reception, I would say, amongst
all those sectors. There is very clearly an unmet demand for complimentary commercial SAR here
in the States." Simon Davidson, managing partner, In-Q-Tel, and EVP, IQT Emerge, said in a press
release yesterday announcing the partnership, "ICEYE's world-class SAR satellites and their
market-leading global coverage allows for capture despite time of day and weather conditions. We
are pleased and excited to bring this technology to our government partners." ICEYE also
announced that it "has built a US manufacturing plant in Irvine, Calif. to boost its satellite-making
capacity to meet the rapid growth in its business base."
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Nunes Warns Intel Chiefs Against Targeting Americans.
The Washington Times (4/16, Scarborough, 626K) reports Republicans are "putting the Biden
intelligence chiefs on notice that their agencies are moving dangerously close to spying on
Americans in the US." They raised "concerns on Thursday at a HPSCI hearing featuring President
Biden's five top intelligence officials, including DNI Haines and FBI Director Wray." Rep. Devin
Nunes (R-CA), the panel's top Republican, said, "The Democrats see political benefits in
characterizing wide swaths of American citizens particularly Republicans and conservatives as
politically suspect, politically violent and deserving of government surveillance. However, I will
remind those assembled here today that our intelligence community exists solely to counteract
foreign threats." He added, "As for the leaders of the intelligence community, I hope you plan on
spending a reasonable amount of time in upcoming years on activities other than investigating
conservatives and spying on Republican presidential campaigns."
CIA Intelligence Network In Afghanistan Likely Will Be Dismantled With Withdrawal.
CNN (4/18, Cohen, Williams, Starr, 89.21M) reports President Joe Biden's planned withdrawal
from Afghanistan includes "an intense unraveling of the extensive intelligence and covert action
network that the US has built there over the two decades since 9/11 as part of the global war on
terror." The current plan includes the "removal of the hundreds of special operations forces not
publidy acknowledged by the US government but known to be there," according to two defense
officials and a senior US official with direct knowledge of the situation. Most, if not all, CIA
operators "working in Afghanistan are almost certain to leave as well," current and former officials
told CNN. Without the support of a conventional military presence, "on-the-ground intelligence
gathering becomes significantly more difficult - and more dangerous." Neither the "removal of
special operations forces nor the likely removal of intelligence operators has been previously
reported."
State's Disinformation-Fighting Arm Tapping AI For Support.
NextGov (4/16) reported emerging technologies - and partnerships promoting their use - "have
proven instrumental for the State Department's Global Engagement Center, a hub that steers
federal efforts to counter state-sponsored propaganda and disinformation campaigns aimed at
undermining the US." The GEC's Acting Coordinator Daniel Kimmage said Thursday, "Artificial
intelligence and the tools that it offers are really helping us to understand what's happening in the
environment, and to identify coordinated activity. There's obviously a much broader range of
activity across the State Department, but for us it's a powerful way to better understand what's
happening in the environment, and identify coordinated activity." At an event hosted by Foreign
Policy, Kimmage "offered a glimpse into how technology is impacting and enabling GEC's work,
particularly as online disinformation campaigns led by US adversaries grow in sophistication."
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
Police Identify Austin Gunman As Former Sheriff's Detective Accused Of Child Sexual
Assault.
The Washington MO (4/18, Shammas, Thebault, 10.52M) reports the FBI and US Marshals Service
are assisting in the manhunt "for a former law enforcement officer who allegedly opened fire at an
apartment complex in Austin on Sunday, killing three people before fleeing." The Post adds that
Austin police "identified the suspect as Stephen Nicholas Broderick, 41, a former detective at the
Travis County Sheriff's Office who is considered armed and dangerous," but the Austin (TX)
American Statesman (4/18, Martinez-Cabrera, Plohetski, Autullo, Odam, Subscription Publication,
261K) reports interim Austin Police Chief Joe Chacon "said police are no longer classifying the
incident as an active shooter situation," as "preliminary information is that Broderick knew the
victims and that the shooting was targeted to them." Fox News (4/18, Fordham, 23.99M) reports
online that police "said that the three lifeless bodies were all adults, including two Hispanic
females, and one Black male."
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While c.NN (4/18, Silverman, Elassar, 89.21M) reports on its website that his motive "is
currently unknown," the AE (4/18, Vertuno) says Travis County District Attorney Jose Garza "said
in a statement that Broderick had been arrested for sexual assault of a child last June and was
released on $50,000 bond." The AP adds Garza "said that the district attorney's office on Sunday
filed a motion to revoke that bond and is actively supporting law enforcement as they pursue
Broderick." The Dallas Morning News (4/18, Keomoungkhoun, 772K) says a spokesperson for the
Travis County sheriff's office "told the American-Statesman that Broderick was a property crimes
detective and resigned after the arrest." The New York Post (4/18, Fitz-Gibbon, 7.45M) and the
New York Daily News (4/18, Feldman, 2.51M), as well as the ABC World News Tonight
(4/18,
story 9, 0:15, Davis, 4.85M) and NBC Nightly News
(4/18, lead story, 1:35, Snow, 6.41M)
segments, provided similar coverage.
The Houston Chronicle (4/18, Blackman, 982K) reports the shooting "rattled the capital city
and a nation already on edge, coming amid a string of mass shootings across the country."
Likewise, USA Today (4/18, Martinez-Cabrera, Bacon, 12.7M) reports "the rampage was the latest
of several shooting attacks across the nation," but President Biden's calls "for tighter gun
restrictions to combat the carnage have drawn little support in Texas." According to USA Today,
"The shooting comes two days after the Texas House of Representatives approved and sent to the
state Senate a bill that would allow anyone at least 21 years old to carry a handgun without a
permit."
Wisconsin Police Arrest Suspect For Shooting At Kenosha Bar
The Kenosha (WI) News (4/18, Smith, 91K) reports the Kenosha Sheriff's Department on Sunday
arrested a suspect "for a shooting that left three men dead and three injured in a shooting early
Sunday morning at the Somers House Tavern near Kenosha," and announced they "will be
referring at least one charge of first-degree intentional homicide to the Kenosha County district
attorney with additional charges pending further information." The News adds Sheriff's Sgt. David
Wright "said no additional information would be released on the suspect Sunday afternoon. But
according to Kenosha County Jail records, a 24-year-old homeless man was booked into the jail at
5:19 p.m. Sunday on a charge of first-degree homicide. Court records indicated that the man
previously had a Racine address."
The Washington Post (4/18, Beachum, 10.52M) reports the sheriff's department on Sunday
morning had "described the suspect as a Black male over 6 feet tall wearing a light-colored hooded
sweatshirt," but "didn't confirm if the person of interest with pending charges was the suspect
described in their previous statements." The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (4/18, Carson, 844K)
reports that according to Kenosha County Sheriff David Beth, the suspected shooter "was a patron
who 'wasn't cooperating with the management' at the tavern," and while the man left the bar, he
"returned a short time later, about 12:45 a.m., and began shooting." Beth added the shooter
"'knew who the victims were' and targeted them." The AP (4/18) reports Beth "said he believed at
least one handgun was used." Axios (4/18, Rummler, 1.26M) and the Fox News (4/18, Stimson,
23.99M) website provide similar coverage.
Meanwhile, the New York Times (4/18, Ramzy, Kwai, 20.6M) describes the shooting as "the
latest instance of gun violence in a nation where such bloodshed has grown wearyingly
commonplace." USA Today (4/18, Carson, Bacon, 12.7M) reports mass shootings "have claimed
four or more American lives every week for the past six weeks, leaving dozens dead and several
more people wounded." USA Today adds that Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) "called it a 'senseless
tragedy' and said he and his wife are 'thinking of the families and loved ones affected and the
entire Kenosha community as they grieve and grapple with yet another tragic incident of gun
violence."
CNN (4/18, Spells, Yan, 89.21M) reports on its website that the US "has suffered at least 47
mass shootings since March 16, when eight people were killed at three Atlanta-area spas."
Florida Nurse Charged For Threatening To Kill Harris.
The Miami Herald (4/16, Weaver, 647K) reports that "a longtime nurse at Jackson Memorial
Hospital has been charged in Miami federal court with making threats to kill Vice President Kamala
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Harris, which she recorded in a series of videos she sent to her husband in prison." According to
the Herald, "Federal authorities say the threats from Niviane Petit Phelps, a 39-year-old mother of
three who lives in Miami Gardens, were serious enough that she practiced at a gun range and
applied for a concealed weapons permit." The Herald says Phelps, "who is Black...threatened to
kill Harris in the videos because she believes the vice president 'isn't actually Black,' according to
the complaint by a Secret Service agent, who spoke with her before her arrest this month."
Maxwell Has To Stand Trial After Judge Turns Down Dismissal Request.
flImmherg (4/16, Hurtado, 3.57M) reports Ghislaine Maxwell "must stand trial on sex-trafficking
charges after a U.S. judge rejected her dismissal request, paving the way for a trial that could
begin as soon as July." Maxwell "is accused of recruiting girls for sex for former boyfriend Jeffrey
Epstein in a scheme that ran from 1994 to 2004."
Family Of Tamir Rice Asks Garland To Reopen Probe Into Rice's Killing.
The New York Times (4/16, Benner, 20.6M) reports, "The family of Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old boy
who was shot and killed in 2014 by the Cleveland police, has asked Attorney General Merrick B.
Garland to reopen the Justice Department's investigation into the shooting, which was closed in
December after the department said it could not charge the officers." In a letter to Garland from
Friday, attorneys representing Rice's mother said, "The election of President Biden, your
appointment, and your commitment to the rule of law, racial justice, and police reform give
Tamir's family hope that the chance for accountability is not lost forever." The attorneys added,
"We write on their behalf to request that you reopen this investigation and convene a grand jury to
consider charges against the police officers who killed Tamir."
Medical Expert: Police Actions Did Not Cause Prude's Death.
The AP (4/16, Sisak) reports, "Prosecutors overseeing a grand jury investigation into the death of
Daniel Prude last year in Rochester, New York, undercut the case for criminal charges with
testimony from a medical expert who said three police officers who held Prude to the ground until
he stopped breathing didn't do anything wrong." Dr. Gary Vilke "told the grand jury that Prude, a
41-year-old Black man, died of a heart attack caused by the medical phenomenon known as
excited delirium." Transcripts disclosed to the public on Friday indicate that Vilke "said the officers'
actions, which included placing a mesh hood over Prude's head, had no impact on his breathing."
Charges Still Possible For Officers Who Restrained Prude. The AE (4/17) reports,
"Newly released grand jury transcripts shed more light on why police officers who restrained
Daniel Prude avoided criminal charges in his death, but the city of Rochester and the officers could
still be held accountable." Disciplinary charges remain a possibility for "the officers, lawyers for
Prude's estate have filed a civil lawsuit and a federal civil rights action also is possible."
Fairfax County, Virginia Prosecutors Move To Dismiss Hundreds Of Convictions
Stemming From Work Or Testimony Of Ex-Officer.
The Washington Post (4/16, Jackman, 10.52M) reports, "Fairfax County prosecutors are moving to
throw out more than 400 criminal convictions based on the testimony or work of a former patrol
officer who is accused of stealing drugs from the police property room, planting drugs on innocent
people and stopping motorists without legal basis, court filings show." The Post adds that a Fairfax
judge on Friday indicated "he was inclined to vacate felony drug and gun convictions against a
former D.C. firefighter and order him released from prison next week after serving nearly two
years because of the actions of former officer Jonathan A. Freitag."
The AE (4/17) and Mist (4/16, Austermuhle, 18K) also covered this story. Online coverage
was run by WRC-TV Washington (4/16, Wilder, 301K), WTTG-TV Washington (4/16, Fox, 168K),
WUSA-TV Washington (4/16, Leshan, 502K), and WTOP-FM Washington (4/16, 164K).
WPost Analysis Discusses Fatal Shooting In Maryland By Off-Duty Officer.
A Washington Post (4/16, Morse, 10.52M) analysis discusses the fatal shooting of Dominique
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Williams and James Johnson by an off-duty Pentagon police officer, which occurred while Williams
and Johnson, along with their friend Michael Thomas, attempted to flee in Thomas' Lexus after the
officer confronted them while they were breaking into cars in Takoma Park, Maryland. According
to the Post, "The unfolding terror and chaos, as described by Thomas in recent interviews, remains
a largely untold part of a story of the encounter involving off-duty officer David Hall Dixon, who
was charged with two counts of murder in the shooting that left Johnson and Williams dead."
Wisconsin Man Drops Extradition Appeal In Whitmer Kidnapping Plot Case.
The portage (WI) Daily Register (4/16, 49K) reports, "A Wisconsin Dells area man accused of
plotting terrorism against the governor of Michigan has dropped an appeal against extradition."
The Daily Register adds, "On Friday, documents were filed in court behalf of Brian Higgins, 52,
notifying the court that he will drop his challenge to a request to extradite him from Wisconsin to
Michigan to face a charge of providing material support to a terrorist act. The FBI alleges several
men were involved in a right-wing militia plot to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and
try her for treason of their own accord in light of the governor's restrictions during the COVID-19
pandemic." Higgins "was specifically accused of providing use of night-vision goggles and using a
dash cam to surveil the governor's vacation home, and Wisconsin and Michigan officials requested
that he be transferred to Michigan last October."
Connecticut Man Faces Federal Arson Charges After Allegedly Tossing Molotov Cocktail
At Officers.
WNBC-TV New York (4/18, Dienst, Miller, 289K) reports, "A traffic stop in Brooklyn turned violent
Saturday morning when a driver pulled over for running a red light hurled a Molotov cocktail at
police, the New York Police Department said," and "that man will now face federal arson charges
that could potentially land him in prison for as long as 40 years." WNBC-TV adds, "Law
enforcement sources identified Lionel Virgile as the driver accused of evading police twice and
throwing potentially harmful substances at several officers in East Flatbush. He's was being held in
federal custody on Sunday and is scheduled to make a virtual appearance in federal court on
Monday. The 44-year-old Bridgeport, Connecticut, man was driving through the borough when he
blew through a red light, catching the attention of police officers."
WABC-AM New York (4/18, 18K) reports, "The NYPD says moments later, in the vicinity of
5505 Snyder Avenue, after officers requested additional units, the 2000 Lincoln Town Car was
stopped by again by officers. 77WABC has learned from police the when Virgile was pulled over
again, he stepped out of his car with a bottle, filled with liquid and flames on top, and then threw
the object at the marked police vehide. It then bounced off the windshield and shattered onto the
ground. Virgile then allegedly went back into his vehide and continued westbound on Snyder
Avenue, before he then collided with a parked, unoccupied SUV according to police just about a
block away. Authorities say at that point, officers approached the vehicle and took Virgile into
custody without incident."
Federal Prosecutors Confirm 2016 Decision Not To Pursue Jeffrey Epstein.
The New York Daily News (4/16, Brown, 2.51M) reports, "Manhattan federal prosecutors confirmed
in court papers made public Friday that they chose not to pursue Jeffrey Epstein in 2016, with one
former assistant U.S. attorney saying she 'felt horrible' after learning of Epstein's abuse of the
criminal justice system in Florida. The disclosure...came in a 212-page filing responding to
Ghislaine Maxwell's legal challenges to an indictment charging her with grooming underage Epstein
victims in the mid-1990s and lying under oath." The Daily News "exclusively revealed last year
that lawyers for Epstein accusers met with then-Assistant U.S. Attorney Amanda Kramer in 2016
and urged her to open an investigation of the notorious sex offender. Sources told The News that
they also urged her to investigate Maxwell. But prosecutors wrote in the new filing that Epstein
was the main subject of the Feb. 29, 2016, sit-down in a conference room at SDNY headquarters in
lower Manhattan."
Teacher's Killing Reveals Drug Cartels' Growing Footprint In North Carolina.
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The Charlotte (NC) Observer (4/16, Alexander, Gordon, 443K) reports, "When a Union County
school teacher and a member of a brutal Mexican drug cartel were shot to death last week, it
sounded like a scene from the television series 'Breaking Bad," but "current and former law
enforcement officials say it illuminated a broader problem: North Carolina has become a land of
opportunity for major drug traffickers." The Observer adds, "Charlotte lawyer Chris Swecker, who
spent much of his previous FBI career focused on drug cartels, says North Carolina has everything
the Mexican cartels need to carry out their work. 'We have the markets. We have the population
centers. We have the interstate network. We have the trucking infrastructure,' said Swecker, who
previously served as North Carolina's lead FBI agent and later as an assistant director for the
bureau's criminal investigations unit. 'It's a perfect distribution center,' Swecker said."
NYPD Arrests Man With Assault Weapon In Times Square Subway Station.
The Wall Street Journal (4/16, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports the New York Police
Department on Friday announced officers had arrested an 18-year-old Ohio man with what
appeared to be an AK-47 in the Times Square subway station. The Journal adds that while the gun
was unloaded, the man had at least one magazine with ammunition.
Two Farmworkers In Fresno, CA Killed In Shooting.
The Los Angeles Times (4/16, Pinho, 3.37M) reports one man died "and two others were seriously
injured after a shooting at a Fresno vineyard Friday morning, authorities said." According to a
spokesman for the Fresno County Sheriff's Office, "at least five men were pruning grapes at a
vineyard roughly 50 miles southwest of the city, near South Butte and West Chandler avenues,
when the shooting started about 7:30 a.m." The motive remains "unclear."
Anti-Prostitution Operation In Columbus Nets 93.
WHIO-TV Dayton, OH (4/18, 100K) reports on its website 20 "law enforcement agencies partnered
to take down a human trafficking ring in the Columbus area arresting 93 people in the process."
The operation took place April 14 and 15, and identified 53 victims of human trafficking. The FBI
was among participating agencies.
WCMH-TV Columbus, OH (4/16, Bowers, 352K) reports on its website that 225 people
responded to online ads posted by law enforcement.
FBI Investigates Money Missing From New Jersey Prosecutor's Office.
The Hudson County (NJ) Jersey Journal (4/16, D'Auria, 1.55M) reports the FBI "is assisting in the
investigation into roughly $20,000 that went missing from the Hudson County Prosecutor's Office."
The FBI "agreed to assist after the New Jersey Attorney General's Office declined last week to
conduct the investigation," according to a spokesperson, who added, "We believed it was
important to have a layer of independence in the investigation."
San Francisco Daycare Worker Arrested For Child Pornography.
SFGate (CA) (4/16, Bote, 1.9M) reports Jace Wong was arrested April 12 and charged with
possession of child pornography. Wong "allegedly posted at least four videos and two images of
partially nude young girls in a chatroom" and told an FBI agent on the chat that he filmed the
videos himself at the daycare center he works at.
NYPD Officer Charged With Trying To Hire Hitman.
The Washington
(4/18, Knowles, 10.52M) reports NYPD officer Valerie Cincinelli pleaded guilty
Friday to trying to hire her boyfriend to kill her husband. After the boyfriend informed the FBI,
they faked the husband's death and Cincinelli "deleted phone data," leading to charge of
obstruction of justice.
The AP (4/16) reports Cincinelli also wanted to pay to have her boyfriend's 14-year-old
daughter killed. Cincinelli "allegedly destroyed two cellphones and the records they contained to
block the investigation" in 2019.
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The j nog Island (NY) Herald (4/16, Smollins, 213K) reports the FBI "staged [Cincinelli's ex-
husband] Carvalho's death and...photos of a faux crime scene." It also recorded a call Cincinelli
made to her boyfriend "to discuss their alibis and [she] told him to delete his text messages."
Texas Man Arrested For Kidnapping 13-Year-Old Girl.
The Tyler (TX) Morning Telegraph (4/18, Wellerman, 4K) reports Daniel Skipworth of Tyler, TX
was arrested Saturday and charged with "kidnapping, trafficking of a child - engaging in sexual
conduct, aggravated sexual assault of a child and resisting arrest." The FBI received a tip that day
that Skipworth had a kidnapping victim at his address. A 13-year-old girl from Alabama was
discovered there.
White Supremacists Charged With Animal Cruelty In Sacrifice Of Ram.
The Atlanta journal-Constitution (4/16, Darnell, 1.46M) reports "five more men have been
charged" with aggravated animal cruelty for beheading a ram in a "ritual sacrifice" at a training
camp for white supremacists in Georgia. The case came to light after "an undercover FBI agent
infiltrated the group last year."
FBI Seeking Information From Public In Minnesota Bank Robbery.
Bring Me The News (MN) (4/16, Desmond, 369K) reports "the FBI says reward money 'may be
available" for information leading to the arrest of two people who robbed a bank in Brooklyn Park,
MN Sunday. The FBI has released surveillance photos of the robbers. No other information was
released.
West Virginia Men Charged As Accessories To Bank Robbery.
WVNews (4/16) reports David Alan Gill of Gypsy, WV and Blaine Allen Ash of Salem, WV were
charged as accessories after the fact to a bank robbery last November, as well "conspiracy to
commit money laundering involving the $69,100 in cash allegedly stolen from the bank." FBI
Special Agent Angela Bronson testified that they helped a bank robber who "reportedly wanted the
proceeds to hire a hitman to threaten and assault a family court judge and his ex-wife."
Two Arrested In Murders Of South Carolina Transgender Women.
The Rock Hill (SC) Herald (4/16, Bose, 75K) reports Dontarius Long and Joel Brewer were arrested
and charged with the murders of two Black transgender women, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police said
Friday. One of the women was found on April 4 and the other April 11, both in hotel rooms. The
FBI was among the investigating agencies.
WCNC-TV Charlotte, NC (4/15, Harper, 168K) reports on its website that Brewer "is charged
with two counts of murder, two counts of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, robbery
with a dangerous weapon, and conspiracy to commit robbery with a dangerous weapon." Long "is
charged with murder, robbery with a dangerous weapon, and conspiracy to commit robbery with a
dangerous weapon."
NBC News (4/16, Yurcaba, 4.91M) reports police are "working with the FBI to determine
whether the killings could be considered hate crimes."
Reward Offered In 2017 Killings In North Carolina.
WSPA-TV Greenville, SC (4/16, Liu, 90K) reports on its website that "the FBI is now offering a
reward of up to $40,000 for information" in the cases of three women killed in the same
neighborhood of Lumberton, NC in the summer of 2017.
Washington Doctor Charged With Trying To Kidnap Ex-Wife.
The Spokane (WA) Spokesman-Review (4/16, 187K) reports Dr. Ronald Craig Ilg of Otis Orchards,
WA "is charged with attempted kidnapping" after "the crew of an unnamed international news
organization investigating the so-called 'dark web" informed his potential victim, who is his former
wife, that she was a target. The woman called the FBI.
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The Daily Beast (4/18, Connor, 933K) reports Ilg was in Mexico on vacation on the date of
the planned attack on his ex-wife. The FBI arrested him at the airport on his return.
California Man Charged With Kidnapping Wife.
The Orange County (CA) Register (4/16, Licas, 594K) reports Eddy Reyes of Covina, CA was
arrested April 15 "after authorities alleged in a federal complaint that he kidnapped" his wife, who
disappeared in 2016. Neighbors "said on Thursday that they saw FBI agents with bolt cutters, a
circular saw and jackhammer and could hear them being used as investigators searched the home
and garage."
FBI Arrests 22 In Connection With Texas Drug Investigation.
The San Antonio Express-News (4/16, Pettaway, 685K) reported, "The FBI arrested 22" Texas
residents in connection with an investigation of "drug trafficking in the San Antonio area."
Officials: Twenty From Texas Indicted On Drug Trafficking And Firearms Charges.
The Temple (TX) Daily Telegram (4/16, Garcia, 48K) reported that 20 Texas residents have been
"indicted on federal drug trafficking and firearms charges that stem from five separate, but related
grand jury indictments." The Daily Telegram added, "The indictments were announced by" several
officials, including "FBI Special Agent in Charge Christopher Combs...and Drug Enforcement
Administration Special Agent in Charge Daniel C. Comeaux." The Bryan College Station (TX) Eagle
(4/16, 88K) also covered this story.
Former Mayor Heading To Trial In Marijuana-Related Case.
The AP (4/18, Durkin Richer) reports Jasiel Correia, a former mayor of Fall River, Massachusetts,
"heads to trial this month on charges that he stole more than $230,000 from investors in a
smartphone app he created to pay for things like a Mercedes, casino trips and adult
entertainment." Correia is also "accused of convincing his chief of staff to give him half of her
salary in order to keep her city job and extorting hundreds of thousands of dollars from marijuana
businesses seeking to operate" in Fall River. Correia's trial will be "one of the first to be held in
Boston's federal court since the start of the coronavirus pandemic." The Fall River (MA) Herald
News (4/16, Medeiros, 71K) published a similar article.
Leader Of Drug Trafficking Organization Gets 45-Year Prison Sentence.
The Media (PA) Patch (4/16, 1.44M) reported that Acting US Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams
"said Abdul West...was sentenced to 45 years in prison." West led a drug trafficking organization,
"according to federal authorities." The Patch highlighted that the FBI investigated this case.
Drug Suspect Arrested In Pennsylvania.
The Delaware County (PA) Daily Times (4/18, 58K) reports members of an "FBI Violent Crimes
Task Force" and other law enforcement workers "arrested three men Thursday while serving a
warrant at a home on the 800 block of MacDonald Street" in Chester, Pennsylvania, Among those
arrested was Kevin Argro, who "was wanted for the delivery of 50 grams of the powerful synthetic
opinion fentanyl."
Massachusetts Drug Suspect Arraigned.
In online coverage, WWLP-TV Springfield, MA (4/16, 453K) reported that Massachusetts resident
Matthew Oquendo "was arraigned Friday in federal court on charges related to the selling of heroin
and fentanyl during several FBI undercover operations."
FINANCIAL CRIME & CORPORATE SCANDALS
Law Enforcement Warns Of Growing Vaccine Card Scams.
The Washington Post (4/18, Al, Diamond, 10.52M) reports that US law enforcement officials are
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attempting to curtail the growing market for illegal vaccine cards. North Carolina Attorney General
Josh Stein (D), who "led a recent effort with 47 colleagues demanding that eBay and other e-
commerce platforms" to crack down on such offers, has "pointed to the FBI's warning that anyone
who makes or buys a fake vaccine card is breaking the law.000
Federal Grand Jury Probing Dark Money In US Steel Industry.
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (4/16, Sallah, 426K) reports that "hundreds of millions of
dollars...stolen from a Ukraine bank" and "secretly moved into the United States" were "used to
pump up the cash reserves of Warren Steel in a money laundering scheme carried out across the
country, the U.S. Justice Department alleges." Federal prosecutors "say Ukraine oligarch Ihor
Kolomoisky, a powerful figure in his country who was banned last month by the State Department
from entering the United States, secretly purchased a dozen other steel mills in small towns from
Ohio to Texas." The Post-Gazette adds, "Bank records, emails and other critical documents were
turned over to a federal grand jury examining the finances of the Ohio mill that prosecutors say
became a conduit for tens of millions of dollars siphoned from PrivatBank in Ukraine, according to
two sources familiar with the probe."
Former Temple Business Dean Lied To Inflate Rank, Attract Students, Federal
Prosecutors Say.
Bloomberg (4/16, Larson, 3.57M) reports former Temple University Richard J. Fox School of
Business Dean Moshe Porat "fed false data to U.S. News & World Report for years to inflate the
school's ranking and attract students, federal prosecutors alleged, in their latest crackdown
involving higher education." Porat, who ran the school "for more than two decades until his ouster
in 2018, was charged by a federal grand jury with conspiring to defraud applicants, students and
donors by falsely boosting the school's ranking for online MBA programs to No. 1 four years in a
row."
FBI Probing Pension Fund's $14M In Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Projects.
The Philadelphia Inquirer (4/18, Distefano, McCoy) reports, "The FBI is investigating the purchase
of millions of dollars in real estate in Harrisburg by Pennsylvania's largest pension fund, The
Inquirer has learned." The Inquirer adds, "People familiar with the newly disclosed probe say
federal authorities are digging into the PSERS fund's authorization of $13.5 million in spending in
recent years to purchase and demolish buildings near its headquarters in the state capital. While
remaining silent about the focus of the investigation, the pension plan itself disclosed earlier this
month that federal authorities, using a grand jury, have subpoenaed records from its
management."
DO) Sues Roger Stone Over Alleged Tax Evasion.
The New York Times (4/16, Benner, 20.6M) reports the Justice Department "filed a civil suit on
Friday against Roger J. Stone, one of former President Donald J. Trump's most visible allies, for
failure to pay nearly $2 million in federal income taxes." The Times adds the DO) "said in its
complaint, which also covered interest and other penalties, that the Treasury Department had
notified Mr. Stone and his wife, Nydia Stone, that they had an unpaid tax liability, but that they
had 'failed and refused to pay.' The chief counsel of the Internal Revenue Service authorized and
requested the legal action, the complaint said." In a statement, Stone "called the civil complaint
'yet another example of the Democrats weaponizing the Justice Department,'" and "said he would
fight the case, and he asked the public to support his legal defense fund."
Man Sentenced In Robocall Scheme That Victimized Elderly.
The Richmond (VA) Times-Dispatch (4/16, Green, 401K) reports, "The third member of an illegal
international robocall operation based in India was sentenced in Richmond on Friday for his role as
a 'professional money mule' in a scam that has victimized thousands of seniors in the U.S."
Jayeshkumar Deliwala, 48, "nabbed last year while waiting to board a flight to India, was
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sentenced to five years and three months for his part in an illegal operation investigators believe
netted millions of dollars from victims, many of them scared into thinking they were under federal
investigation. In some instances the scammers were so effective at establishing trust with the
victims that when real FBI agents contacted them it was difficult to convince them that they were
legitimate agents, Kaitlin G. Cooke, an assistant U.S. Attorney told U.S. District Judge Henry E.
Hudson on Friday."
Scammer Takes Pennsylvania Widow For Entire Savings.
The Detroit Free Presc (4/16, Tompor, 2.16M) reports Kate Kleinert of Glenolden, PA is a widow
who was convinced by a scammer to send him $39,000 as he wooed her. He even asked for
$20,000 bail money after the FBI arrested him. She did not have that sum left by then, but she
tried to visit him in jail.
Administration Faces Challenges In Combatting Money Laundering.
USA Today (4/18, Saraiva, 12.7M) reports President Biden during his time in the Senate
"established himself as a sort of drug czar on Capitol Hill," and during his presidential campaign
had "vowed to enforce 'sanctions on international actors engaged in the trafficking of illicit drugs,'
and Congress gave him a stronger anti-money laundering law that could help achieve that goal,"
but "with the emergence of new technologies, drug traffickers now increasingly rely on elaborate
trade-based schemes and digital transactions that are harder to track."
CYBER DIVISION
The Untold Story Of The SolarWinds Hack.
NPR (4/16, Temple-Raston, 3.69M) reported an NPR investigation into the SolarWinds attack
"reveals a hack unlike any other, launched by a sophisticated adversary intent on exploiting the
soft underbelly of our digital lives." Hackers "believed to be directed by the Russian intelligence
service, the SVR, used that routine software update to slip malicious code into Orion's software
and then used it as a vehicle for a massive cyberattack against America." Sudhakar Ramakrishna,
SolarWinds' president and CEO, told NPR, "Eighteen thousand [customers] was our best estimate
of who may have downloaded the code between March and June of 2020. If you then take 18,000
and start sifting through it, the actual number of impacted customers is far less. We don't know
the exact numbers. We are still conducting the investigation." NPR's months-long "examination of
that landmark attack...reveals a hack unlike any other, launched by a sophisticated adversary who
took aim at a soft underbelly of digital life: the routine software update."
SolarWinds Attack Creates Problems For Microsoft. The AP (4/17) reported the
sprawling hacking campaign "deemed a grave threat to US national security came to be known as
SolarWinds, for the company whose software update was seeded by Russian intelligence agents
with malware to penetrate sensitive government and private networks." Yet it was Microsoft
"whose code the cyber spies persistently abused in the campaign's second stage." This has put
Microsoft "in the hot seat." Because its products "are a de facto monoculture in government and
industry - with more than 85% market share - federal lawmakers are insisting that Microsoft
swiftly upgrade security to what they say it should have provided in the first place, and without
fleecing taxpayers." Seeking to assuage concerns, Microsoft this past week "offered all federal
agencies a year of 'advanced' security features at no extra charge." But it also "seeks to deflect
blame, saying it is customers who do not always make security a priority."
Biden Administration Is Improving Cyber Defenses Against Russia And China.
The Christian Science Monitor (4/16, 234K) reported the SolarWinds hack was "exposed as the
legislative process unfolded for what Sen. Angus King (I-ME) called 'the most comprehensive piece
of national cybersecurity legislation ever passed in US history." The 2021 annual defense bill
"included 27 cyber defense provisions, from efforts to improve email security to the creation of a
new Office of the National Cyber Director within the White House." The provisions were "largely
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the result of the work of the congressionally mandated Cyberspace Solarium Commission, which
Senator King co-chaired with Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-WI)." On Thursday, a senior Administration
official "said in a press briefing that the efforts already underway to increase multi-factor
authentication and other security measures across the nine affected agencies will be the 'hallmark'
of an upcoming executive order focused on the government's software procurement."
Hacking Alert Measure May Be Possible.
Newsday (NY) (4/18, 776K) reports legislation that "could require private companies to notify the
government of breathes to their cyber-systems looked possible last week as US intelligence
officials appeared before Congress amid the Biden Administration's loud response to foreign-based
hacks." A bipartisan push for "a new notification law seems to echo congressional sentiment."
Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Mark R. Warner (D-VA,) and Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL)
"released a joint statement in February arguing the federal response until then had 'lacked the
leadership and coordination warranted by a significant cyber event.'" The chances for "requiring
notification of private breaches clearly will depend on details of how federal officials would see fit
to follow up."
US Investigating Breach At Code Testing Company.
Reuters (4/16) reported federal investigators are "probing an intrusion at San Francisco-based
software auditing company Codecov that affected an unknown number of its 29,000 customers,
raising the specter of knock-on breaches at companies elsewhere." Codecov "said in a statement
hackers began tampering with its software - which is used across the tech industry to help test
code for mistakes and vulnerabilities - on January 31." However, the intrusion was "only detected
earlier this month when an astute customer noticed there was something off about the tool." The
breach "drew comparisons to the recent compromise of Texas software firm SolarWinds, both
because the breach could have follow-on effects at many of the organizations that use Codecov
and because of the length of time that the doctored software remained in circulation."
FBI Exchange Remediation Action May Set A Precedent.
Gov Info Security (4/16) reported the latest edition of the ISMG Security Report "features an
analysis of whether the FBI removing malicious web shells from hundreds of compromised
Microsoft Exchange Servers could set a precedent." In the report, ISMG's Jeremy Kirk "discusses
the FBI's Exchange remediation efforts; ISMG's Mathew Schwartz describe how fraudsters nearly
stole $17.5 million via PPE fraud; and Edna Conway of Microsoft predict how the development of
security products will fundamentally change in the year ahead."
New Jersey Combating Hackers That Threaten Water Systems.
Nthews (4/18, 1.47M) reports the worrisome details of the cyberattack against the Florida water
treatment plant "made national news and brought into question the security of our critical, if oft-
overlooked, infrastructure." In New Jersey, experts "warn drinking water systems across the
Garden State are exposed to the same threat." Jared Maples, the director of the New Jersey Office
of Homeland Security and Preparedness, "said that the Garden State Network faces an onslaught
of 4 million cyberattacks each day." Maples "told NJ Advance Media the Garden State has been
aggressive in strengthening cybersecurity standards and regulations for a variety of sectors." He
said, "The country is running off of a lot of what we're doing infrastructure-wise. And because of
that, I think we've been forced to adopt some of these principles well ahead of time."
MSU's Holt Discusses Pakistani Counterfeiter Who May Have Aided Russian Trolls.
Reuters (4/16) reported that "amid the cascade of US sanctions imposed Thursday on Russian
cybersecurity companies and officials alleged to be operating on behalf of the Kremlin's intelligence
services, one company stood out: the Fresh Air Farm House in Karachi, Pakistan." The Farm House
"is run by 34-year-old Mohsin Raza, one of two founders of an online fake ID business that
prosecutors say helped Russian operatives get a toehold in the United States." Raza's business is
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an "example of how transnational cybercrime can serve as a springboard for state-sponsored
disinformation, said Tom Holt, who directs the School of Criminal Justice at Michigan State
University." The alleged "use by Russian operatives of a Pakistani fake ID merchant to circumvent
American social media controls 'highlights why this globalized cybercrime economy that touches so
many areas can be a perfect place to hide - even for nation-states,' he said."
Medtronic Partners With Sternum On Device Cybersecurity.
TechCrunch (4/16, McCarthy, 502K) reported, "Medtronic, a medical device company, has been in
hot water over the last couple of years because its pacemakers were getting hacked through their
internet-based software updating systems." The company recently partnered "cybersecurity
startup Sternum to protect its pacemakers from hackers." Based in Israel, Sternum is an "IoT
cybersecurity startup." According to TechCrunch, "Sternum's solution allows medical devices to
protect themselves in real-time."
Carmakers Confront Challenges In Staying A Step Ahead Of Hackers.
The Minneapolis Star Tribune (4/16, 855K) reported the auto industry is "worried about how they
can stay one step ahead of those who could eventually wreak havoc with the world's private
transport systems." Hackers "seemingly cannot wait for the opportunity to commandeer vehicles."
In 2019, automotive cybersecurity company Karamba Security "posted a fake vehicle electronic
control unit online." In less than three days, "25,000 breach attempts were made, and one
succeeded." The effects of a breach "could range from mildly annoying to catastrophic." A hacker
"could steal a driver's personal data or eavesdrop on phone conversations." Nefarious code
"inserted into one of a vehicle's electronic control units could cause it to suddenly speed up, shut
down or lose braking power."
Ron Wyden Proposing New Data Privacy Legislation.
The Washington
(4/16, Lovelace, 626K) reported Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) "is proposing new
data privacy legislation that would restrict the export of Americans' data to certain countries where
that information poses a national security risk to the US." Wyden said in a statement, "Shady data
brokers shouldn't get rich selling Americans' private data to foreign countries that could use it to
threaten our national security. My bill would set up common sense rules for how and where
sensitive data can be shared overseas, to make sure that foreign criminals and spies don't get
their hands on it." Wyden's 'Protecting Americans' Data from Foreign Surveillance Act' "would
direct the secretary of commerce to lead a regular federal review of what type of data could harm
national security." Under Mr. Wyden's proposal, the secretary of commerce "would also create a
list of countries that could have access to Americans' personal data and to require licenses for the
export of personal data in bulk."
LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES
Garland Moves To Allow DO) To Impose Changes On Police Departments.
The Washington Post (4/16, Nakamura, 10.52M) reports that on Friday, Attorney General Garland
"rescinded a Trump-era near-ban on the Justice Department's use of consent decrees to force the
restructuring of local law enforcement agencies, signaling a push from the Biden administration to
resume use of the tactic amid a continued outcry from liberal groups about abusive policing."
According to the Post, "In a four-page memo to staff, Garland said he would rescind the 2018
order from former attorney general Jeff Sessions that imposed strict new measures aimed at
drastically limiting the use of the settlement agreements with local police. Under Garland's memo,
Justice Department lawyers who are leading the litigation, including the assistant attorneys
general or U.S. attorneys, will be authorized to approve the consent decrees."
The New York Times (4/16, Benner, 20.6M) says Garland's memo "was not unexpected, and
it revives one of the department's most effective tools in forcing law enforcement agencies to
evaluate and change their practices." The Times also says his action comes "as the Justice
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Department prepares to step up its role in investigating allegations of racist and illegal behavior by
police forces amid a nationwide outcry about the deaths of Black people at the hands of officers."
The Wall Street Journal (4/16, Gurman, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) provides similar
coverage.
LAPD Posted More Than Twofold Increase In Amount Of Hate Crimes Against Asian
Americans In 2020.
The Los ariggig5 Times (4/17, 3.37M) reports the Los Angeles Police Department "documented 15
hate crimes against Asian Americans in 2020, more than double the previous year, according to a
new study by the agency." The Times adds, "The findings were included in a report submitted to
the Police Commission this week that analyzed hate crimes and hate incidents against the Asian
American and Pacific Islander community in L.A. last year."
Bass Optimistic About Passage Of National Police Reform Legislation.
Politico (4/18, O'Brien, 6.73M) reports Rep. Karen Bass (D-CA) on Sunday "said she's optimistic on
the prospects of striking a bipartisan deal on police reform legislation that has passed the House
but faces a high hurdle in the Senate." On CNN's State Of The Union
(4/18, 638K), Bass said, "I
am hopeful because the group of people where we have been having informal discussions are very
sincere. It's a bipartisan group. I believe we want to make something happen." The Hill (4/18,
Schnell, 5.69M) reports Bass said she and Sens. Cory Booker (D-NJ) and Tim Scott (R-SC) are
"continuing to work together to find a solution that will garner the supermajority that is needed to
pass legislation in the Senate." The Hill adds that when asked if Republicans "are 'operating in
good faith' on the issue of police reform, Bass said she believes her colleagues across the aisle she
is working with are doing so."
Advocates Continue To Call For More Police Oversight Bills. The New York Times
(4/18, Al, Eder, Keller, Migliozzi, 20.6M) in a 2,300-word article says that states "have passed
over 140 police oversight bills since the killing of George Floyd, increasing accountability and
overhauling rules on the use of force. But the calls for change continue." According to the Times,
"It's a remarkable, nationwide and in some places bipartisan movement that flies directly counter
to years of deference to the police and their powerful unions. But the laws, and new rules adopted
by police departments across the country, are not enough to satisfy demands by Black Lives
Matter and other activists who are pushing for wholesale reforms, cultural shifts and cutbacks at
law enforcement agencies."
Ben Crump, the attorney for the families of George Floyd and Daunte Wright, on ABC's Thic
Week
(4/18, 2.44M), said, "We hope police officers are accountable and we change the laws in
America, where you have the George Floyd Justice and Policing Act passed to change the culture
and the behavior of policing in America, especially as it relates to marginalized minorities and
especially Black people. When a Black person is stopped for a traffic violation, it should not end up
in a death sentence. ... Even tasing [Daunte Wright) is troubling because it's still an excessive use
of force and we see this over and over again."
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Lopez Obrador To Propose Migration Agreement This Week.
CNN (4/18, Sorto, Hu, 89.21M) reports on its website Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez
Obrador announced Sunday that he will propose a migration agreement between the countries of
North and Central America this week. The proposal, which Lopez Obrador plans to present "during
Thursday's virtual Climate Summit, convened by US President Joe Biden," would "ask Central
American migrants as well as Mexicans considering emigration to work planting trees and crops
across Mexico for three years in return for an eventual six-month US work visa," the Mexican
President "said in a video posted to his YouTube channel. Eventually, participants in the program
should be able to apply for US citizenship, he said."
Number Of Emergency Facilities To Accommodate Migrant Children Is Growing.
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The AP (4/18, Licon, Taxin) reports a "a dramatic spike in children crossing the U.S.-Mexico border
alone" has led to "a massive expansion in emergency facilities to house them as more kids arrive
than are being released to close relatives in the United States." As of Thursday, "more than 22,000
migrant children are in government custody...with 10,500 sleeping on cots at convention centers,
military bases and other large venues likened to hurricane evacuation shelters with little space to
play and no privacy. More than 2,500 are being held by border authorities in substandard
facilities." The AP says there is "little room in long-term care facilities, where capacity shrank
significantly during the coronavirus pandemic. As a result, minors are packed into Border Patrol
facilities not meant to hold them longer than three days or they're staying for weeks in the mass
housing sites that often lack the services they need."
HHS Official Died While Helping At Emergency Shelter In Texas. The Washington
Post (4/18, Diamond, 10.52M) reports Mary Brodie-Henderson, an IT specialist at HHS, "died this
weekend at an emergency shelter set up to care for unaccompanied migrant children in Texas,
according to a health department email obtained by The Washington Post." Brodie-Henderson "was
working at a site in Houston, Texas, that housed several hundred unaccompanied children." She
"collapsed on Friday evening and could not be revived at a nearby hospital," HHS Secretary
Becerra wrote in an email to staff.
DeSantis: Florida Suing Administration To Resume Honoring ICE Detainers. Florida
Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) was asked on Fox News' Sunday Morning
(4/18) about Florida's
lawsuit against the Biden Administration. DeSantis said, "Normally, when we have a criminal alien,
convicted of a felony, they obviously serve their sentence in a Florida state prison, and prior to the
Joe Biden's Administration, ICE would take control of them when they finish their sentence and
they'd remove the criminal alien and send them back to the home country. ... Instead, under
Biden's Administration, they are no longer honoring these ICE detainers. ... ICE is effectively
releasing them back into our communities." DeSantis continued, "The lawsuit seeks to have them
actually follow the law, follow the Constitution."
WSJoumal: Congress Should Address Migrants In US Under TPS. A Wall Street
Journal (4/18, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) editorial says the Supreme Court on Monday will
hear the case of Jose Santos Sanchez, who came to the US without authorization in the late 1990s
from El Salvador. They were granted Temporary Protected status in 2001 after earthquakes in El
Salvador. In 2014, Sanchez was denied permanent residency. The Journal says Sanchez and
others like him deserve to have their cases resolved and calls on Congress to craft an immigration
policy that includes a compromise for such migrants.
LAWFUL ACCESS
WPost: Encryption Debate Is Not "Between Two Bad Choices."
The Washington Post (4/17, 10.52M) in an editorial highlights the "standoff between Apple and the
FBI" in the investigation into "the 2015 San Bernardino massacre," arguing it "seemed to present
an impossible choice: Deny law enforcement the ability fully to investigate a terrorist attack that
killed 14, or force a private company to write software that would destroy the security of its own
devices. That choice, as it turns out, was false." The solution of "commissioning a reputable
consultancy to help unlock the phone" of one of the shooters, the Post concludes, "should serve as
a reminder that in the continuing controversy over encryption the country need not choose
between two bad choices."
OTHER FBI NEWS
NYTimes Profile: Monaco Will "Quickly Be Tested" As Deputy Attorney General.
A New York Times (4/17, Benner, 20.6M) profile says Lisa Monaco, "a veteran of national security
roles, is poised to become the deputy attorney general - the Justice Department's No. 2 official -
where her ability to broker consensus on politically charged issues will quickly be tested."
However, Monaco's "résumé makes her uniquely suited to tackle the department's biggest issues,
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which include not only domestic extremism but also foreign cyberattacks, a sensitive investigation
into [President] Biden's son and an open special inquiry into the roots of the Russia investigation."
The Times adds that the Senate Judiciary Committee "voiced unanimous support for her
nomination last month and a bipartisan coalition of senators is expected to confirm her in the
coming days."
Montana Freeman Dies In Prison.
The AP (4/16) reports Russell Dean Landers died in prison in Terre Haute, IN April 10. He was a
member of the Montana Freemen "who took part in the extremist group's 81-day armed standoff
with FBI agents" in 1996. The Montana Freemen "held the FBI at bay for almost three months
before surrendering."
Massachusetts Drug Dealer's Car Rammed During Chase.
VTDigger (VT) (4/16, 9K) reports Matthew A. Oquendo of Holyoke, MA "pleaded not guilty to
charges of selling heroin and fentanyl" Friday. The FBI "used a confidential informant to buy drugs
from Oquendo during a monthslong investigation" and on March 8 began to chase the informant by
car when he noticed that he had been paid with fake money. An FBI agent "rammed [Oquendo's]
vehicle, trying to get him to stop."
Varsity Blues Conspirator Released.
The New York Daily News (4/16, Wilkinson, 2.51M) reports fashion designer Mossimo Giannulli,
husband of actress Lori Loughlin, "ended his home confinement Friday," after serving two weeks
house arrest and five months in prison before that. The couple were figurants in "Operation Varsity
Blues," which caught parents bribing university officials for admissions. They initially denied the
FBI's accusations against them.
Oregon Man Charged With Selling Guns, Fake Drugs On Snapchat.
The Oregonian (4/17, Bernstein, 1.02M) reports Aumontae Wayne Smith of Portland, OR "pleaded
not guilty to an indictment charging him with conspiracy to distribute fentanyl, possession with
intent to distribute fentanyl and possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime"
Friday. He is accused of selling guns and "fentanyl disguised as oxycodone pills" on Snapchat. The
FBI is among the agencies investigating the case.
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
Blinken And Sullivan Defend Planned US Withdrawal From Afghanistan.
Christina Ruffini reported on the CRS Weekend News
(4/18, story 3, 2:00, Duncan, 1.24M), "The
Biden Administration believes that years of prolonged conflicts in the Middle East are causing
America to lose pace with strategic competitors like China and that the resources from America's
longest war are better redeployed elsewhere." Secretary of State Blinken said Sunday that "the US
needs to focus its geopolitical energy outside of Afghanistan." Blinken: "We have other very
important items on our agenda, including the relationship with China." Ruffini: "But CBS News has
confirmed the President's decision to withdraw all US forces by September 11 was opposed by
senior military advisors. They warned that without a residual force on the ground, it could be
harder to stop a resurgence of terrorist groups." National Security Adviser Sullivan: "I can tell you
that President Biden has no intention of sending forces back to Afghanistan, but at the same time,
he has no intention of taking our eye off the ball."
Blinken, on ABC's This Week
(4/18, 2.44M), said, "We had a very deliberate and fully
informed process leading up to the decision by the President, and the fact is this: We went to
Afghanistan 20 years ago, and we went because we were attacked on 9/11. And we went to take
on those who had attacked us on 9/11 and to make sure that Afghanistan would not again become
a haven for terrorism directed at the United States or any of our allies and partners, and we
achieved the objectives that we set out to achieve."
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On CNN's State Of The Union (4/18, 644K), Sullivan said, "The United States achieved the
objective it set out when we went into Afghanistan in the first place, which was to get the people
who attacked us on 9/11. We have degraded Al Qaeda, we have killed Bin Laden. In fact, we killed
Bin Laden a decade ago." On Fox News Sunday (4/18, 976K), Sullivan said, "The terrorist threat
has changed dramatically since we went to war in Afghanistan 20 years ago. Al Qaeda is in Yemen
and Syria and Somalia. ISIS is across that border region in Iraq and Syria and in multiple
countries in Africa, so to really protect this country from the terrorist threat, we need to allocate
our resources and capabilities across a range of countries and continents, not just focus them on
Afghanistan."
filnomberg (4/18, Czuczka, 3.57M) reports Blinken said withdrawing US troops from
Afghanistan "meshes with the Biden administration's goal of focusing resources on China and the
Covid-19 pandemic." Blinken "played down concern that U.S. intelligence might be blindsided to
terrorist threats emerging in Afghanistan, saying the U.S. will be repositioning forces and assets to
'guard against the potential reemergence." The Wall Street Journal (4/18, Mauldin, Subscription
Publication, 8.41M) reports Blinken said the Taliban has committed not to allow Al Qaeda or other
terrorist groups to use Afghanistan to grow, and said the US will hold the Taliban to that pledge.
The New Ynrk Post (4/18, Moore, 7.45M) reports Blinken "dismissed criticism of President
Biden's planned troop withdrawal from Afghanistan. ... In making his decision, Biden went against
the Pentagon and the opinions of former generals like David Petraeus and Joseph Dunford."
Blinken said, "I have great respect for Gen. Petraeus, Gen. Dunford, and others, but we had a
very deliberate and fully informed process leading up to the decision by the President." The
Washington Post (4/18, DeYoung, Ryan, 10.52M) reports that since taking office, "Biden has
reestablished the formal decision process, which his predecessor seemed determined to destroy,
that has guided U.S. administrations through foreign policymaking since the Second World War. ...
Yet at the end of the day, Biden did not budge from where he began nearly 13 years ago." politico
(4/18, O'Brien, 6.73M) also covers Blinken's remarks.
Reuters (4/18) reports Sullivan argued that "no one can offer guarantees about Afghanistan's
future after U.S. troops leave...even as he stressed the United States would stay focused on
terrorist threats emanating from the country."Fox News (4/18, Blitzer, 23.99M) reports on its
website, "Sullivan maintained that by keeping forces in the region, the U.S. will be able to ward off
any threats that may arise from organizations like ISIS or al-Qaida. He said that according to
intelligence, the U.S. would have 'months of warning before al-Qaida or ISIS could have an
external plotting capability from Afghanistan."
Reuters (4/18) reports Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Sunday "rejected what he said were
'false analogies' with the war in Vietnam as well as any suggestion his government was at risk of
folding under Taliban pressure." Ghani said on c-NN's Fareeri 7akaria GPS
(4/18, 825K), "We
have been deliberating about this for two years. Now, it is time for recalculation. For us it is a time
of opportunity, for Taliban and for Pakistan. It is a moment of choice. Will they opt to become a
credible international stakeholder, with rules of the game for a peaceful part of Asia and
connectivity, or for opting for chaos?"
CNN (4/18, Hoffman, Cole, 89.21M) reports on its website, "Former President Donald Trump
on Sunday praised withdrawing US troops from Afghanistan, while knocking his successor's
timeline for doing so." In a statement, Trump said that "while leaving Afghanistan is 'a wonderful
and positive thing to do,' he had set a May 1 withdrawal deadline and added that 'we should keep
as close to that schedule as possible."
In his New Ynrk Times (4/18, 20.6M) column, Thomas L. Friedman writes that the US effort in
Afghanistan was "worth a try; our soldiers and diplomats were trying to make it better, but it was
never clear that they knew how or had enough Afghan partners. Yes, maybe leaving will make it
worse, but our staying wasn't really helping. ... We need to offer asylum to every Afghan who
worked closely with us and may now be in danger." And "Afghans are going to author their own
future."
NYTimes Analysis: "Afghan Women Fear The Worst." The New York Times (4/18,
Gibbons-Neff, Faizi, Rahim, 20.6M) reports on its conversations with "many Afghan women -
members of civil society, politicians, journalists and others - about what comes next in their
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country" under the headline "Afghan Women Fear The Worst, Whether War Or Peace Lies Ahead."
The Times says, "They all said the same thing: Whatever happens will not bode well for them."
Fauci Says He Anticipates "Some Form" Of 380 Vaccine Resumption By Friday.
NIAID Director Fauci, on CNN's State Of The Union
(4/18, 644K), discussed the pause on the
Johnson & Johnson vaccine and overall vaccination efforts in the US. When asked about the
decision to pause, Fauci said, "Because you want to make sure that you have all the information
that you need to make that determination because although the cases, the six cases as you
mentioned correctly, were of women of a certain age group, if you look at the experience, for
example, that [AstraZeneca] has had in Europe and the UK, it went beyond women. There were
some men involved. There was also a great display of the ages. We wanted to take a look at our
experience with another vaccine, i.e., the J8J vaccine. I think if you assume on the basis of six,
you know everything going on would not be prudent."
On NBC's Meet The Press
(4/18, 2.84M), Fauci said, "What we do, and that's what we keep
saying, we leave it to the science. We have the experienced FDA and CDC people looking at it.
There's one case, then two, three, four. Then when they got to six, they said we really need to
pause. Hopefully it will be a quite temporary pause." The AP (4/18, Yen) reports Fauci said
Sunday, "I would be very surprised if we don't have a resumption in some form by Friday. I don't
really anticipate that they're going to want to stretch it out a bit longer." Fauci also discussed the
issue on CBS' Face The Nation
(4/18, 2.46M).
Politico (4/18, O'Brien, 6.73M) reports that the FDA panel had "met Wednesday, but delayed
a vote on whether and how to limit the Mil based on sex or age." The New York Times (4/18,
Anthes, 20.6M) reports that federal health agencies had "recommended putting injections of the
vaccine on pause on Tuesday while they investigated whether it was linked to a rare blood-clotting
disorder." The guidance led every state to stop using the vaccine.
The Wall Street Journal. (4/18, Mauldin, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports former FDA
Commissioner Scott Gottlieb addressed the guidance, and he suggested that the FDA could decide
to limit the vaccine to older Americans, who are less likely to suffer from the side effect. The Wall
Street Journal (4/18, Burton, McKay, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) and The Hilt (4/18, Choi,
5.69M) provide additional coverage of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine delay.
Fauci Criticizes Republican Opposition To Vaccine. The New York Post (4/18, Salo,
7.45M) reports that during his interview on CNN, Fauci discussed vaccine hesitancy in the US, and
he "said Republicans who want to lift COVID-19 restrictions but don't want to get vaccinated don't
'make any sense." Fauci said, "It's almost paradoxical that on the one hand, they want to be
relieved of the restrictions, but on the other hand, they don't want to get vaccinated. It just almost
doesn't make any sense."
The Hill (4/18, Choi, 5.69M) reports Fauci also "said on Sunday that combative comments like
those from Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), who last week accused the nation's leading infectious diseases
expert of promoting pandemic guidelines that violate Americans"liberties,' are 'quite frustrating.'"
Fauci said on CNN, "This has nothing to do with liberty. We're talking about the fact that 560,000
people in our country have died. We're talking about [60,000] to 70,000 new infections per day.
That's the issue. This is a public health issue. It's not a civil liberties issue."
On ABC's This Week (4/18, 2.44M), Fauci discussed problems of vaccine hesitancy. Fauci
said, "That will be a problem if we get a substantial proportion of people not getting vaccinated.
What we are doing is we're trying to get trusted messages by a community core that anyone
would feel comfortable listening to whether you're a Republican, a Democrat, an independent or
whomever you are that you're comfortable and these are people in the community."
CDC Says Half Of US Adults Have Had At Least First Vaccine Shot.
ABC World News Tonight
(4/18, story 3, 2:20, Davis, 4.85M) reported that new CDC data show
an estimated 50% of American adults have been vaccinated, with 25% of adults reaching full
vaccination. NBC Nightly News
(4/18, story 4, 2:35, Snow, 6.41M) reported that news comes as
the US reaches a new critical milestone of nationwide vaccine eligibility: Every state will allow
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individuals over the age of 16 to schedule a vaccination appointment as on Monday.
The CBS Weekend News
(4/18, story 4, 1:55, Duncan, 1.24M) reported that the growing
number of vaccinated adults is clashing with a shrinking number of COVID mandates across the
country, resulting in a surge of new COVID infections. CBS' Lilia Luciano reported, "The variant
spreading new infections now averaging over 67,000 a day, about the same as the summer peak."
Luciano added, "Over the past week, 34 states reported heights in hospitalizations, hardest hit,
Michigan, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and New Jersey."
The AE (4/18, Yen, Mattise) reports that the US "cleared the 50% mark just a day after the
reported global death toll from the coronavirus topped a staggering 3 million." The US vaccination
rate of 61.6 doses per 100 falls behind Israel, and it also "trails the United Arab Emirates, Chile
and the United Kingdom."
The New Ynrk Prig (4/18, Salo, 7.45M) reports that the CDC data also show that an
estimated 130 million adults "have gotten at least one vaccine shot." The New York Daily News
(4/18, Braine, 2.51M) reports that an estimated 84 million adults, representing 32.5% of the US
population, "are fully vaccinated."
Axios (4/18, Saric, 1.26M) reports that during his White House briefing on Friday, White
House COVID-19 Response Coordinator Jeff Zients "noted that in the past week the U.S.
vaccinated roughly 3.3 million people per day, an increase on the seven-day average from the
previous week."
Whitmer Discusses COVID Surge In Michigan.
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D), on NBC'c Meet The Precc (4/18, 2.84M), discussed the
current challenges with the pandemic in the state. Whitmer said, "We're clearly watching the data,
working with our local public health experts, talking with national experts as well. What we know
is that our success at keeping COVID spread down for such a long period of time has left us with
vast reservoirs of people who don't have antibodies. That was a good thing until the variants came
on stage. ... We've gotten a lot of help from the Biden Administration to surge some therapeutics
here, get some boots on the ground. I think all these things are going to be important to us
stemming the tide of what we're seeing."
The Detroit Free Prec (4/18, Egan, 2.16M) reports Whitmer blamed the recent surge in
COVID cases in part on the Michigan Supreme Court, which ruled against her Administration last
October by invalidating a law governing her emergency authorities. The message "was a
departure from statements Whitmer made immediately following the October ruling, when she
said she mostly retained powers related to public health measures but would require legislative
approval for other measures." Yet, Whitmer "did say Michigan still has 'strong measures to keep
people safe,' induding a face mask requirement, and is 'still doing what we can."
The Hill. (4/18, Bowden, 5.69M) reports Whitmer also "indicated Sunday that her state would
not implement new coronavirus-related lockdown restrictions in response to a spike in new
infections due to Republican-led lawsuits last year that challenged her constitutional authority to do
so."
DeSantis Explains Order Prohibiting Vaccine Passports.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), on Fox News' Sunday Mnrning Futures (4/18, 1.32M), said, "I did
an executive order prohibiting [vaccine passports] in Florida from government and from private
industry, and we have a bill going to the Florida legislature that will make that permanent. Here is
the deal, we don't want to go down this road. It is not a business, they have no right to know what
shots you have had or not had, that's not ever how we've ordered American society."
Colorado Warns Of New COVID Wave.
The New York Times (4/18, Ngo, 20.6M) reports that Colorado health officials "are warning about
another wave of infections as new coronavirus cases in the state jump to levels not seen since
January and as counties start to loosen virus restrictions." The state has been "reporting an
average of 1,661 new cases a day, up by 18 percent in the past two weeks," and hospitalizations
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have climbed by 19% in the same time period. The warning came ahead of the state's decision to
terminate the "dial system," which "required counties to place capacity limits on restaurants,
offices and gyms, depending on case counts, positive test percentages and hospitalizations in those
areas."
Independent Pharmacies Struggling To Acquire Vaccine Doses In New York.
The Wall Street Journal (4/18, Chernova, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports that New York
community pharmacies, which represent a major segment of the city's heath care system, remain
unable to acquire COVID vaccines in a timely manner. Official New York City Health Department
data support the claim, and it shows that community pharmacies have received a net total of
300,000 vaccines distributed compared to 1.13 million doses for chain pharmacies.
WPost: COVID Booster Shots Will Ensure US Resilience Going Forward.
The Washington Pnct (4/18, 10.52M) argues that new science indicating a need for an annual
COVID booster shot "should not be a cause for dismay" because it means that the US can
effectively prepare for the future. However, the Post adds that the need for a booster shot means
that COVID will "not just stop one day," and this reality will "demand that our lifestyles adapt."
WPost Details "Inordinately Complex" Task Of Crafting Infrastructure Legislation.
The Washington Post (4/18, Kim, Sotomayor, Stein, Romm, 10.52M) reports President Biden and
Democratic lawmakers "are quickly finding that their ambitions" got Biden's infrastructure package
"are colliding with the complicated reality of precisely how to do it." The "arduous task of turning
Biden's $2.25 trillion infrastructure blueprint into legislation," is "proving inordinately complex" as
"some Democrats in the narrowly divided House are noisily raising demands, sensing a fleeting
moment of leverage" and Republicans "are talking through a bipartisan alternative, though they
are deeply skeptical that Biden will engage." The Post adds that "the American Jobs Plan could
merge with other ongoing efforts to craft a wide-ranging transportation bill, a process with its own
set of competing agendas." All of which, the Post says, are "setting the stage for a lengthy and
laborious path for getting the American Jobs Plan to the president's desk."
Cornyn: Republicans Could Support An $800B Infrastructure Bill. The Wall Street
lniarnal. (4/18, McKinnon, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) said
Sunday that Republicans could support a bill with a price tag around $800 billion. Cornyn told Fox
News Sunday (4/18), "There is a core infrastructure bill that we could pass...So let's do it and leave
the rest for another day and another fight." On the same program, Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE)
argued Democrats should try to find bipartisan agreement before passing a broader plan with only
Democratic votes. Coons said, "Then we show our people that we can solve their problems" in a
bipartisan fashion. Coons continued, "I think in the next few weeks we should roll up our sleeves
and sit down and find ways that we can support to make these critically needed investments."
Harris To Make First Mafor Economic Speech As She Touts Infrastructure Plan. The
Washington Post (4/18, Alemany, 10.52M) reports as Vice President Harris "continues her push to
tout the Biden administration's $2 trillion infrastructure plan," she "will deliver her first major
speech on the economy on Monday in North Carolina." According to excerpts of the speech, Harris
will say the plan "will be the largest jobs investment our country has made since World War II. ...
And it's not just about jobs. It's about good jobs... At a good job, you shouldn't have to worry
about your safety at work. At a good job, you shouldn't have to go into debt for a diploma that
promises a decent paycheck." The Post says Harris' "policy footprint threads through the far-
reaching infrastructure proposal the administration touts as the most significant federal jobs
investment since World War II." In the Senate, Harris "co-sponsored several of the bills and
investments incorporated into Biden's infrastructure effort."
Administration Officials Defend Biden's Stance On Admitting Refugees.
ABC World News Tonight
(4/18, story 5, 0:55, Davis, 4.85M) reported, "The White House is
defending President Biden's mixed messages on the number of refugees to be allowed into this
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country." While Biden promised during the campaign he would "increase the limit to more than
62,000," his team "now concedes they will not reach this goal." CNN (4/18, Judd, Liptak, Cole,
89.21M) reports on its website that Secretary of State Blinken told ABC's This Week
Sunday that
reaching the goal of resettling 62,000 refugees this fiscal year would be "very hard." Blinken said,
"I think what the President has and the White House has said today is that based on what we've
now seen from in terms of the inheritance and being able to look at what was in place, what we
could put in place, how quickly we could put it in place, it's going to be very hard to meet the
62,000 this fiscal year." CNN adds, "Pressed on whether the administration would accept 125,000
refugees next year," Blinken said, "Look, the President's been clear about where he wants to go,
but we have to be, you know, focused on what we're able to do when we're able to do it."
On its website, Fox News (4/18, Cawthorne, 23.99M) says Blinken "blamed the 'broken
system' under the Trump administration for why the Biden administration likely won't be able to
meet their pledge of resettling 62,000 refugees in the United States." Blinken said, "One of the
biggest problems we faced was inheriting a broken system. ... And the refugee system that we
found was not in a place, did not have the resources, the means to effectively process as many
people as we hoped."
National Security Adviser Sullivan said on CNN's State Of The Union
(4/18, 644K) that the
President is "not breaking that promise" to admit more refugees. Sullivan said, "President Biden's
ultimate target is going to reflect very much his commitment to bringing refugees to the United
States to the maximum extent possible consistent with our ability to process them. ... What will
drive our determination are the practical questions of whether we can fix the absolutely shattered
system we were left with to process refugees." Sullivan told Fox News Sunday (4/18) that Biden "is
absolutely committed to making sure that not only is America welcoming to refugees, not only do
we get people on planes immediately by changing those allocations, which were rooted in
xenophobia and even racism, but also that we raise the cap. He is committed to that and he will
follow through on that."
UN Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield said on SRS' Fare The Nation' (4/18, 1.92M), "I don't
think the President broke his promise. This is a first step and we're looking at the infrastructure
that we have in place to support bringing refugees into the United States. That infrastructure was
basically destroyed over the past four years. This is just a first installment. I know that the
President intends to revisit those numbers over the course of the next few months."
James Hohmann writes in the Washington Post (4/18, Hohmann, 10.52M) that Biden's "recent
pirouetting on how many refugees to allow into the United States illustrates how much easier
campaigning is than governing." Biden "has long suffered from indecisiveness," and while
"indecisiveness is preferable to impulsiveness," it "still carries a cost. About 35,000 refugees have
already been approved and are prepared to travel to the United States as soon as they're allowed.
Biden's foot-dragging has resulted in hundreds of canceled flights for refugees."
Bush Urges Congress To Set Aside "Harsh Rhetoric" On Immigration.
CNN (4/18, Robertson, Duster, 89.21M) reports on its website that in an interview with CBS'
Sunday Morning. , former President George W. Bush "called on Congress to tone down the 'harsh
rhetoric' on immigration." Bush said, "I do want to say to Congress, please put aside all of the
harsh rhetoric about immigration, please put aside trying to score political points on either side. I
hope I can help set a tone that is more respectful about the immigrant, which may lead to reform
of the system." CNN says Bush "acknowledged...one of the biggest disappointments of his
presidency is that he did not pass any meaningful reform on the issue." Axias (4/18, 1.26M)
provides similar coverage of the interview.
Bush's interview aired the same day an op-ed he penned was published in the Washington
Post. In it, USA Today (4/18, Brown, 12.7M) reports, Bush "reflected on the importance of
immigrants to the United States, arguing for solutions to the nation's ongoing immigration
debates." Bush "advocated for a pathway to citizenship for immigrants in the Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals program, while calling for stronger border security." Although Bush "opposes
providing a pathway to citizenship for the country's 11 million immigrants in the country illegally,"
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he said they should be "brought out of the shadows through a gradual process in which legal
residency and citizenship must be earned."
Administration Preparing New Campaign To Transform Coal Counties.
Politico (4/18, Colman, Adragna, 6.73M) reports President Biden and the Democratic Party "have
accepted the challenge that's vexed them for a decade: convincing fossil fuel workers that they will
still be okay even if their current jobs evaporate as the nation embraces a climate change-friendly
economy." Democrats "hope it might succeed in the same places where previous attempts to focus
on economic transition have failed," but coal mine union representatives "acknowledge that
Democrats haven't yet landed on a coherent, persuasive message."
Texas Oilmen Embrace Green Energy Transition. The Wall Street Journal (4/18,
Subscription Publication, 8.41M) examines the evolution of the historic Texas landman industry,
which formerly hunted for pristine oil well leases and now seeks to acquire optimal acreage for
solar and wind power. The collapse of the industry's oil focus is partly driven by reduced demand
for fossil fuels as well as reduced investor interest.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
Officials Say Chileans Overestimated Effectiveness Of Chinese Vaccine After First Dose.
The Wall Street Journal (4/18, Dube, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports half of Chile's adult
population has received at least one vaccine dose, most of which were made by Chinese
drugmaker Sinovac Biotech. But across the country, health officials are dealing with an increase in
infections and deaths. According to public health officials, the Journal reports, people
overestimated the vaccine's effectiveness after the first of two recommended doses and moves to
lift pandemic restrictions too soon.
Macron: France Will Lift Restrictions For Vaccinated Travelers Starting In May.
USA Today (4/18, Brown, 12.7M) reports French President Emanuel Macron told CBS' Face The
Nation
Sunday that France will begin lifting restrictions on international travel with non-European
countries beginning next month. Macron said, "We will progressively lift restrictions at the
beginning of May." Macron said officials are developing a way for vaccinated "French, European
citizens but also American citizens" to travel more freely by the summer. Macron "said, ideally,
travel would be open" for "US citizens who are vaccinated, with a special pass." He "said he had
spoken with the White House about potential plans for lifting some travel restrictions between
France and the US, though talks were still in their early stages."
France Restricts Travel From Four Countries To Slow Spread Of Variants. The AP
(4/18) reports France is restricting travel from Argentina, Chile, South Africa and Brazil "in hopes
of keeping out especially contagious coronavirus variants, the government has announced."
Travelers from those counties "will be restricted to French nationals and their families, EU citizens
and others with a permanent home in France." The restrictions also include "mandatory 10-day
quarantines with police checks to ensure people arriving in France observe the requirement." The
New York Times (4/18, Breeden, 20.6M) says the decision "adds to a complex tangle of rules and
policies about international travel that can vary widely from country to country and month to
month."
COVID Deaths, New Cases Declining In Britain.
The CBS Weekend News
(4/18, story 5, 1:55, Duncan, 1.24M) reported Europe "is still grappling
with a lethal third wave of the pandemic. The exception is Britain. One of the world leaders in
vaccinations, its strict lockdown in effect since Christmas is finally easing. And deaths and new
cases are both in decline."
Ontario To Expand Use Of AstraZeneca Vaccine This Week.
The CBS Weekend News
(4/18, story 5, 1:55, Duncan, 1.24M) reported Canada is "struggling
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with a COVID surge." CBS added, "Medical services are under strain and in Toronto and Ottawa,
children's hospitals opened up their ICUs to adults. Until Canada manages to ramp up its
vaccinations, the outlook is dire." Reuters (4/18, Martell) cites "a government source" who said the
province of Ontario will begin offering the AstraZeneca vaccine "on Tuesday to people turning 40 or
older this year." The move "will broaden access to vaccines as a third wave of infections threatens
to overwhelm hospitals in Canada's most-populous province, and should make it easier to use
doses that in some cases have been accumulating at pharmacies."
Brazil's Daily COVID Death Toll Is World's Highest.
The CBS Weekend News
(4/18, story 5, 1:55, Duncan, 1.24M) reported in Brazil, "there is an
ominous trend." For "the very first time, the majority of patients in ICU are under 40. Extra
contagious variants may be to blame, but one thing is clear: more Brazilians are dying of COVID
every day than anywhere else on Earth."
India Records 200K New COVID Cases For Ninth Straight Day.
The CBS Weekend News
(4/18, story 5, 1:55, Duncan, 1.24M) reported India's "overstretched
medical system is facing shortages of oxygen and drugs, as India recorded more than 200,000
new coronavirus cases for the ninth day in a row."
Iran's Daily COVID Death Toll Climbed Past 400 Sunday.
The AP (4/18) reports Iran's daily COVID death toll exceeded 400 on Sunday for the first time in
months. Amid a post-holiday surge in infections, "Iranian health authorities recorded 405 fatalities
from the virus, pushing the total death toll to 66,732. Officials increasingly have warned about the
impact of trends seen nationwide during the Persian New Year, or Nowruz," a two-week holiday
last month, which "brought increased travel, relaxed restrictions and large gatherings without
precautions."
Turkey Reports Record Daily COVID Death Toll.
The AR (4/18) reports Turkey on Sunday reported a record number of COVID deaths. According to
Health Ministry data, 318 deaths were confirmed in 24 hours, bringing "the country's total
pandemic death toll to 35,926. The Health Ministry also reported 55,802 new confirmed cases,
pushing Turkey's total closer to 4.3 million."
Israel Lifts Outdoor Mask Mandate.
The New York Times (4/18, Kershner, 20.6M) reports Israel has "lifted its outdoor mask mandate
on Sunday, while schools fully reopened for the first time since September." Israel "has been
taking rapid steps back to normalcy in the wake of its world-leading vaccination campaign and
plummeting infection rates. About 56 percent of the Israeli population has been fully vaccinated,
according to a New York Times database." Health Minister Yuli Edelstein "urged people to continue
carrying masks with them for entry into indoor public spaces, where they are still required."
More Than 60% Of Bhutan's Population Has Received First Vaccine Dose.
The New York Times (4/18, Dema, Ives, 20.6M) reports as of Saturday, Bhutan "had administered
a first vaccine dose to more than 478,000 people, over 60 percent of its population. The Health
Ministry said this month that more than 93 percent of eligible adults had received their first shots."
Its "vaccination rate of 63 doses per 100 people was the sixth highest in the world, according to a
New York Times database. That rate was ahead of those of the United Kingdom and the United
States, more than seven times that of neighboring India and nearly six times the global average.
Bhutan is also ahead of several other geographically isolated countries with small populations,
including Iceland and the Maldives."
WPost: Peruvian Election Undermined By COVID And Corruption.
The Washington Post (4/18, 10.52M) argues that Peru is facing an increasingly pessimistic future
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following the recent presidential elections, which resulted in Pedro Castillo, whose platform "lauds
the approach to press freedom of Lenin and Fidel Castro," and Keiko Fujimori, who "promises a
repressive-sounding 'demodura," as the current leaders in vote totals. While the first-round
elections results means that one of the two candidates will become president, the Post calls on
Peruvian voters to "continue fighting for democracy in the years ahead" as well as calling on the
Biden Administration to remember that the incoming president does not represent Peruvian
democratic values.
Islamist Group Takes Six Pakistani Security Personnel Hostage.
The Washington Post (4/18, Hussain, George, 10.52M) reports the "hard-line Islamist" Tehrik-e-
Labbaik Pakistan took six Pakistani security personnel hostage on Sunday "after days of deadly
clashes in the northeastern city of Lahore over a French satirical newspaper's publication of
cartoons depicting the prophet Muhammad and the arrest of the group's leader."
Hiatt: World Must Stand Up For Chinese Uyghurs.
Fred Hiatt writes in the Washington
(4/18, 10.52M) that with their treatment of Uyghurs and
other Muslim minorities, China's Communist rulers "are attempting to wipe out a culture, a way of
life, a people. We know this thanks to Radio Free Asia reporter Gulchehra Hoja and her colleagues,
to a few dogged academics and to dozens of survivors and exiles who have bravely given
testimony." The Chinese Foreign Ministry this month "attacked many of those witnesses as liars,
criminals, terrorists and persons of 'bad morality." Hiatt adds, "The question is whether the rest of
us - our democratic governments, our companies doing business in western China, our Beijing
2022 Olympic athletes and sponsors - will honor the sacrifice of the truth-tellers and their
families."
Sullivan Warns Russia Of "Consequences" If Navalny Dies In Prison.
Ian Pannell reported on ABC World News Tonight
(4/18, story 4, 1:45, Davis, 4.85M), "Russia's
leading opposition leader is dying, claim allies of Alexei Navalny. Keeping watch outside his prison,
Navalny's doctors saying he's in 'critical condition. They didn't let us in.' Navalny [is] now 19 days
into a hunger strike. ... A chorus of voices, including President Biden, [are] demanding Navalny be
allowed access to care." President Biden: "It's totally unfair. It's totally inappropriate." National
Security Adviser Sullivan: "We have communicated to the Russian government that what happens
to Mr. Navalny in their custody is their responsibility, and they will be held accountable. There will
be consequences if Mr. Navalny dies." Pannell: "Russian officials insist Navalny will be given
appropriate medical treatment, and that he won't be allowed to die in prison. His supporters don't
believe it and are calling for mass demonstrations across Russia this week."
Sullivan said on cNN's State Of The Union
(4/18, 644K), "First, we joined with the European
Union and many other like-minded democracies around the world to impose sanctions for what the
Russian government has done to Navalny, for the use of a chemical weapon against him, which is
in contravention of international laws. Second, we have communicated to the Russian government
that what happens to Mr. Navalny in their custody is their responsibility and they will be held
accountable by the international community. In terms of the specific measures that we would
undertake, we are looking at a variety of different costs that we would impose. And I'm not going
to telegraph that publicly at this point, but we have communicated that there will be consequences
if Mr. Navalny dies."
jlloomberg (4/18, Meyer, 3.57M) reports the US "warned Russia of 'consequences' if
[Navalny] dies, deepening the conflict over the dissident who has already survived an alleged
assassination attempt and is now engaged in the third week of a hunger strike." USA Today (4/18,
Brown, 12.7M) reports that when asked by the President "was not more vocal about his
condemnation of Navalny's treatment," Sullivan said the Administration "is dealing with the issue
'privately' while still in communication 'through diplomatic channels direct to the uppermost levels
of the Russian government."
politiro (4/18, O'Brien, 6.73M) reports Sullivan was pressed by CNN's Dana Bash "over why
EFTA00135906
Biden isn't demanding Navalny's release or granting him medical attention at `every single
opportunity,' induding in a call with Russian President Vladimir Putin last week or in announcing
further sanctions against Russia on Thursday. Sullivan responded that the Biden administration
sees diplomatic channels as the best way to advocate on behalf of Navalny." The Wall Street
lniirnal. (4/18, Simmons, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports the Kremlin had no immediate
response to Sullivan's remarks.
The Wall Street Journal (4/18, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) says in a brief editorial that
despite Sullivan's strong words Sunday, the President sent Russia mixed signals last week by
proposing a one-on-one summit to Putin during their telephone conversation. Axios (4/18,
Rummler, 1.26M), The Hill (4/18, Choi, 5.69M), and the LE= (4/18, Macias, 7.34M) website
briefly cover Sullivan's comments.
Navalny Supporters Plan Mass Protests For Wednesday. The AP (4/18, Heintz)
reports Navalny associates "called Sunday for massive protests in the heart of Moscow and St.
Petersburg on Wednesday, saying Navalny's health is deteriorating severely during a hunger
strike. Leonid Volkov, a top strategist for Navalny, said the demonstrations were called with three
days' notice because 'his life hangs in the balance. ... We don't know how long he can hold on. But
it is clear we do not have time "Renters (4/18) reports the Navalny allies hope to hold "the
largest protests in modern Russian history on Wednesday."
The New York Times (4/18, Kramer, 20.6M) reports Navalny's doctors "sharply escalated
their warnings over the weekend about his health failing from a hunger strike, the lingering effects
of an attempted poisoning with a chemical weapon and what they said was ill treatment in prison,"
while the Washing nn Post (4/18, Dixon, 10.52M) reports that Navalny's 20-year-old daughter,
who is in college in the US, on Saturday tweeted a plea to allow a doctor to see her father.
Macron Warns Russia Against Military Action In Ukraine. The AP (4/18) reports
French President Emmanuel Macron "says that while dialogue with Russia is essential, 'clear red
lines' carrying possible sanctions must also be drawn with Moscow over Ukraine." Macron, on Las!.
Face The Nation (4/18, 1.92M), said, "We will never accept new military operations on Ukrainian
soil. ... And I think after an unacceptable behavior, indeed, we have to sanction." Axing (4/18,
Lawler, 1.26M) says Russia "is menacing Ukraine's borders" and "could strike now in an attempt to
push further into Ukrainian territory or secure a source of much-needed water for occupied
Crimea."
Report: Israeli Intelligence Predicts US Will Reactivate JCPOA.
Axios (4/18, Ravid, 1.26M) reports that according to Israeli intelligence sources, Israel is preparing
for a resumption of the JCPOA nuclear deal. The Israeli government has been "trying to convince
the Biden Administration not to take the pressure off the Iranian regime," but there are growing
signs of a shift towards diplomacy. One source said, "We will not be surprised if within weeks the
US and other world powers sign a deal with Iran."
Sullivan Says US Will Not Lift Sanctions On Iran Until Full Compliance With Nuclear
Deal. National Security Adviser Sullivan, on Fox News Sunday' (4/18, 976K), discussed the
status of negotiations with Iran over a potential resumption of the nuclear deal. Sullivan said, "The
talks in Vienna have been constructive in the sense that there are real efforts underway...to get on
the table all of the issues related to both sanctions and nuclear issues so that we could end up back
in the deal on a compliance basis. ... The United States is not going to lift sanctions unless we have
clarity and confidence that Iran will fully return to compliance with its obligations under the deal."
Thomas-Greenfield Says More Needs To Be Done With Tigray.
UN Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield, on CBS' Face The Nation
(4/18, 1.92M), discussed the
conflict in the Tigray region. Thomas-Greenfield said, "President Biden has engaged with the
Ethiopian government. Secretary [of State] Blinken has engaged with the Ethiopian government.
President Biden sent a presidential emissary, Sen. Coons, to have discussions with the Ethiopian
government and lay out our concerns about the horrific situation in Tigray. And as the US
representative on the Security Council, I thought it was important that the Security Council's voice
EFTA00135907
also be added to the voices of concern about the situation there. ... More has to be done. And that
was the purpose of my raising this issue."
US Warns Citizens To Leave Chad.
Reuters (4/18) reports that the State Department "said rebel fighters in Chad appeared to be
moving towards the capital N'Djamena and ordered non-essential staff to leave, warning of
possible violence." The announcement came after the rebel Front for Change and Concord in Chad
spokesperson "said its fighters had 'liberated' the province of Kanem," about 136 miles from
N'Djamena.
THE BIG PICTURE
Headlines From Today's Front Pages.
Wall Street Journal:
More Stocks Are Participating In Rally, An Encouraging Sign For Bull Market
J&J Covid-19 Vaccine Pause Driven By Risk Of Mistreating Blood Clots
andmen Who Once Staked Claims For Oil And Gas Now Hunt Wind And Sun
The New York Power Lunch Is Back, With New Rules
Alexei Navalnv Health Concerns Prompt Russian Opposition Calls For Protest
WeWork's New Stock-Listing Plan Has Echoes Of Its Past
New York Times:
New Police Reform Laws Seize on Calls for Change
A Scarred Minneapolis Braces For a Verdict in Chauvin's Trial
With Much to Lose, Afghan Women Fear Stifling Return to Past
Soccer's Rich Make a Move To Get Richer
pandemic Buoys Older Books, Leaving New Authors in I imbo
Wall Street Candidate Courts 5 Boroughs' Votes
Washington Post:
Hunter Biden's Struggle Looms Over Father's Work
In Fed's Shadow, A Painful Reminder
Support For Riot Prohe Recedes
Vaccine Cards Are Target For Scammers
Union's Loss At Amazon Draws Tough Evaluations
Minneapolis Braces For Unrest
Financial Times:
Breakaway Dozen European Football Clubs Sign la) To Super I eague
US And China Pledge Joint Action On Climate Change Despite Strained Ties
HSBC Top Brass Forced To Hot Desk As HQ Scraps Executive Floor
Story Lineup From Last Night's Network News:
ABC: Chauvin Trial; FedEx Shooting; COVID Update; Alexei Navalny; Biden-Refugees; Biden-Fetal
Tissue Restrictions Lifted; COVID-Restaurants; Tesla-Autopilot Crash; Austin Shooting; Tribute To
Fort Hood Soldier; NASA-Flight Helicopter On Mars; Death of Oldest Living American; Fraternity
Brothers Celebrate Their House Cook.
CBS: Chauvin Trial; FedEx Shooting; Biden-Afghanistan; COVID Update; COVID-Global Spread;
Nashville-Country Music Awards.
NBC: Austin Shooting; FedEx Shooting; Chauvin Trial; COVID Update; Egypt-Train Derailment;
NASA-Flight Helicopter On Mars; COVID-Mental Health of College Students; South Africa-Table
Mountain; Iceland-Climate Change Tools; Small Town Restaurant Lets Folks Pay What They Can
EFTA00135908
Afford
Network TV At A Glance:
Chauvin Trial - 8 minutes, 55 seconds
COVID Update - 6 minutes, 50 seconds
FedEx Shooting - 6 minutes, 30 seconds
wac!-ftralfr,Trirc cri-frnit iLE
Today's Events In Washington.
White House:
• President Biden — Meets with a bipartisan group of Members of Congress to discuss historic
investments in the American Jobs Plan.
• Vice President Harris — Delivers remarks on the American Jobs Plan and lays out a vision for
the future at Guilford Technical Community College; tours Thomas Built Buses.
US Senate:
• Senate debates COVID-19 Hate Crimes Art - Senates convenes and resumes consideration of
`S.937, COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act'. Agenda also includes vote on a motion to invoke cloture
on the nomination of Lisa Monaco to be Deputy Attorney General * Motion to proceed to 'S.937'
passed by 49 votes to 45 last week, entirely along party lines
Location: U.S. Capitol, Washington, DC; 3:00 PM
US House:
• Europe, Energy, the Environment and Cyber Subcommittee closed briefing on `Cyber 101';
4:00 PM
Cabinet Officers:
• No schedules released.
Visitors:
• No visitors scheduled.
General Events:
• U.S. Supreme Court hearings - U.S. Supreme Court hearings: `Yellen v. Confederated Tribes of
Chehalis Reservation', `Alaska Native Village Corporation v. Confederated Tribes of Chehalis
Reservation' (consolidated) (Whether Alaska Native regional and village corporations
established pursuant to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act are 'Indian Tribes' for the
purposes of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act?) * 'Sanchez v. Mayorkas'
(Whether a grant of temporary protected status authorizes eligible noncitizens to obtain lawful-
permanent-resident status?); 10:00 AM
• Press Briefing by White House COVID-19 Response Team and public health officials; 10:30 AM
• Dem Rep. Tom Suozzi discusses 'Sinn-Colonialism' (virtual), - `The Belt and Road Initiative and
Sino-Colonialism: Global Implications and the Uyghur Genocide' Victims of Communism
Memorial Foundation online event, featuring Democratic Rep. Tom Suozzi, World Uyghur
Congress President Dolkun Isa and Inspector General Abdulhakim Idris, and Victims of
Communism Memorial Foundation President and CEO Andrew Bremberg; 11:30 AM
• Federal Reserve Board of Governors closed meeting - Federal Reserve Board of Governors
closed meeting via conference call to review and determine the advance and discount rates to
be charged by the Federal Reserve Banks; 11:30 AM
• press Briefing by Press Secretary Jen Psaki: 12:15 PM
• Jill Biden.
eiycardiamallinolscloysitzlierlogrSeghvelleycommonitt
College - First Lady Jill Biden, Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona, and Illinois Governor JB
Pritzker tour Sauk Valley Community College in Illinois, before the first lady and Secretary
Cardona deliver remarks
Location: Sauk Valley Community College, Dixon, IL; 12:30 PM
EFTA00135909
• Heritage Foundation discussion on solving Americans' health care problems (virtuall -
'Conservatives Must Lead in Solving Americans' Health Care Problems' Heritage Foundation
virtual discussion, with special opening remarks from former House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
conversation with Republican Rep. Jim Banks and Domestic Policy Studies Director Marie
Fishpaw, and discussion with Domestic Policy Studies Visiting Fellow Doug Badger, Americans
for Prosperity Senior Health Policy Fellow Dean Clancy, Goodman Institute for Public Policy
Research President John Goodman, and Republican Study Committee Executive Director Dan
Ziegler; 2:00 PM
Copyright 2021 by Bulletin Intelligence LLC Reproduction or redistribution without permission prohibited.
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Document Details
| Filename | EFTA00135867.pdf |
| File Size | 5082.5 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 177,624 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T10:48:45.496851 |