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Mobile version and searchable archives available at fbi.bulletinintelligence.com.
_FBI News Briefing
TO: THE DIRECTOR AND SENIOR STAFF
DATE: TUESDAY, JULY 28, 2020 6:30 AM EDT
TODAY'S TABLE OF CONTENTS
LEADING THE NEWS
• Administration Sending Additional Federal Agents To Portland.
PROTESTS
• FBI Arrests Homicide Suspect Through Operation LeGend.
• Some Chicagoans Welcome Federal Investigators.
• Authorities Brace For More Violent Protests Across The Country.
• Mayors Appeal To Congress To Restrict Use Of Federal Agents.
• Dozens Of Seattle Police Officers Injured During Weekend Violence.
• Austin Police Release Man Who Fatally Shot Protester.
• National Guard Officer: Protesters Cleared From Lafayette Square Without Provocation.
• Cotton Criticized For Says Founding Fathers Viewed Slavery As "Necessary Evil."
• Police Departments Withdraw From Security Agreements For Democratic Convention.
• Illinois County Board Candidate Quits Over Tweet "Laughing" At Officer Getting Hit.
• Black Soldiers Monument In Boston Under Scrutiny.
• NYTimes Analysis: NFL Efforts To Combat Racism Undercut By Team Owners.
• WTimes Analysis: Black Lives Matter Has "Leftist" Goal.
COUNTER-TERRORISM
• Georgia Man Sentenced For Planning White House Attack.
• Arizona Woman Charged With Helping Al Qaeda To Appear In Court Next Week.
• Sentencing Postponed For Man Who Supplied Guns To San Bernardino Shooter.
• Changes Made To 9/11 Commemoration In New York Due To Pandemic.
• Prosecutors Struggle To Resume Guantanamo Trials.
• State Department Declares "Unwavering" Commitment To Seeking 'Justice For The Families' Of US
Citizens Killed By ISIS.
COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE
• Yates To Testify Before Senate Judiciary Committee Next Week.
• Jarrett: Christopher Steele's Secret Source For Anti-Trump Dossier Is Finally Exposed.
• Carter Page Sues Yahoo, HuffPost Parent Company For "False And Defamatory" Articles.
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• Op-Ed: Biden May Want To Forget About The Russia Investigation.
• Chinese Scientist Charged With Visa Fraud Ordered Held As Flight Risk.
• Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou Seeks Canadian Spy Agency Documents Linked To Canadian Arrest.
• Spanish Court Hears Testimony On Whether Assange Was Spied On.
• Lowenthal Says Intelligence Analysis Needs Course Change.
• Pentagon Issues Contract Guidance On China Tech Ban.
• IARPA Funds Study Showing Randomness Theory Could Hold Key To Internet Security.
• Op-Ed: Russian Spying is Privatized and Competitive.
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
• Maxwell Seeks To Seal Evidence.
• FBI Investigating Washington State Murder.
• Continuing Coverage: FBI Investigating Disappearance Of Missing Iowa Child.
• FBI Task Force Arrests Two In Connection To Colorado Party Shooting.
• Continuing Coverage: California Police Arrest Parents In Connection To Disappearance Of Toddler.
• Mississippi Man Charged With Threatening Federal Judge.
• Georgia Man Sentenced Over Producing Child Pornography.
• FBI Agents Investigating In Pennsylvania.
• Connecticut Man Sentenced For Embezzling.
• New Mexico Police Continuing To Investigate Disappearance Of Local.
• Wisconsin Man Sentenced Over Child Enticement.
• Former FBI Task Force Officer Facing Trial In Guam.
• Continuing Coverage: FBI Investigating Disappearance Of Pennsylvania Teenager.
• Continuing Coverage: US Marshal Task Force Announces Arrests Of Juvenile Prison Escapees.
• Michigan Man Sentenced Over Bank Robbery.
• FBI Searching For Virginia Man.
• Massachusetts Gang Member Ordered Held Without Bail.
• Former Medical Doctor Pleads Guilty To Illegally Prescribing Oxycodone.
• Notices Filed To Seize Properties In Connection With Marijuana Firm Raid Operation
• Federal Prosecutors: Drug Offender Was Involved In Prison Smuggling Scheme.
• Maryland Resident Facing Drug Charges.
FINANCIAL CRIME & CORPORATE SCANDALS
• Ohio Candidate Went To FBI In March Over Householder, Dark Money.
• Man Captured After Faking Own Death Over Fraudulent PPP Loans.
• Former UCLA Soccer Coach Pleads Guilty To Taking College Admissions Bribes.
• Visa, Mastercard Fined Wirecard For Questionable Transactions Over A Decade Ago.
• US Charges Former Florida Tech CEO With Wire Fraud.
• US Charges Trustify CEO With Defrauding Investors.
• New York Man Charged With Defrauding Drug Maker.
• Top Tech CEOs To Be Grilled On Antitrust Issues At House Hearing.
• Under Armour Receives SEC Wells Notice Of Possible Enforcement Action.
CYBER DIVISION
• Garmin Says Cyberattack Made Its Software Unavailable.
• Fund Administrator To Pimco, Others Saw Breach At Vendor.
• House Spending Bill Details Funding For Cyber Defenses.
• Cyberstalker Gets Four Years In Prison For "War" On Woman.
• DOD Issues RFI With Goal Of Advancing Cybersecurity Technology.
• CISA Says 62,000 QNAP NAS Devices Have Been Infected With The QSnatch Malware.
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• NDAA Would Create National Cyber Director Position In White House.
LABORATORY
• FBI Joins Probe Of Human Remains Found In Kentucky.
• NIST Study Finds Pandemic Masks Thwarting Face Recognition Technology.
LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES
• US Launches Minnesota Office On Missing Indigenous Cases.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
• Former Malaysian PM Convicted In First 1MDB Trial.
• Operation Conducted By Honduran, Colombian Authorities Leads To Big Cocaine Seizure.
• Bulletin: Cartel Likely Used Phones That Were Compromised By Law Enforcement.
OTHER FBI NEWS
• Senate GOP's COVID-19 Stimulus Proposal Includes $1.75B For New FBI Headquarters.
• Barr To Defend Administration In Congressional Testimony.
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
• Trump Touts "Tremendous Success" In Development Of Coronavirus Vaccine.
• O'Brien Tests Positive For Coronavirus, Is "Self-Isolating."
• Commerce Department: Ross Hospitalization Was Not Related To Coronavirus.
• Birx Advocates Mask-Wearing, Bar Closures In Tennessee Visit.
• Azar Credits Mask-Wearing For "Plateauing" Of COVID Cases In Key States.
• Report: 4,000 Federal Workers Seeking Disability Compensation For Contracting COVID-19 At Work.
• Ten States Set Single-Day Records For New Infections.
• Florida Reports Lowest Number Of New COVID Cases In Three Weeks.
• DC Mayor's Quarantine Order Takes Effect.
• Coronavirus Outbreak Could Endanger Baseball Season.
• Cain Still Hospitalized For Coronavirus.
• NYTimes Analysis: Expanding Data Set Helps Americans Make Sense Of Pandemic.
• Some Patients With Coronavirus Suffer From Symptoms, Effects Months After Initial Infection.
• Colleagues Say Doctor Responsible For Discredited Studies Has History Of Cutting Corners.
• Republicans Say Border-Crossers Responsible For Rise In Coronavirus Cases.
• DO) Reaches Settlement With Company That Discriminated Against Permanent US Residents.
• Trump Lawyers File To Block Manhattan DA's Subpoena For President's Tax Records.
• Senate GOP Relief Plan Would Cut Weekly Unemployment Aid To $200 Per Week.
• Kudlow: "V-Shaped Recovery" Is "Very Much Intact."
• Sen. Collins Joins Romney In Opposing Fed Nominee Shelton.
• Trump Retweets Praise For Defense Bill He Has Threatened To Veto.
• Politico Report: White House Aides Struggle To Revise List Of Potential SCOTUS Nominees.
• Trump Says Twitter's "Trending" Tweet Listing Is Illegal.
• Commerce Department Enlists FCC In "Tech Crackdown."
• EPA IG Investigating Rollback Of Auto Emissions Standards.
• Lewis Lies In State At Capitol; Trump Says He Will Not Pay Respects.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
• Cases Surge Around World, Prompting Lockdowns And Travel Bans.
• Navarro Says He Predicted China Would Create A Deadly Pandemic.
• Iran Moves Mock Aircraft Carrier Into Strait Of Hormuz.
• Israel Says It Fired On Hezbollah Fighters Who Crossed Over From Lebanon.
• Taliban Executes Prison Guard As UN Releases Report On Violence Against Civilians.
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• China Takes Control Of US Consulate In Chengdu.
• Russian Fighter Intercepts US Spy Plane Over Black Sea.
• Experts Worry North Korea's Undelivered "Christmas Gift" Will Become An "October Surprise."
• Ambassador To South Korea Shaves Off Controversial Mustache.
THE BIG PICTURE
• Headlines From Today's Front Pages.
WASHINGTON'S SCHEDULE
• Today's Events In Washington.
LEADING THE NEWS
Administration Sending Additional Federal Agents To Portland.
The Washington Post (7/27, Barrett, Miroff, Lang, Fahrenthold, 14.2M) reports the
Administration is "sending more federal agents to Portland, Ore., as officials consider pushing
back harder and farther against the growing crowds and nightly clashes with protesters,
vandals and rioters." In order to "strengthen federal forces arrayed around the city's downtown
courthouse, the U.S. Marshals Service decided last week to send 100 deputy U.S. Marshals to
Portland." DHS is "also considering a plan to send an additional 50 U.S. Customs and Border
Protection personnel to the city, but a final decision on the deployment has not been made."
The CBS Evening NewsVI (7/27, story 7, 1:30, O'Donnell, 4.33M) similarly reported it "has
learned the White House is not backing down, and more agents are on standby for cities like
Portland and Seattle."
Appearing on Fox Business (7/27, 1.73M), Acting CBP Commissioner Morgan said, "We
need to separate two distinct things happening. One is the violence and anarchy against federal
property. That's going to require one response. That's what you're seeing in Portland and
Seattle. Versus the increased crime that's going on in Chicago and Kansas City and other states
and cities. That's going to require special agents and other federal officers to work with state
and locals, specifically to address violent crime. That's not what we're seeing in Portland. ...
We're going to go wherever the threat tells us we need to go and keep in mind. ... This is
serious and people need to separate peaceful protests from the criminal anarchy that's going
on."
On Fox News' Your World, Morgan similarly said, "This is not about peaceful protesters.
This is about anarchists and criminals, who, every single night, or hijacking these peaceful
protests with the intent to damage property and harm federal enforcement. That is a fact. Until
we are united on that, this problem is not going to be solved."
The AP (7/27, Balsamo, Flaccus), meanwhile, reports on the scene at the Mark O. Hatfield
Federal Courthouse in Portland. According to the AP, "To the protesters, the men inside the
battened down courthouse are at best thoughtless political minions, at worst murderous
henchmen. To the agents inside, the demonstrators that pack the downtown each night are
violent anarchists, an angry sea of humanity bent on hurting - or even killing - federal agents
doing their job." The Wall Street Journal (7/27, Gottfried, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) has a
similar report headlined "In Portland And Other Protest Cities, Neither Left, Right Nor Center Is
Happy."
The New York Times (7/27, Conger, Fuller, Baker, 18.61M) reports that in recent weeks,
protesters "have pointed laser beams, lobbed water bottles and trash bags and, in one case,
according to the Portland Police Bureau, hurled an open pocketknife at the officers guarding the
courthouse." According to the Times, the "nightly assault on the federal courthouse has been
part of a much wider peaceful resistance - high school students, military veterans, off-duty
lawyers, lines of mothers who call themselves the 'Wall of Moms' - that began assembling
nearly two months ago."
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Trump Warns Those Caught Vandalizing Federal Property Will Be Prosecuted.
President Trump tweeted, "Anarchists, Agitators or Protestors who vandalize or damage our
Federal Courthouse in Portland, or any Federal Buildings in any of our Cities or States, will be
prosecuted under our recently re-enacted Statues & Monuments Act. MINIMUM TEN YEARS IN
PRISON. Don't do it! @DHSgov"
Administration Sued For Use Of Tear Gas, Force In Portland. The Washington Post
(7/27, Lang, 14.2M) reports protesters "who say they were tear gassed, shot at, pepper
sprayed and assaulted outside the federal courthouse while peacefully demonstrating and
rendering aid to others sued the Trump administration Monday for its use of force during nightly
demonstrations in downtown Portland." A "group of five women and two organizations,
including longtime Black Lives Matter protesters" and the Wall of Moms group filed a lawsuit
"alleging that several agencies - the Department of Homeland Security, Customs and Border
Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Federal Protective Service - have
violated their constitutional rights of free speech, assembly and due process and against
unreasonable seizures."
Federal Officials Acknowledge Actions Have Contributed To Escalation. Oregon
Public Broadcasting (7/27, Wilson, Levinson, 13K) reports on its website, "Federal officials are
internally acknowledging they have contributed to the quick escalation between law
enforcement and groups of protesters, which had dwindled to a couple hundred people or less
earlier this month. 'Anytime you shoot someone in the face and beat them with a baton, it's
going to be criticized,' said one federal law enforcement official. 'That's not a controversial
statement:" One "federal law enforcement source" said of Donavan La Bella, who was "shot...in
the head with a crowd control weapon" by US Marshals, "Crowds were very small and the
incident with La Bella - that was a flare up point that the government tried to deescalate."
Another said, "The van arrests that happened overnight on July 14 - after that, everything
went to hell."
Agent: Portland Protesters Shout Racial Slur At Black DHS Officers. The
Washington Times (7/27, Dinan, 492K) reports that a "Homeland Security agent deployed to
help quell the violence demonstrations in Portland says protesters shouted a racial epithet at a
Black Federal Protective Service officer providing security at the courthouse, according to an
account given to the Center for Immigration Studies." The unnamed agent is quoted as saying,
"I'm seeing African American Federal Protective Service inspectors, twenty years' law
enforcement officer, being called the N-word to their face for the first time in their careers."
PROTESTS
FBI Arrests Homicide Suspect Through Operation LeGend.
The AP (7/27) reports from Kansas City, Missouri, "FBI agents in Kansas City as part of new
controversial federal crime fighting effort assisted police in the arrest of a homicide suspect."
Federal prosecutors "praised the apprehension of 44-year-old Joel Roseberry as 'good work' in a
tweet Monday. He is jailed on $200,000 bond on charges of second-degree murder, armed
criminal action and evidence tampering in the March 1 fatal shooting of 28-year-old Frederick
Outley outside of a convenience store."
The Kansas City (MO) Star (7/27, Nozicka, 549K) reports, "FBI agents in Kansas City as
part of Operation LeGend assisted police in recently arresting a homicide suspect - the first
known murder charge connected to the federal anti-crime initiative." FBI agents, "in the city as
part of the surge in federal resources, assisted in locating and arresting" Roseberry, "who was
charged with second-degree murder and other crimes in the March 1 fatal shooting of Frederick
Outley, 28." The Star adds, "Before Monday, the known criminal cases connected to Operation
LeGend included a defendant charged with illegally possessing firearms and methamphetamine
to distribute and another defendant, who was accused of shooting three people and was
charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm."
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NPR (7/27, 3.12M) reports, "The Trump administration has sent some 200 federal agents
to Kansas City, Mo., as part of an initiative to quell violent crime. The rollout of the operation
has been marred by misinformation, and some local activists say it's wrong-headed at best, but
others applaud the added help from Washington, D.C., to fight a desperate homicide problem."
According to NPR, "The operation here is fraught politically, but those involved say it's
important to clarify what Operation LeGend is - and what it is not. 'This is not Portland,' says
Tim Garrison, the U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri. 'This has nothing to do with
anybody's exercise of their rights to protest. We are simply here to address the unprecedented
level of violence that is exemplified by the senseless and tragic killing of LeGend Taliferro." NPR
adds, "Evidence supports Garrison's claim. No heavily armed, unidentifiable federal operatives
have clashed with demonstrators during recent protests in Kansas City."
Some Chicagoans Welcome Federal Investigators.
Reuters (7/27) reports from Chicago, "Many Chicagoans vehemently oppose President Donald
Trump's pledge to send federal officers to the third-largest U.S. city, after seeing camouflaged
agents deployed in Portland club and tear-gas anti-racism protesters," but "in South and West
Side neighborhoods hit hardest by a recent spike in gang violence, some Chicago residents
welcomed the move and said federal agents may be able to help solve crimes. 'I appreciate it
and I like it,' said Cedrick Easterling, a former gang member, who was shoveling garbage
scattered in the South Side neighborhood of Englewood as part of his work clearing vacant lots.
'If you sit at that park, you will hear shots all over Englewood,' said Easterling, who was once
shot himself, pointing south toward Ogden Park. Like most in Chicago, Easterling is not a fan of
Trump, who won just 51 of the city's 2,069 precincts in the 2016 presidential election."
Authorities Brace For More Violent Protests Across The Country.
ABC World News TonightVI (7/27, story 8, 0:25, Muir, 7.11M) reported that protests around the
country are "turning violent. Demonstrators squaring off with federal officers in Portland,
Oregon. Local leaders say the federal presence is only fueling" the protests, which are
"spreading to other cities." NBC Nightly NewsVi (7/27, story 8, 1:25, Holt, 6.32M) reported,
"Authorities across the country are bracing for more protests [Monday night] after some
demonstrations turned violent over the weekend."
Mayors Appeal To Congress To Restrict Use Of Federal Agents.
The AP (7/27) reports that "the mayors of six U.S. cities appealed Monday to Congress to make
it illegal for the federal government to deploy militarized federal agents to cities that don't want
them, even as the Trump administration is considering sending more of them to Portland." The
mayors of Portland, Seattle, Chicago, Kansas City, Albuquerque, and Washington wrote, "This
administration's egregious use of federal force on cities over the objections of local authorities
should never happen." The Oregonian (7/27, Bailey, 1M) reports the mayors call "it 'unlawful
and repugnant' for the President to be able to continue to deploy federal forces to cities without
consulting local officials first and against objections."
Dozens Of Seattle Police Officers Injured During Weekend Violence.
The Washington Times (7/27, Richardson, 492K) reports the Seattle Police Department has said
"that 59 officers were wounded in the Saturday night rioting after being struck by explosives,
bottles and rocks." The Seattle Police Blotter "posted photos of officers with burns on their skin
and other injuries and video of officers being hit by what appeared to be fireworks and small
explosives as they worked crowd control."
Austin Police Release Man Who Fatally Shot Protester.
Fox News (7/27, Gearty, 27.59M) reports on its website that "a man who admitted to fatally
shooting an armed Black Lives Matter protester in Austin on Saturday night was taken into
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custody and then released pending further investigation, the Texas city's police chief said." Chief
Brian Manley told reporters the fatal shooting of Garrett Foster is "actively being investigated
and ongoing in conjunction with the Travis County District Attorney's Office."
National Guard Officer: Protesters Cleared From Lafayette Square Without
Provocation.
The AP (7/27, Knickmeyer) reports Army National Guard Maj. Adam DeMarco, who was across
from the White House on June 1, said the US Park Police "began the violent clearing of
protesters from Lafayette Square last month without apparent provocation or adequate warning
to demonstrators, immediately after" Attorney General Barr spoke with Park Police leaders.
DeMarco's "account...challenges key aspects of the Trump administration's explanation for the
clearing of the protest in front of the White House, just before President Donald Trump walked
through the area to stage a photo event in front of a historic church." The CBS Evening NewsVi
(7/27, story 4, 0:40, O'Donnell, 4.46M) said DeMarco will testify before Congress on Tuesday.
The Washington Post (7/27, Jackman, Leonnig, 14.2M) says DeMarco's "statement...also
casts doubt on the claims by acting Park Police Chief Gregory Monahan that violence by
protesters spurred Park Police to clear the area at that time with unusually aggressive tactics."
DeMarco said that "demonstrators were behaving peacefully" and that tear gas was deployed in
an "excessive use of force." DeMarco's account "backs up law enforcement officials who told The
Washington Post they believed the clearing operation would happen after the 7 p.m. curfew that
night --- but it was dramatically accelerated after...Barr and others appeared in the park around
6 p.m."
Politico (7/27, Cohen, 4.29M) reports that according to DeMarco's account, "Park Police
said they would be clearing demonstrators out of Lafayette Square, along with Secret Service,
in order to construct a perimeter fence around the White House. But the materials necessary to
build the security barrier did not arrive until 9 p.m. and the barrier was not completed until
later that night."
Cotton Criticized For Says Founding Fathers Viewed Slavery As "Necessary Evil."
Reuters (7/27, Morgan) reports Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) on Monday "came under pressure over
published comments in which he said America's founders viewed slavery as a 'necessary evil."
Cotton made the comments in an interview with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette in which he
said, "As the Founding Fathers said, it was the necessary evil upon which the union was built,
but the union was built in a way, as Lincoln said, to put slavery on the course to its ultimate
extinction." In response to the criticism, Cotton tweeted, "This is the definition of fake news. I
said that *the Founders viewed slavery as a necessary evil*."
Police Departments Withdraw From Security Agreements For Democratic Convention.
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (7/27, Spicuzza, 632K) reports that "at least three Wisconsin
police departments have withdrawn from agreements to send personnel to next month's
Democratic National Convention, some of them citing orders to Milwaukee's police chief to
cease the use of tear gas and pepper spray during demonstrations." The moves by police
departments in Fond du Lac, Franklin and West Allis "cast doubt on a program to bring about
1,000 police officers from outside agencies to help shore up security for the event" next month.
Illinois County Board Candidate Quits Over Tweet "Laughing" At Officer Getting Hit.
The Chicago Tribune (7/27, McCoppin, 2.65M) reports that a Democratic candidate for the
DuPage County board "withdrew from the race after apologizing for a tweet in which she said
she laughed repeatedly at a video of a law enforcement officer getting hit in the face with a
projectile." Hadiya Afzal tweeted, "ive been watching this on repeat for fifteen minutes and
laughing every single time." The video shows "what appears to be an officer behind a barricade
wall at a protest throw an object off-screen, and then recoil after getting hit in the face with a
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projectile." Afzal said in a statement Sunday, "My post was in poor taste and doesn't reflect the
values I was raised with and hold dear."
Black Soldiers Monument In Boston Under Scrutiny.
The AP (7/27, Marcelo) reports that a bronze statue in downtown Boston memorializes
Massachusetts 54th Regiment Memorial, an all-Black regiment that fought during the Civil War,
"can conjure mixed feelings as the nation takes another hard look at its monuments and
memorials in the wake of the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police." To some, the
monument "should be moved to a museum because it casts Blacks as 'subservient' to whites."
NYTimes Analysis: NFL Efforts To Combat Racism Undercut By Team Owners.
The New York Times (7/27, Belson, 18.61M) reports the NFL has "taken strides to repair its
image as being insensitive to issues facing women and people of color. But the league continues
to be confronted by an uncomfortable reality: Its efforts can be undercut by reports of toxic
behavior at the tops of its franchises." The "re-emergence of issues of discrimination involving
two of the league's most prominent team owners" - Woody Johnson, the owner of the Jets, and
Dan Snyder, owner of the Washington Football Team, as it is now known - comes as "the nation
confronts systemic racism in many of its institutions, including sports teams and leagues." The
Times says the new allegations of "racism and sexism threaten to undercut the league's efforts
to promote itself as having learned from past failings."
WTimes Analysis: Black Lives Matter Has "Leftist" Goal.
The Washington Times (7/27, Al, Scarborough, 492K) reports that "beyond Black Lives Matter's
drive to eliminate police brutality is a far more extensive leftist ideology that would upend
American economic and social life, according to an examination of BLM leaders' writings and
interviews." According to the Times, "BLM leaders say they want capitalism abolished."
The Washington Post (7/27, Natanson, 14.2M), meanwhile, reports that in the days
following George Floyd's death, "the nation had erupted in protests that shattered cities and
swept Americans, in what felt like every corner of the country, into an unprecedented reckoning
with racism and police violence. Every corner except Rocky Mount, the seat of Franklin County
in southern Virginia." The Post goes on to detail how a Black Lives Matter chapter was
established in the county.
COUNTER-TERRORISM
Georgia Man Sentenced For Planning White House Attack.
WXIA-TV Atlanta (7/27, Kleinpeter, 258K) reports from Forsyth County, Georgia, "Hasher Jallal
Taheb, of Forsyth County faces a sentence of 15 years in prison after pleading guilty to
attempted destruction of government property by fire or explosive. The 23-year-old was
sentenced Thursday in U.S. District Court. Taheb admitted, earlier this year, to planning an
attack on the White House." Taheb "was arrested in 2018 and 2019 in Gwinnett County after
the culmination of an undercover investigation revealed hand-drawn diagrams of the West Wing
in the White House. A federal affidavit at the time suggested that Taheb plotted attacks on
other Washington landmarks including the Washington Monument and Lincoln Memorial. He also
intended to travel overseas at the time and that his attacks were part of his desire to 'engage in
"jihad".'"
Arizona Woman Charged With Helping Al Qaeda To Appear In Court Next Week.
KTVK-TV Phoenix (7/27, 302K) reports from Phoenix, Arizona, "The Chandler woman accused of
trying to help Al Qaeda was supposed to appear in court today, but that appearance has been
continued until next week. Jill Marie Jones, 35, is now scheduled to appear on Monday, Aug. 3."
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Jones "was arrested at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on Wednesday, July 22, after
allegedly being in communication with two undercover FBI agents, one of whom she believed to
be a member of al Qaeda. According to the criminal complaint filed in court, Jones agreed to
send money to purchase scopes for rifles that would be used to kill American soldiers. In May
2020, Jones gave the purported al Qaeda member a $500 prepaid Visa card, prosecutors say."
Sentencing Postponed For Man Who Supplied Guns To San Bernardino Shooter.
The San Bernardino (CA) Sun (7/27, De Atley, 129K) reports, "Enrique Marquez Jr.'s sentencing
in federal court for supplying the guns used in the Dec. 15, 2015 terrorist attack in San
Bernardino that killed 14 and wounded 22 has been postponed from Aug. 17 to Oct. 23."
According to the Sun, "Defense attorney John N. Aquilina said in papers that the delay was
needed to research and address 'significant and multiple issues' regarding briefs he anticipates
filing in connection with Marquez's sentencing. The government has recommended 25 years in
prison for Marquez, 28. He remains in custody." The Sun adds, "Federal authorities have said
Marquez did not know about the Redlands couple's plans to open fire on Farook's co-workers
with the San Bernardino County Division of Environmental Health at the Inland Regional Center
during a holiday party and training session."
Changes Made To 9/11 Commemoration In New York Due To Pandemic.
ABC World News TonightVi (7/27, story 10, 0:15, Muir, 7.11M) reported "a major change" has
been made to this year's 9/11 commemoration in New York. Because of precautions due to the
pandemic, "this year's memorial will not include a live reading of the names by relatives of the
victims. It will be recorded." Families will still be allowed to gather in the plaza for the
ceremony.
Prosecutors Struggle To Resume Guantanamo Trials.
The New York Times (7/27, Rosenberg, 18.61M) reports the coronavirus pandemic is "forcing
the military to consider creating a quarantine zone at the court compound to allow proceedings
to continue in the case of the alleged 9/11 plotters." Military prosecutors struggling to "restart
war crimes tribunals at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in the midst of the pandemic are proposing to
transform the crude court compound of tents and trailers into a quarantine zone." The plan
would "airlift about 100 people from across the US to Guantanamo on Sept. 5 - everyone
bound for the courtroom, except the defendants - and then isolate them for two weeks at the
makeshift site called Camp Justice." Then the men "accused of plotting the September 11,
2001, attacks would be brought from the prison to the courtroom to begin six weeks of
hearings in the case, from September 21 to November 3, the height of hurricane season."
State Department Declares "Unwavering" Commitment To Seeking Justice For The
Families' Of US Citizens Killed By ISIS.
The Washington Examiner (7/27, Dunleavy, 448K) reports the State Department "said it has an
'unwavering' commitment to bringing Islamic State fighters who killed US citizens to justice."
The agency sent this message "as the families of the dead renew calls for captors, some of
whom are being held in the Middle East, to be put on trial in the US." A State Department
spokesperson told the Washington Examiner, "Seeking the safe return of US citizens held
hostage abroad and justice for the families of those murdered by their captors is a hallmark of
this administration's policy. The Department of State's commitment to these goals is
unwavering." Last week, the parents of ISIS victims Kayla Mueller, James Foley, Peter Kassig,
and Steven Sotloff - all abducted and killed by members of ISIS - "penned a joint op-ed in the
Washington Post urging the Trump Administration to take action."
COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE
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Yates To Testify Before Senate Judiciary Committee Next Week.
The Hill (7/27, Carney, 2.98M) reports Senate Judiciary Chairman Graham said in an interview
with Fox News Radio Monday that former Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates will testify before
his panel on Aug, 5. Graham, who The Hill describes as "a close ally" of the President, "is
investigating the origins of `Crossfire Hurricane,' the name of the FBI's investigation into
Russian election interference and the Trump campaign, and former special counsel Robert
Mueller's probe, which followed it."
Jarrett: Christopher Steele's Secret Source For Anti-Trump Dossier Is Finally Exposed.
In his column on the Fox News (7/26, 27.59M) website, Gregg Jarrett writes, "When the dossier
was invented in 2016, the president of Brookings was Strobe Talbott, a long-time friend and ally
of Hillary Clinton. Her campaign provided the cash for the phony document that was composed
by ex-British spy Christopher Steele. Talbott helped fuel the Trump-Russia collusion narrative.
But it was Danchenko who supplied Steele with most of the false stories contained in the
dossier." He contends, "I haven't seen Talbott's retraction or apology since the Mueller report
came out, nor do I expect one. He has a lot to answer for, including his own contacts with
Steele. It just so happens that Talbott's brother-in-law is Clinton sycophant, Cody Shearer, who
created what became known as the `second dossier.' Remarkably, it echoed several of the
identical fantastic allegations as the original Steele-Danchenko dossier." He concludes, "Clinton's
campaign didn't just commission the dossier, her allies contributed to its contents."
Fox News (7/27, 27.59M) reports in a video that former DO) official Francey Hakes
provides reaction and analysis on "the source's American roots raise questions on how the FBI
renewed FISA warrants against former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page."
Carter Page Sues Yahoo, HuffPost Parent Company For "False And Defamatory"
Articles.
Fox News (7/27, Flood, 27.59M) reports former Trump campaign aide Carter Page "is suing
Yahoo parent company Oath Inc. over `false and defamatory statements,' claiming the outlet
`portrayed him as a traitor to America' who illegally conspired with Russia to influence the 2016
election." The suit "was filed Monday in Delaware Superior Court and accuses Oath's Yahoo
News and HuffPost of publishing stories about Page `with actual knowledge of falsity or with a
reckless disregard of truth or falsity' with a motive of generating clicks online and aligning with
the political bias and aims of senior management." The lawsuit claims, "Page is an innocent
individual whose entire way of life was shattered as a direct result of being defamed and falsely
branded as a traitor to his country by the Defendant's media brands. He was allegedly secretly
plotting with Russian leaders to sabotage the 2016 Presidential Election and give `aid and
comfort' to Russian President Putin's efforts to `weaken' America."
Op-Ed: Biden May Want To Forget About The Russia Investigation.
In an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal (7/27, Subscription Publication, 7.57M), Gerald Baker
writes on malfeasance during the Obama Administration and efforts by Joe Biden to sidestep
those issues during the presidential campaign. Baker highlights various events during the
Obama Administration that suggest Biden was involved in meetings tied to the investigation of
the Trump campaign.
Chinese Scientist Charged With Visa Fraud Ordered Held As Flight Risk.
The AP (7/27, Har) reports from San Francisco, "A Chinese scientist charged with visa fraud
after authorities said she concealed her military ties to China in order to work in the U.S. made
her first appearance Monday in federal court by video." Juan Tang, 37, "was appointed a federal
public defender and U.S. Magistrate Judge Deborah Barnes ordered Tang to remain in custody,
saying she is a flight risk, while her attorney prepares an argument to allow her release on bail.
The Justice Department last week announced charges against Tang and three other scientists
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living in the U.S., saying they lied about their status as members of China's People's Liberation
Army. All were charged with visa fraud."
The Sacramento (CA) Bee (7/27, Stanton, 567K) reports, "Tang allegedly lied about her
ties to China's People's Liberation Army Air Force and the Chinese Communist Party, and after
FBI agents questioned her at her Davis apartment she fled into hiding inside the Chinese
consulate in San Francisco. The FBI subsequently took her into custody Thursday night and she
was booked into the Main Jail last Friday. In a brief initial appearance conducted Monday via
Zoom, U.S. Magistrate Judge Deborah Barnes ordered Tang to remain in custody at least until
her federal defender can propose conditions that might allow her release."
Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou Seeks Canadian Spy Agency Documents Linked To
Canadian Arrest.
Reuters (7/27, Warburton) reports lawyers representing Huawei's Meng Wanzhou, "who is
fighting against extradition to the US, argued in a Canadian court on Monday that redacted
documents prepared by the Canadian spy agency relating to her December 2018 arrest should
be released." The lawyers "said national security should not limit the release of the documents,
parts of which were made public during ongoing court proceedings over whether Meng,
Huawei's chief financial officer, should be extradited, court documents showed." Meng's lawyers
have "asked for additional documents from the Canadian government pertaining to her arrest,
hoping to support their claim that Canadian authorities committed abuses of process during her
arrest." The lawyers are "pressing for a stay in Meng's extradition."
The Globe and Mail (CAN) (7/27, Woo, 1.04M) reports that, "at a virtual hearing at
Ottawa's Federal Court on Monday, Meng's lawyers argued that several documents from the
Canadian Security Intelligence Service, previously released under a disclosure order, were likely
the subject of excessive redactions and overly broad claims of privilege." AFP (7/27) reports
Scott Fenton, one of Meng's lawyers, "said on Monday his client had been questioned for three
hours by Canadian customs agents at Vancouver airport without knowing what she was accused
of, before being formally arrested." Bloomberg (7/27, Pearson, 4.73M) reports that, "in its
latest filing, the defense suggests Meng's arrest was closely coordinated between the FBI and
the Canadian agencies." The defense "said the FBI was likely monitoring Meng before she
boarded her Cathay Pacific flight in Hong Kong because it was able to provide a description of
what she was wearing to Canadian police."
Spanish Court Hears Testimony On Whether Assange Was Spied On.
The AP (7/27) reports Spain's National Court "heard testimony Monday in an investigation into
whether a Spanish company was hired to spy on Julian Assange during the seven years the
WikiLeaks founder spent in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London." The court is investigating
"whether David Morales, a Spaniard, and his Undercover Global S.L. security agency invaded
the privacy of Assange and his visitors at the embassy by secretly recording their meetings."
According to court papers, the intelligence "that Morales' company collected is suspected of
being handed over to third parties." Among those set to "face the court's questions Monday
were prominent Spanish lawyer Baltasar Garzon, who is part of Assange's legal team; former
Ecuadorean consul in London Fidel Narvaez; and Stella Morris, a legal adviser and Assange's
partner, who revealed earlier this year that she had two children with him while he lived in the
embassy."
Lowenthal Says Intelligence Analysis Needs Course Change.
SIGNAL Magazine (7/27, Ackerman) reports Mark Lowenthal, former assistant director of
central intelligence for analysis and production "says legacy methods and arcane rules are
hamstringing US intelligence analysis at a time when it should be innovating." He "said that,
from training, which needs to shift emphasis to more basic skills, to collection and processing,
which must branch into nontraditional areas, intelligence must make course corrections to solve
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inflexibility issues." Lowenthal, who teaches "an AFCEA PDC onsite course on US intelligence
that is also available in a virtual format, states that training must change to compel the type of
analysis necessary to meet the new threat picture." Recognizing that "analytic deficiencies
existed after 9/11, Congress and the intelligence community created the DNI position." Along
with this came "congressional requirements for what analysis should look like." However,
Lowenthal "asserts that the attempt to bring about a community-wide basis largely has not
succeeded." Analytic training is "still stovepiped by agency."
Pentagon Issues Contract Guidance On China Tech Ban.
Federal Computer Week (7/27, Williams, 263K) reports the Pentagon has "released guidance on
how acquisition executives should implement the upcoming ban on contracting with companies
that use telecommunications equipment made by Huawei and other China-based companies." In
a 15-page memo "signed July 23, the Defense Department outlines what companies and
contracting officers have to do once the government's ban goes into effect." Starting August 13,
the government "won't be allowed to issue or extend contracts with companies that use certain
video and telesurveillance technologies, services and equipment made by certain Chinese
manufacturers, such as ZTE or Hikvision." Contracts, task and delivery orders, "including those
for commercial-off-the-shelf items and delivery orders, issued after Aug. 13 must also include
specified language invoking regulation for the ban. Existing indefinite delivery contracts will
have to be modified, the memo states."
IARPA Funds Study Showing Randomness Theory Could Hold Key To Internet
Security.
The Cornell Chronicle (NY) (7/27, Lefkowitz, 5K) reports Rafael Pass, professor of computer
science at Cornell Tech, "is co-author of 'On One-Way Functions and Kolmogorov Complexity."
He said, "The result is that a natural computational problem introduced in the 1960s in the
Soviet Union characterizes the feasibility of basic cryptography - private-key encryption, digital
signatures and authentication, for example." In the paper, Pass and doctoral student Yanyi Liu
"showed that if computing time-bounded Kolmogorov Complexity is hard, then one-way
functions exist." Although their finding "is theoretical, it has potential implications across
cryptography, including internet security." The research was "funded in part by the National
Science Foundation and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, and was based on research
funded by the Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity in the Office of the Director of
National Intelligence."
Op-Ed: Russian Spying is Privatized and Competitive.
In an op-ed in Newsweek (7/27, 1.53M), Christo Grozev writes, "The Russia report published
last week by the UK government proved what we had grown to suspect. Western intel —
personified by the revered British spy services - were not being tight-lipped. ... No systematic,
consistent post-mortem seems to have been conducted on Russian influence operations. The
government's response to the Report's findings was blinkered and Trumpian. Even as it
admitted no serious effort was put into establishing whether or not Russia intervened in the
Brexit referendum, it stressed, defensively." He concludes, "Comprehending the complexity of
this new reality is key to having an adequate response. ... The UK government's response to
the Report is even more anachronistic. Even the errors it recognizes, and the forward-looking
measures it commits to, amount to a 20th century solution to a 21st century problem."
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
Maxwell Seeks To Seal Evidence.
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The Telegraph (UK) (7/27, Ensor, 956K) reports, "Ghislaine Maxwell is trying to prevent nude
photographs and 'sexualised video' evidence from being unsealed ahead of her trial, according
to a new court appeal." According to the Telegraph, Maxwell's attorney "details the 'highly
confidential' material in a proposed protective order filed at a Manhattan court on Monday,
arguing it should be kept out of public view. 'The highly confidential information contains nude,
partially-nude, or otherwise sexualised images, videos, or other depictions of individuals,' which
Ms Maxwell does not wish to be 'disseminated, transmitted, or otherwise copies,' it reads."
Maxwell "is being held in Metropolitan Detention Centre in Brooklyn, New York, without bail
while awaiting trial for grooming underage girls for associate Jeffrey Epstein's sexual abuse.
She has pleaded not guilty to all six charges on the indictment."
The Daily Mail (UK). (7/27, Boswell, 5.27M) reports that Maxwell "ambushed prosecutors
by asking for a gag order on witnesses in her criminal trial, court documents seen by
DailyMail.com claim." Prosecutors "scrambled to file a letter to Judge Alison Nathan in response,
claiming they had been negotiating with Jeffrey Epstein's alleged madam's legal team 'as
recently as 6p.m. last night' and were surprised by the gagging request. The British socialite's
attorney wrote to Judge Nathan asking her to keep discovery materials from being published,
but wanted permission to identify witnesses and Maxwell's alleged victims who have already
come forward in the case."
The New York Daily News (7/27, Brown, 2.52M) reports, "When the FBI raided Epstein's
Upper East Side mansion last year, investigators found a stash of nude photographs of
underage girls. Prosecutors and Maxwell's legal teams asked Judge Alison Nathan to resolve two
disputes about the evidence. Maxwell's attorneys wanted any witnesses - including alleged
victims - to not be allowed to use evidence for any purpose beyond prepping for her criminal
trial." The Daily News adds, "Many of Maxwell's accusers have pending lawsuits against her,
which could be impacted by new evidence revealed through the criminal case. Her attorneys
also said they should be allowed to name victims involved in the criminal case who have
already spoken out publicly about Epstein and Maxwell's alleged sex trafficking scheme."
FBI Investigating Washington State Murder.
The Yakima (WA) Herald-Republic (7/27, 88K) reports that the FBI "is investigating the
shooting death of [Adam James Young)," who "was shot to death in Brownstown on July 13."
The FBI "investigates homicides on the reservation that involve Native Americans."
Continuing Coverage: FBI Investigating Disappearance Of Missing Iowa Child.
The Des Moines IA) Register (7/27, 404K) reports that the FBI is investigating the
disappearance of Breasia Terrell, who "went missing on July 10 after spending the night with
her half brother and his father, Henry Earl Dinkins, a registered sex offender." Davenport Chief
Strategy Officer Sarah Ott "said detectives discovered new information that met the
requirements set by the state for an Amber Alert to be issued, but declined to provide details."
FBI Task Force Arrests Two In Connection To Colorado Party Shooting.
KMGH-TV Denver (7/27, 168K) reports that the FBI-led Criminal Apprehension Team task force
arrested last week Michael Walker and an unidentified minor in connection to the July 11 double
shooting incident that "left one juvenile dead and another wounded."
Continuing Coverage: California Police Arrest Parents In Connection To
Disappearance Of Toddler.
WJAX-TV Jacksonville, FL (7/27, Bonvillian, Desk, 44K) reports Sukhjinder Sran and Briseida
Sran have been arrested in connection to the disappearance of their son, Thaddeus Sran, after
Madera police found the burned remains of a child's body. The FBI has been supporting the
investigation.
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Mississippi Man Charged With Threatening Federal Judge.
The AP (7/27) reports that a federal grand jury "indicted [Bryant Lamont Harris) accused of
threatening to harm a federal judge at a U.S. district courthouse in New Orleans." The criminal
complaint "obtained by The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate accused Harris of
calling U.S. District Judge Susie Morgan's office in February and complaining 'angrily' to a
staffer about the city's police department." The FBI New Orleans field office supported the
investigation.
Georgia Man Sentenced Over Producing Child Pornography.
AllOnGeorgia (7/27) reports Richard Hunt Moore Jr, who was "arrested at a motel when a 14-
year-old boy signaled that he was in danger," has "been sentenced to federal prison for
production of child pornography." He "was sentenced by U.S. District Court Chief Judge J.
Randal Hall to 264 months in prison and ordered to pay restitution of $1 million." FBI agents
"discovered child pornography on electronic devices in Moore's possession" prior to his arrest.
FBI Agents Investigating In Pennsylvania.
Levittown Now (PA) (7/27) reports that FBI agents "have been asking questions in the
Levittown area." The FBI "is leading a charge to look into matters with ties to local governments
and school districts in Bucks and Montgomery counties."
Connecticut Man Sentenced For Embezzling.
Zip06 (CT) (7/27) reports Michael Verzella "was sentenced July 20 by U.S. District Judge Kari A.
Dooley in Bridgeport to 33 months of imprisonment, followed by three years of supervised
release, for stealing more than $240,000 from his non-profit employer and numerous
individuals serviced by his employer." He plead guilty, and he "admitted that, between January
2012 and February 2018, he used his Chapel Haven credit card to purchase tickets for sporting
and entertainment events that he attended with friends and family."
New Mexico Police Continuing To Investigate Disappearance Of Local.
The Las Cruces (NM) Sun-News (7/27, 58K) reports about the ongoing investigation into the
disappearance of Steve Carey, who "was last seen July 8 in Las Cruces" in 2019. His car "was
later found at the Baylor Canyon Trailhead by New Mexico State Police, but his bike and wallet
were not found with the car."
Wisconsin Man Sentenced Over Child Enticement.
WAOW-TV Wausau, WI (7/27) reports Brian D. Wickersham, who abducted and assaulted an
unidentfied minor, was "sentenced to 20 years in federal prison by Senior District Judge William
C. Griesbach." The case "was investigated by the Brown County Sheriff's Office, the Brown
County Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force and the Green Bay office of the
F.B.I."
Former FBI Task Force Officer Facing Trial In Guam.
The Guam Daily Post (7/27, Nick Delgado I, Post) reports former FBI Task Force officer and
former Guam police officer John Mantanona, who is "accused of tampering with the jury in a
major federal drug case," is scheduled "back in court on Aug. 14 to find out when his trial will
begin."
Continuing Coverage: FBI Investigating Disappearance Of Pennsylvania Teenager.
WPMT-TV Harrisburg, PA (7/27, 93K) reports that the FBI is continuing to investigate the
disappearance of Linda Stoltzfoos, who "vanished over a month ago." While a suspect "has been
arrested for her kidnapping," she "has not been found."
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Continuing Coverage: US Marshal Task Force Announces Arrests Of Juvenile Prison
Escapees.
MLive (MI) (7/27, 925K) reports that the US Marshal Service announced the successful arrests
of Rashad E. Williams and Jabar Ali Taylor, who "fled through a hole that was cut in a perimeter
fence at the Bon Air Juvenile Correctional Center in Chesterfield County, Virginia on July 13."
The FBI supported manhunt, which ended in Michigan.
Michigan Man Sentenced Over Bank Robbery.
WWJ-TV Detroit (7/27) reports U.S. Attorney Andrew Birge "announced that David Wilson
Floyd, formerly of Michigan City, Indiana, was sentenced to serve 216 months' imprisonment by
U.S. District Judge Paul L. Maloney. Floyd pled guilty in March 2020 to armed bank robbery and
attempted bank robbery." The FBI "investigated and determined Floyd committed the
September 9, 2019, armed bank robbery, the September 18, 2019, attempted bank robbery, as
well as six additional robberies of convenience stores and gas stations in northern Indiana and
southwestern Michigan between June 2019 and September 2019."
FBI Searching For Virginia Man.
The Augusta (VA) Free Press (7/27) reports that the FBI "is requesting the public's help in
locating LaShawn Robertson, who is wanted on federal drug trafficking and firearms charges."
The arrest warrant "was issued for Robertson in the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of Virginia, Newport News, on July 8, after Robertson was charged with being a felon in
possession of a firearm; distributing heroin or cocaine or cocaine base or methamphetamine,
amphetamine, and oxycodone; and providing a firearm to a convicted felon."
Massachusetts Gang Member Ordered Held Without Bail.
The Attleboro (MA) Sun Chronicle (7/27, 15K) reports Boston NOB gang member Damian
Cortez, whose apartment "was raided last month has waived his right to a detention hearing
and will remain in jail until trial." He "faces federal sex trafficking and drug distribution charges
for alleged incidents in Maine and Brockton."
Former Medical Doctor Pleads Guilty To Illegally Prescribing Oxycodone.
Newsday (NY) (7/27, 932K) reports Tameshwar Ammar, a former medical doctor "who practiced
as an anesthesiologist" in the state of New York, has admitted that he illegally "prescribed
oxycodone to two patients...in exchange for money and steroids." Newsday quotes "Acting
Eastern District United States Attorney Seth DuCharme," who said Ammar's "guilty plea
establishes that the defendant, who was a doctor, essentially acted as a drug dealer, spreading
injury and addiction without regard for the consequences." DuCharme also said his office "and
our partners at the DEA are working tirelessly to combat the opioid epidemic on Long Island
and elsewhere, including by prosecuting medical professionals who betray their oath to do no
harm." The Port Washington (NY) Patch (7/27, Hampton, 1.03M) and the Lindenhurst (NY)
Patch (7/27, Korb, 1.03M) publish similar articles.
Notices Filed To Seize Properties In Connection With Marijuana Firm Raid Operation
The Bangor (ME) Daily News (7/27, Valigra, 198K) reports, "The US attorney's office in Maine
has filed notices in federal court to seize 12 properties" in connection with a recent raid
operation that targeted the marijuana distribution firm Narrow Gauge Distributors. The article
highlights that the DEA and the FBI conducted the operation.
Federal Prosecutors: Drug Offender Was Involved In Prison Smuggling Scheme.
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (7/27, Ove, 616K) reports federal prosecutors have alleged that
"Robert Korbe, a convicted cocaine dealer at the center of a drug investigation that resulted in
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the murder of an FBI agent in 2008, was directly involved in another scheme to smuggle drug-
saturated greeting cards into the US prison where he is an inmate." The Post-Gazette highlights
the DEA's involvement in the investigation of this case.
Maryland Resident Facing Drug Charges.
In online coverage, WTOP-FM Washington (7/27, 385K) reports Maryland resident Lamontae
Montae Young, Sr., "is facing drug charges in connection with alleged large-scale cocaine and
heroin distribution." The article adds, "The Frederick High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area Task
Force" was involved with the investigation that led to those charges. The Frederick (MD) News-
Post (7/27, Arias, 74K) and the WFMD-AM Frederick, MD (7/27, 1K) website also cover this
story.
FINANCIAL CRIME & CORPORATE SCANDALS
Ohio Candidate Went To FBI In March Over Householder, Dark Money.
WKRC-TV Cincinnati (7/27, Levy, 161K) reports from Union Township, Ohio, "A Republican
candidate for Ohio's 66th House District went to the FBI last spring over concerns that Ohio
House Speaker Larry Householder was coordinating with dark money groups to influence the
campaign." Nick Owens "said he was contacted by Householder in November 2018" and that
Householder "brought up another house race that had happened that month during their
meeting. `He told me how he saved the representative from defeat by dumping about $500,000
to prop up his campaign at the end,' Owens said." In 2019, Owens "learned he would not
receive Householder's endorsement" and "was hit by a flood of dark money ads that questioned
his support of GOP issues." In March, Owens "said he contacted the FBI and discussed his
November 2018 meeting with Householder with FBI Agent Blane Wetzel," who "was in the
middle of an investigation into Householder, four others and $60 million paid to a nonprofit
controlled by Householder through an energy pass-through company."
Man Captured After Faking Own Death Over Fraudulent PPP Loans.
In continuing coverage, Alabama News Network (7/27) reports, "The U.S. Marshals Service
says David Staveley, who also goes by Kurt Sanborn, was captured last week in Georgia," after
he was "accused of faking his own death to avoid prosecution for fraudulently seeking hundreds
of thousands of dollars" in PPP loans. Prosecutors say he "sought nearly $440,000 in fraudulent
loans for three restaurants."
Boston (7/27, 586K) also reports.
Former UCLA Soccer Coach Pleads Guilty To Taking College Admissions Bribes.
NBC News (7/28, 6.14M) reports, "A former UCLA men's soccer coach on Monday admitted to
accepting $200,000 in bribes as part of a college admissions cheating scheme, federal
prosecutors said." Jorge Salcedo, 47, "who resigned from the University of California, Los
Angeles in March 2019, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit racketeering, the
U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts said in a statement. He was accused of
accepting the bribes to help get two students admitted to UCLA as purported soccer recruits,
which was part of a scheme orchestrated by William 'Rick' Singer."
Visa, Mastercard Fined Wirecard For Questionable Transactions Over A Decade Ago.
The Wall Street Journal (7/27, Andriotis, Davies, Chung, Subscription Publication, 7.57M)
reports Visa and Mastercard each slapped Wirecard with fines exceeding $10 million more than
a decade ago for suspicious transactions. Since at least 2015, Visa and Mastercard were
concerned about issues including miscoded gambling transactions, stolen card purchases, and
reversed transactions.
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US Charges Former Florida Tech CEO With Wire Fraud.
The Jacksonville (a) Business Journal (7/27, Robinson, Subscription Publication, 830K) reports
from Jacksonville, Florida, "Jason Cory, the ousted CEO of a company that was once awarded
city and state incentives, has been indicted for wire fraud and has a warrant issued for his
arrest, according to court records. Cory's attorney, Todd Foster, told the Business Journal on
Monday that Cory will be surrendering voluntarily to the FBI and intends to plead not guilty."
The Journal adds, "Cory founded and led SharedLabs, a company that grew rapidly by buying a
number of IT, staffing and digital marketing firms. Cory's July 22 indictment in the U.S. District
Court for the Middle District of Florida accuses him of three counts of wire fraud and one count
of illegal monetary transaction. The counts refer to three transfers of about $5,500 each and an
$11,630 purchase of a gold Rolex watch using `criminally derived' funds."
US Charges Trustify CEO With Defrauding Investors.
Virginia Business Magazine (7/27, Foster, 80K) reports, "Daniel Boice, CEO and founder of
Arlington-based tech startup Trustify Inc., was charged by federal prosecutors Monday with
fraud and money laundering charges related to a scheme to defraud investors of $18.5 million.
In a parallel action, the Securities and Exchange Commission also charged Trustify Inc. and
Boice with violating the antifraud provisions of the federal securities law." VBM adds, "In an
indictment unsealed Monday, Boice was charged with five counts of wire fraud, one count of
securities fraud and two counts of money laundering. FBI officials and U.S. Attorney for the
Eastern District of Virginia G. Zachary Terwiliger allege in the indictment that Boice fraudulently
solicited $18.5 million from more than 90 investors in his company, which connected customers
with private investigators, by falsely overstating Trustify's financial performance."
Infosecurity Magazine (7/27, Coble) reports, "An indictment unsealed in federal court on
July 24 alleges that Boice fraudulently solicited investments in Trustify from 2015. The 41-year-
old resident of Alexandria, Virginia, allegedly lied about how much money the business was
making in order to secure funds from multiple investors. The Department of Justice claims that
via means that included overstating Trustify's financial performance, Boice fraudulently raised
approximately $18.5m from over 90 investors. In total, Boice is accused of committing five
counts of wire fraud, one count of securities fraud, and two counts of money laundering."
New York Man Charged With Defrauding Drug Maker.
The Queens (NY) Chronicle (7/27, Russell, 157K) reports, "A Forest Hills man was indicted last
Friday for defrauding a pharmaceutical manufacturer, the U.S. attorney Eastern District of New
York announced." Arkadiy Khaimov, 37, "allegedly submitted approximately $6.9 million in
fraudulent claims under a reimbursement program. As alleged in the indictment, the
pharmaceutical manufacturer, referred to in the indictment as `John Doe Company 1,'
established the co-pay program to reimburse pharmacies for dispensing a prescription
medication." The Chronicle adds, "Between approximately February 2017 and July 2018,
Khaimov and his co-conspirators submitted claims for approximately $6.9 million in
reimbursements under the program, for medications the pharmacies operated never actually
dispensed. 'It's utterly discouraging to see people capitalize on any initiative designed to
contribute to the greater good, but when the crime is healthcare related, and manufacturers
stand to lose millions, nobody wins in the long run,' said Assistant Director-in-Charge of the FBI
New York Field Office William Sweeney Jr."
Top Tech CEOs To Be Grilled On Antitrust Issues At House Hearing.
The Washington Post (7/27, Al, Romm, 14.2M) reports members of Congress are "set to turn
their attention to technology, channeling long-simmering frustrations with Amazon, Apple,
Facebook and Google into a high-profile hearing that some Democrats and Republicans hope
will usher in sweeping changes throughout Silicon Valley." The Post says that on Wednesday,
"the industry's four most powerful chief executives are set to...submit to a grilling from House
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lawmakers who have been probing the Web's most recognizable names to determine whether
they have become too big and powerful." According to the Post, "The focus is antitrust, and the
extent to which a quartet of digital behemoths - representing a nearly $5 trillion slice of the
U.S. economy - has harmed competition, consumers and the country writ large."
Under Armour Receives SEC Wells Notice Of Possible Enforcement Action.
The Wall Street Journal (7/27, Safdar, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports two Under
Armour executives have received Wells notices from the Securities and Exchange Commission
signaling that the company may be the target of an enforcement action by the regulator. Under
Armour Executive Chairman Kevin Plank and CFO David Bergman received notices that they
could face civil-enforcement action over the company's accounting practices in 2015 and 2016
and "pull forward" sales during those periods.
CYBER DIVISION
Garmin Says Cyberattack Made Its Software Unavailable.
The Wall Street Journal (7/27, Choi, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports Garmin
announced it was targeted in a cyberattack that took its software offline for a number of days.
The company stated no customer data appears to have been accessed or stolen. The company
reported their systems are coming back online and should return to normal in coming days.
The New York Post (7/27, Manskar, 4.57M) reports a gang of Russian hackers "may be
behind the cyberattack that disabled Garmin's fitness-tracking services for several days." The
attackers reportedly "crippled the smartwatch maker's Garmin Connect service last week with
malicious software tied to Evil Corp., a Moscow-based hacker group run by alleged
cybercriminal Maksim Yakubets." Evil Corp. runs the "WastedLocker ransomware responsible for
the Garmin outage, which encrypts the target's files and demands a ransom to unlock them."
Hackers have sought "as much as $10 million to release affected data, though companies can
get around such an attack if they've backed up the files, according to the outlet."
CNN (7/27, Effron, 83.16M) reports Sam Curry, chief security officer of cybersecurity
company Cybereason, "said the ransomware attack on Garmin was 'crippling,' and called it 'the
corporate equivalent of a heart attack." He said, "The longer Garmin is offline, the cost of
recovery increases and could cost tens of millions of dollars more," Garmin, however, "said that
it does not expect the blackout to have a material impact on its financial results." Also reporting
on the story is U.S. News & World Report (7/27).
Fund Administrator To Pimco, Others Saw Breach At Vendor.
Bloomberg (7/27, Massa, McDonald, 4.73M) reports a fund administrator for Pacific Investment
Management Co., Angelo Gordon & Co., Centerbridge Partners and other money managers "said
a cyberattack at one of its key vendors exposed data." According to a statement from an SEI
spokesperson, the attack involved data "on clients of SEI Investments Co." The spokesperson
"said one of SEI Investments' vendors, M.J. Brunner Inc., was breached in a ransomware attack
that occurred on May 17, and the root cause was not related to vulnerability of SEI's systems."
The spokesperson said, "We take our clients' security very seriously, and we are working with
Brunner, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and our impacted clients to understand the extent
to which SEI's or our clients' data has been exposed." A representative for M.J. Brunner "said
the firm is 'confident that we have contained the incident and there is no further risk to our
network."
The Wall Street Journal (7/27, Tokar, Rundle, Chung, Subscription Publication, 7.57M)
reports the ransomware attack uncovered in May exposed the personal data of investors in
about 100 of the fund administrator's clients. Angelo Gordon & Co., Graham Capital
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Management, Fortress Investment Group LLC, Centerbridge Partners and Pacific Investment
Management Co. were cited as funds effected by the attack.
House Spending Bill Details Funding For Cyber Defenses.
Politico (7/27, Starks, 4.29M) reports in its Cybersecurity newsletter that the House this week
"is set to consider a $1.4 trillion, seven-bill spending package (H.R. 7667) - although one of
them, the DHS bill, is so controversial it might derail the whole shebang, what with constant
border fights and disputes over the Trump Administration deploying federal officers to protests."
The division-by-division summary "said the bill would provide nearly $12 million to create a
Joint Cyber Center for National Cyber Defense, but doesn't say much about what it would do."
The committee report "said it would `serve as a coordinating entity that will help the
Department identify strategic priorities and synchronize cyber-related activities across the
operational components." It also "spells out cyber-spending increases at CISA for specific
purposes, such as ransomware against state and local governments, awareness campaigns,
supply chain risks, vulnerability management and the Multi-State Information Sharing and
Analysis Center."
Cyberstalker Gets Four Years In Prison For "War" On Woman.
The AP (7/27, Kunzelman) reports that, "less than two months after their office romance
ended, Ahmad Kazzelbach began tampering with the email and social media accounts of the
Baltimore woman who broke up with him." He "changed her Instagram username to include the
word `whore!" That was only the "start of a vicious cyberstalking campaign that would escalate
steadily over the next year." Before FBI agents "arrested her ex-boyfriend, the woman was
wrongfully arrested twice and spent four nights in jail based on a string of false police reports
that he made." Kazzelbach "was sentenced on Monday to four years in prison for his online
harassment of the woman, who is identified by her initials "J.K." in court records." US District
Judge James Bredar "said Kazzelbach repeatedly lied to police and court officials to essentially
`wage war' against his ex-girlfriend."
DOD Issues RFI With Goal Of Advancing Cybersecurity Technology.
FedScoop (7/27, Mitchell) reports that the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering "issued a request for information late last week, asking for help building out a
roadmap of science and technology activities related to advances in cybersecurity over the next
two-and-a-half decades in line with the 2018 National Defense Strategy." The solicitation "asks
interested parties to help inform the Pentagon's future cybersecurity guideposts by sharing
`their R&D projections, technical capabilities, and demonstrated experiences in cybersecurity
and cyberspace operations,' the RFI says." Under the 2020 National Defense Authorization Act -
not yet passed - the Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering "will be required
to submit annual reports on cyber S&T starting in fiscal 2021."
CISA Says 62,000 QNAP NAS Devices Have Been Infected With The QSnatch Malware.
ZDNet (7/27, Cimpanu, 299K) reports cyber-security agencies from the UK and the US "have
published today a joint security alert about QSnatch, a strain of malware that has been
infecting network-attached storage (NAS) devices from Taiwanese device maker QNAP." In
alerts [1, 2] by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and the UK's
National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), the two agencies "say that attacks with the QSnatch
malware have been traced back to 2014, but attacks intensified over the last year when the
number of reported infections grew from 7,000 devices in October 2019 to more than 62,000 in
mid-June 2020." Of these, CISA and the NSCS "say that approximately 7,600 of the infected
devices are located in the US, and around 3,900 in the UK." CISA and the NCSC "say that the
two campaigns used different versions of the QSnatch malware (also tracked under the name of
Derek)."
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NDAA Would Create National Cyber Director Position In White House.
Federal News Network (7/27, Serbu, 220) reports in the DOD reporter's Notebook that the US
"may have a new top cybersecurity position within the White House as Jim Langevin, chairman
of the House Armed Services Emerging Threats and Capabilities Subcommittee, got an
amendment to the House version of the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act that will
create a National Cyber Director within the executive office of the president." The position
would serve "as the principal advisor to the president on cybersecurity strategy and policy." The
role "would also consult with federal departments to develop the US national cyber strategy and
supervise its implementation." Langevin "told Federal News Network that he pushed for the role
because the Trump Administration got rid of the cybersecurity coordinator position on the
National Security Council, and because cybersecurity needs a leadership position in the White
House."
LABORATORY
FBI Joins Probe Of Human Remains Found In Kentucky.
The Lexington (KY) Herald-Leader (7/27, 257K) reports, "The Nelson County sheriff's office
called in federal agents on Friday to help retrieve possible human remains, leading some in the
community to wonder if authorities had found Crystal Rogers, a Bardstown resident missing
since 2015." The sheriff's office "said in a Facebook post Sunday that possible remains were
recovered and sent to the FBI lab at Quantico, Va., for testing. Investigators wouldn't be able to
say if the remains are connected to Rogers until they get results back. 'Out of respect for family
members of multiple missing persons in these areas, we will not be commenting on this until
we have more information from the lab,' representatives from the sheriff's office said." The
Herald-Leader adds, "Nelson County law enforcement became aware of the possible human
remains near the border of Nelson and Washington counties on Thursday, according to the
sheriff's office. The FBI's Evidence Response Team was called in because the location of the
potential remains was difficult to reach, according to the sheriff's office." WDRB-TV Louisville,
KY (7/27, 179K) also reports.
NIST Study Finds Pandemic Masks Thwarting Face Recognition Technology.
The AP (7/27, O'Brien) reports a preliminary study "published by a US agency on Monday found
that even the best commercial facial recognition systems have error rates as high as 50% when
trying to identify masked faces." The mask problem is why "Apple earlier this year made it
easier for iPhone owners to unlock their phones without Face ID." It could also be "thwarting
attempts by authorities to identify individual people at Black Lives Matter protests and other
gatherings." The National Institute of Standards and Technology "says it is launching an
investigation to better understand how facial recognition performs on covered faces." Its
preliminary study "examined only those algorithms created before the pandemic, but its next
step is to look at how accuracy could improve as commercial providers adapt their technology
to an era when so many people are wearing masks."
LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES
US Launches Minnesota Office On Missing Indigenous Cases.
The AP (7/27) reports from Minneapolis, "Ivanka Trump and Acting Interior Secretary David
Bernhardt visited a Minneapolis suburb on Monday to open an office dedicated to investigating
cold cases involving missing and murdered Indigenous peoples." The AP adds, "The new office
in Bloomington is part of the Operation Lady Justice Task Force created via executive order by
President Donald Trump in November to address violence against Native Americans, particularly
women and girls, which advocates say are often overlooked by law enforcement across the
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country. The task force, co-chaired by Bernhardt and U.S. Attorney General William Barr, aims
to develop protocols for law enforcement to respond to missing and slain Native American
persons cases and to improve data and information collection."
NBC News (7/27, Ortiz, 6.14M) reports, "Pledging to bring justice for Native American
families afflicted by higher rates of violence, homicide and human trafficking, Ivanka Trump
announced the opening Monday in Minnesota of the nation's first Indian Affairs task force office
dedicated to solving cold cases of missing and murdered American Indians and Alaska Natives."
Trump "joined Interior Secretary David Bernhardt to promote the office and the launches of six
other task force locations next month in Rapid City, South Dakota; Billings, Montana; Nashville,
Tennessee; Albuquerque, New Mexico; Phoenix; and Anchorage, Alaska. But Trump's arrival in
Bloomington, a Twin Cities suburb, drew rebuke from Democratic lawmakers and dozens of
protesters, including Native American women who remain skeptical of the Trump
administration's commitment to resolving the root causes of violence against Indigenous
women and providing adequate federal resources."
The Rapid City (SD) Journal (7/27, Zionts, 106K) reports, "Rapid City is one of seven
cities set to house a federal task force focused on solving cold cases of missing and murdered
Indigenous people." President Trump "created the task force to 'reduce the staggering number
of violent crimes committed against American Indians and Alaska Natives and close out
hundreds of cold cases," Bernhardt said in a news release from the Department of Interior.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Former Malaysian PM Convicted In First 1MDB Trial.
The AP (7/27, Ng) reports from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, "Former Prime Minister Najib Razak
was convicted Tuesday of crimes involving the multibillion-dollar looting of a Malaysian state
investment fund that brought down his government in a shocking election ouster two years
ago." The AP adds, "Najib was calm and stone-faced as he became the first Malaysian leader
convicted. He has vowed to appeal the verdict that could bring many years in prison." The
ruling in the "first of his five corruption trials came five months after Najib's Malay party
returned to government as the biggest bloc in an alliance that took power from the reformist
government that ousted Najib's in 2018. Analysts said the ruling would bolster the prosecution's
case in Najib's other trials and would signal to the business community the Malaysia's legal
system has strength in tackling international financial crimes. But others cautioned the ruling
could be overturned and his political party remains in office."
Reuters (7/28, Latiff) reports, "The case has been widely seen as a test for Malaysia's
efforts to stamp out corruption and could have big political implications for the Southeast Asian
nation. 'After considering all evidence in this trial, I find that the prosecution has successfully
proven its case beyond a resonable doubt,' Kuala Lumpur High Court Judge Mohamad Nazlan
Mohamad Ghazali said." Najib "faced seven charges of criminal breach of trust, money
laundering and abuse of power for allegedly illegally receiving nearly $10 million from former
1MDB unit SRC International. He had pleaded not guilty." Reuters adds, "That's only a fraction
of the money that Najib is alleged to have misappropriated from 1MDB. Prosecutors say more
than $1 billion of 1MDB funds made its way into his personal accounts - over which he faces a
total of 42 criminal charges."
Operation Conducted By Honduran, Colombian Authorities Leads To Big Cocaine
Seizure.
AFP (7/27) reports a joint operation conducted by Colombian and Honduran authorities led to
the recent seizure of 1,984 pounds of cocaine from a fishing boat that was "intercepted...in the
eastern department of Gracias a Dios." Three Hondurans who were allegedly found on the boat
have been arrested, according to the AFP article, which highlights that the DEA and Colombian
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authorities "are working with Honduras to try to prevent drug smugglers from using Gracias a
Dios as a launchpad to" transport cocaine from South America to the US.
Bulletin: Cartel Likely Used Phones That Were Compromised By Law Enforcement.
Vice (7/27, 2.11M) reports, "A bulletin written by the FBI for law enforcement" organizations
"said that members of the Sinaloa drug cartel were likely using" an encrypted phone network
that was compromised by law enforcement earlier this year. The bulletin "notes that traffickers
from the Sinaloa transnational crime organization (TCO) were using Encrochat cryptophones as
recently as October of last year, according to an unclassified case citation that was marked DEA
sensitive and also law-enforcement sensitive by the FBI."
OTHER FBI NEWS
Senate GOP's COVID-19 Stimulus Proposal Includes $1.75B For New FBI
Headquarters.
The Washington Post (7/27, O'Connell, Kim, Werner, 14.2M) reports, "Under intense White
House pressure, Senate Republicans agreed Monday to allocate $1.75 billion in their
coronavirus relief bill towards the construction of a new D.C. headquarters of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation." This reflects President Trump's "ongoing interest in building a new
headquarters for the FBI downtown, rather than a secure campus in the suburbs that was
envisioned before he took office." The article says while "the provision says the money would
enable the bureau to prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus, domestically or
internationally,' the request did not appear to be related to the economic fallout of the
pandemic, which lawmakers are rushing to address before expanded jobless aid expires later
this week."
The Hill (7/27, Bolton, 2.98M) reports, "Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate
Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) on Monday accused President Trump of self-dealing
in pressing Senate Republicans to include in their coronavirus relief proposal $1.75 billion to
rebuild the FBI headquarters on Pennsylvania Avenue in downtown Washington." The Hill adds,
"Democrats suspect Trump is pressing for the money to rebuild the FBI headquarters in
downtown D.C. so that it doesn't move out from its space on 9th Street and Pennsylvania and
leave open a prime piece of real estate that could be occupied by a new hotel that would pose
serious competition to the Trump International Hotel across the street. `They don't have money
for food stamps but they have money for an FBI building just so that they can diminish
competition for the president's hotel,' Pelosi said to reporters after meeting with Treasury
Secretary Steve Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows Monday evening."
The Washington Times (7/27, Boyer, 492K) reports, "Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell, who unveiled the roughly $1 trillion package on Monday, initially said he didn't
believe the money for the FBI construction was in the legislation. Told that it was, the Kentucky
Republican said the administration insisted on it. `You'll have to ask them why they insisted that
be included,' he told reporters." The Times adds, "President Trump has expressed an interest in
rebuilding the headquarters, which is located about a block from the Trump International Hotel.
Earlier plans envisioned relocating the agency's headquarters outside Washington."
CQ Roll Call (7/27, Lerman, 154K) reports, "Democrats have suggested that the
president's interest in the Trump Hotel, also on Pennsylvania Avenue, may have influenced the
decision to not redevelop the FBI site, potentially as a competing hotel. Top Senate Republicans
were at pains to defend the provision in the coronavirus relief package, which the White House
pushed for."
CNN (7/27, Mattingly, Raju, Barrett, Kelly, 83.16M) reports, "McConnell initially indicated
at a news conference Monday that he was not aware the FBI provision was in the bill but then
moments later said the White House `insisted that be included: `I'm not sure that it is,'
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McConnell replied to a reporter when he was first asked why the money was in the Senate GOP
proposal. An appropriations aide to McConnell then interjected and explained off camera to
everyone in the room: `There's a limitation to honing specifically to Covid-related matters, so
well get more information for you." McConnell "was then asked if it was possible an almost $2
billion could be in the measure without his knowledge, and he seemed to suggest he was
aware. `Well, in regard to that proposal, obviously we had to have an agreement with the
administration in order get started. And they will have to answer the question as to why they
insisted on that!"
Bloomberg (7/27, House, 4.73M) reports, "Plans to move the FBI from its current location
about four blocks from the White House had been in the works since about 2012, but were
scuttled after Trump took office. The president told reporters last week that other potential sites
in nearby Maryland and Virginia were not preferable because `you have to be near the Justice
Department' and 'there's nothing better than the site," but Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) "and
other Democrats have accused Trump of trying to keep the bureau's headquarters at its current
site because it occupies a significant chunk of real estate near the Trump International Hotel,
and keeping it there would prevent other commercial development in the spot."
Barr To Defend Administration In Congressional Testimony.
The Washington Post (7/27, Zapotosky, Demirjian, 14.2M) reports Attorney General Barr "will
tell the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday that President Trump has not inappropriately
intervened in Justice Department business - even though Barr has more than once moved in
criminal cases to help the president's allies - and he will defend the administration's response
to civil unrest in the country, according to a copy of his opening statement." Barr, according to
the statement, "will take a defiant posture as he testifies before the panel for the first time
since Democrats took control of it, alleging that they have attempted to 'discredit' him." Barr is
quoted as saying in his opening statement, "From my experience, the President has played a
role properly and traditionally played by Presidents."
The New York Times (7/27, Savage, Fandos, 18.61M) says Tuesday's testimony "is
expected to be a showdown over his interventions in the criminal cases of President Trump's
allies and his role in deploying federal agents to confront protesters demanding racial justice in
Washington and across the country." For Barr, the hearing "will offer the highest-profile platform
to date to explain his rationale for the protest response and other issues, like voter fraud and
the special counsel's Russia investigation."
The Washington Times (7/27, Mordock, 492K) reports Barr is expected to "call on
committee Democrats to condemn the violence." Barr will say, "To tacitly condone destruction
and anarchy is to abandon the basic rule-of-law principles that should unite us even in a
politically divisive time."
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
Trump Touts "Tremendous Success" In Development Of Coronavirus Vaccine.
President Trump on Monday visited a Research Triangle Park company in North Carolina and
touted progress toward treatments and a potential vaccine for COVID-19. The Raleigh News &
Observer (7/27, Eanes, Murphy, Shaffer, 425K) quotes the President as saying at the beginning
of his remarks at Fujifilm Diosynth in Morrisville, "We will achieve a victory over the virus by
unleashing American scientific genius." Fujifilm Diosynth, the News & Observer notes, "is
manufacturing a vaccine for the biotech company Novavax, which was awarded $1.6 billion
from the federal government as part of an effort to speed up coronavirus vaccine development."
Trump later told WRAL-TVVi Raleigh, NC (7/27, 170K) in an interview, "We're having
tremendous success. That is why we are North Carolina today, because this is a great plant and
great scientists and they are very close to having the vaccine. When that happens, we are
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going to distribute it in record time" and "if we can do that, that will be a great achievement. ...
We are going to have a vaccine very soon, by the end of the year, maybe even a little sooner
than that. That will be a great achievement. That would have been years ahead of schedule."
Says Newsweek (7/27, Crisp, 1.53M), "If true, it would mark a significant achievement months
ahead of schedule and give Trump potentially game-changing news as he faces his Democratic
rival...in the November 3 election" - but "if Trump oversells, it could potentially sink his already
struggling campaign."
WNCN-TVVi Raleigh-Durham, NC (7/27, 17K) recounted that Trump "praised the hard
work of people at this facility and ones just like it, all working toward creating a vaccine as part
of the Administration's Operation Warp Speed. President Trump promised the United States
would defeat the coronavirus in record time." Trump was shown saying, "We have shaved years
off of the time it takes to develop a vaccine. In some cases, many years, and we have done it
while maintaining the FDA gold standard for safety." WNCN added that Trump "said the hope is
this strategy will cut down on people waiting for a dose of the vaccine." Trump also said, "We
are mass-producing all of the most promising vaccine candidates in advance. so, that on the
day one that it's approved, it will be available to the American people immediately. ... There has
never been anything like this in terms of speed, nothing even close." WJZY-TVVi Charlotte, NC
(7/27, 8K) said that North Carolina "is not just a major technology hub, but a crucial state
for...Trump to try to hold in 2020," and WITN-TVVi Greenville, NC (7/27, 17K) that "the visit
and the President's response to the pandemic was criticized by state Democrats...who say he
could be doing more to fight this pandemic than he is."
CNBC (7/27, Feuer, Kim, 3.62M) reports on its website that Trump also announced that
"the US government has awarded Fujifilm a $265 million contract to expand the country's
coronavirus vaccine manufacturing capacity." Trump said HFIS "awarded the contract to the
Fujifilm Texas A&M Innovation Center in College Station, Texas."
The Hill (7/27, Samuels, 2.98M) reports "the trip to North Carolina was brief - he spent
roughly an hour inside the biotech facility in total — but remained closely on message." To the
AP (7/27), Trump's "handling of the coronavirus pandemic put his political fate in grave
jeopardy. Now he's hoping to get credit for his administration's aggressive push for a vaccine -
and crossing his fingers that one gets approved before Election Day." The Washington Times
(7/27, Howell, 492K) says that "battered by claims he fumbled the virus response," Trump also
"rattled off his administration's push to build ventilators and replenish the federal stockpile of
personal protective equipment, while distributing point-of-care testing machines to nursing
homes." WXII-TV Winston-Salem, NC (7/27, Shrair, 109K) recounts that the President "also
encouraged folks to social distance, wash your hands and wear a mask."
All three major network newscasts covered the President's trip, highlighting the fact that
he donned a mask - and not so much his optimistic message on vaccine development. Ben
Tracy of the CBS Evening NewsVi (7/27, story 3, 1:20, O'Donnell, 4.46M) reported "Trump did
wear a mask...during a visit to a biotech company in the key battleground state of North
Carolina" which "is working on components for a coronavirus vaccine," and Peter Alexander of
NBC Nightly NewsVI (7/27, story 4, 1:45, Holt, 6.32M) likewise remarked on Trump "for only
the second time in public wearing a mask while touring a biotech center in North Carolina." Both
CBS and NBC devoted most of their segment to coverage of National Security Adviser O'Brien
testing positive for the virus.
ABC World News TonightVi (7/27, story 3, 2:25, Muir, 7.11M) reported that in North
Carolina, "the President did wear a mask, just the second time he has done so in public, as he
visited a vaccine production facility." Trump was shown saying, "A second vaccine is likely to
enter Phase 3 in a matter of days." However, added ABC, "the President also seemed to
contradict health experts who say much of the country is dealing with an alarming spike in new
infections, largely because the states reopened too quickly." Trump, on the other hand,
"suggested some states are not opening quickly enough." Said Trump, "I really do believe a lot
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of the governors should be opening up states that they're not opening, and we will see what
happens with them." Along those lines, Yahoo! News (7/27, Stableford, 12.82M) recounts
"Trump continued to urge states to reopen their economies Monday despite the sharp increase
in the number of Americans testing positive for COVID-19 in recent weeks."
The New York Post (7/27, Bowden, 4.57M) similarly reports "Trump donned a mask," and
that he "has embraced wearing masks in recent weeks, pulling it out of his pocket at the
rebooted coronavirus briefings and calling it an act of patriotism after mocking...[Joe] Biden for
wearing one in May."
WWAY-TVVi Wilmington, NC (7/27, 10K) reported, meanwhile, that when he took
questions from the media, Trump "was asked about the state's decision regarding the
Republican National Convention and how the nomination night will be going ahead as planned."
Trump was shown saying, "We are having a very major - I guess that would be the nomination
night, so that is Monday, that will be Monday, they are going to be here and the rest we will do
in a different form. We could have done it many different ways, but I think we did the right
thing, and I'm really happy that we're going to be having a piece of it, at least , and a very
important piece in North Carolina."
Moderna Begins Final-Stage Testing Of Corona virus Vaccine Candidate. The AP
(7/27, Neergaard, Hill, Noveck) reports that "the biggest test yet of an experimental COVID-19
vaccine got underway Monday with the first of some 30,000 Americans rolling up their sleeves
to receive shots created by the US government as part of the all-out global race to stop the
outbreak." The AP adds "final-stage testing of the vaccine, developed by the National Institutes
of Health and Moderna Inc., began with volunteers at numerous sites around the US given
either a real dose or a dummy without being told which." Reuters (7/27, Maddipatla, O'Donnell)
indicates that NIH Director Collins said in a release announcing the start of Moderna's Phase 3
trial, "Having a safe and effective vaccine distributed by the end of 2020 is a stretch goal, but
it's the right goal for the American people." Reuters reports that the trial is "the first such late-
stage study under the Trump administration's program to speed development of measures
against the novel coronavirus, adding to hope that an effective vaccine will help end the
pandemic."
The Wall Street Journal (7/27, Loftus, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports that NIH's
Collins said on Monday, "Yes, we're going fast, but no, we are not going to compromise safety
or efficacy." In its lead story, the CBS Evening NewsVi (7/27, lead story, 3:25, O'Donnell,
4.46M) referred to the trials as "a huge leap forward in the development of a vaccine," and
showed Collins saying, "This is a very significant milestone. ... This is the first of several
vaccines that are going to be coming along quite quickly. So people are going to be hearing a
lot about this." ABC World News TonightVi (7/27, story 2, 1:15, Muir, 7.11M) showed Collins
saying to the volunteers, "You're contributing to the kind of scientific advance that might
ultimately save hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of lives." NBC Nightly NewsVi (7/27,
lead story, 2:55, Holt, 6.32M) reported, meanwhile, that "there is growing reason to hope
tonight that medicine can soon do what all those changes in human behavior seemingly can't:
prevent COVID infections. ... What once seemed so far away may now be in sight as our
current best defense from the virus, social distancing, seems to be crumbling against a wall of
denial."
CNBC (7/27, Lovelace, 3.62M) reports on its website that NIAID Director Fauci "said
Monday he is 'not particularly concerned' about the safety risk of a potential coronavirus
vaccine by Moderna, despite the fact that it uses new technology to fight the virus." According
to CNBC, Moderna's vaccine candidate "uses messenger ribonucleic acid, or mRNA molecules, to
provoke an immune response to fight the virus," and "while early studies show promise, mRNA
technology has never been used to make a successful vaccine before." USA Today (7/27,
Weintraub, 10.31M), the Washington Times (7/27, Neergaard, 492K), CQ Roll Call (7/27,
Siddons, 154K) and New York Times (7/27, Grady, 18.61M), among other news outlets, also
report the story.
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CNBC (7/27, Lovelace, Feuer, 3.62M) reports on its website, meanwhile, that Moderna
shares "rose nearly 6% on Monday after the biotech company announced it received an
additional $472 million from the U.S. government to support the development of its potential
coronavirus vaccine." Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel indicated Monday that "the results from
Moderna's late-stage trial could be released as soon as October." The AP (7/27, Neergaard, Hill)
has more details of the vaccine candidate's Phase 3 trial.
Pence Hails "Historic Day" Of "Hope" And "Promise" As He Visits Miami For
Launch Of Vaccine Trial. The Miami Herald (7/27, Chang, Smiley, 1.09M) reports Vice
President Pence "visited the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine on Monday to focus
attention on one of the pandemic's few potential bright spots: the rapid development of a
vaccine against the disease." The Herald adds that "noting the president's emphasis on speed,
Pence said the federal government has positioned itself through public-private collaborations
with drug makers to ramp up mass production of a vaccine at the first sign of its safety and
effectiveness."
The South Florida Sun Sentinel (7/27, Goodman, 545K) recounts that "the University of
Miami is one of 89 sites in the country that will enroll volunteers for the 30,000-person study,
which will look at the safety and effectiveness of a vaccine manufactured by Moderna." Said
Pence, "This is a statement of confidence in the professionalism of the great healthcare team at
the University of Miami. ... Today is a historic day. It's a day of hope, a day of promise."
Navarro: No Other President Would Have Made As Much Progress On Vaccine.
On Fox News' Fox & Friends (7/27, 831K), Director of Trade and Manufacturing Policy Navarro
said the President "is shooting for January 2021 to have three million doses of vaccine. And
here is the thing, this is the only President who really could have got this done and what's going
to be effectively half or a third of the time that it usually takes. And the reason why [is] in the
old days the way vaccines were developed it was a sequential process. ... President Trump said,
'No, we are not going to do it that way, what we will do simultaneous development of the whole
process,' and be ready so that if that vaccine from Novavax or Pfizer is ready to go, we would
have tremendous bandwidth to manufacture at scale."
Global Alliance Says Vaccine Should Cost No More Than $40 Per Shot. Reuters
(7/27, Kelland, Steenhuysen) reports that "coordinators of a global coronavirus vaccines
funding scheme are looking at a wide range of potential prices for COVID-19 shots, with a
reported $40 per dose price tag the 'highest number' in that range." Seth Berkley, chief
executive of the GAVI vaccine alliance, "which is co-leading the COVAX facility designed to
ensure fair global access to COVID-19 shots, said the facility had no specific target price and
would also seek to negotiate tiered pricing for richer and poorer countries." According to
Reuters, COVAX is "co-led by GAVI, the World Health Organization and the CEPI Coalition for
Epidemic Preparedness Innovations and is designed to guarantee fast and equitable access
globally to COVID-19 vaccines once they are developed."
WPost Analysis: Advisers And Opponents Say Trump Has Failed To Show
Leadership On Pandemic. The Washington Post (7/27, Parker, Rucker, 14.2M) says
President Trump's advisers and those working to defeat him agree that the "best way for him to
regain his political footing is to wrest control of the coronavirus." The Post says Trump's "allies
and opponents agree he has failed at the one task that could help him achieve all of his goals -
confronting the pandemic with a clear strategy and consistent leadership." The Post cites
"people close to Trump," many of whom spoke anonymously, who "say the president's inability
to wholly address the crisis is due to his almost pathological unwillingness to admit error; a
positive feedback loop of overly rosy assessments and data from advisers and Fox News; and a
penchant for magical thinking that prevented him from fully engaging with the pandemic."
O'Brien Tests Positive For Coronavirus, Is "Self-Isolating."
The AP (7/27, Miller, Colvin) reports that National Security Adviser O'Brien "has tested positive
for the coronavirus - making him the highest-ranking official to test positive so far." The White
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House "confirmed that O'Brien has mild symptoms and 'has been self-isolating and working
from a secure location off site." The AP adds, "Officials did not respond to questions about the
last time the president and O'Brien had contact." The Washington Post (7/27, Wagner, 14.2M)
reports that on Monday, President Trump "said...that he had not seen O'Brien recently. ... 'I
haven't seen him lately; Trump said as he left the White House for a trip to North Carolina."
All three major network newscasts covered the story last night. ABC World News Tonight
Vi (7/27, story 3, 2:25, Muir, 7.11M) reported "the coronavirus is now reaching deeper into the
President's inner circle," while Ben Tracy of the CBS Evening NewsVi (7/27, story 3, 1:20,
O'Donnell, 4.46M) said "the President did not explain why he has not recently seen his own
National Security Adviser," and NBC Nightly NewsVi (7/27, story 4, 1:45, Holt, 6.32M) that "it's
unclear how much contact...Trump and O'Brien have had in recent weeks," though "their last
public appearance together was 17 days ago in Florida."
CNBC (7/27, Breuninger, 3.62M) reports on its website that the White House released a
statement reading, "There is no risk of exposure to the President or the Vice President. The
work of the National Security Council continues uninterrupted." Politico (7/27, Lippman, 4.29M)
reports that NEC Director Kudlow "told reporters on Monday morning that O'Brien got infected
from his daughter." Politico goes on to report that O'Brien, along with his deputy, Matt Pottinger,
were "early internal advocates of swift action to combat the outbreak," and "more recently, he
has focused on coordinating the administration's pushback against a rising China."
Bloomberg (7/27, Jacobs, Mohsin, 4.73M), which first reported that O'Brien had tested
positive, says, "Since his diagnosis, O'Brien has been isolating at home while still running the
National Security Council, doing most of his work by phone." Bloomberg adds, "NSC staff
weren't informed that O'Brien had tested positive," and "some found out through press reports."
Likewise, Reuters (7/27, Holland) indicates that the announcement that O'Brien had tested
positive "caught some White House staff off guard, as there had not been an internal memo
about it." USA Today (7/27, Jackson, 10.31M), the Los Angeles Times (7/27, Bierman, 4.64M),
The Hill (7/27, Samuels, 2.98M), and McClatchy (7/27, Wilner, 19K), among other news outlets,
also reports the story.
Commerce Department: Ross Hospitalization Was Not Related To Coronavirus.
CNBC (7/27, Breuninger, 3.62M) reports on its website that the Commerce Department
announced on Monday that Secretary Ross "has left the hospital where he had been admitted
for health reasons unrelated to the coronavirus pandemic." The 82-year-old Ross "had been
working from his home in Palm Beach, Florida, since at least late March."
Birx Advocates Mask-Wearing, Bar Closures In Tennessee Visit.
WKRN-TVVi Nashville, TN (7/27, 25K) that White House coronavirus task force coordinator
Deborah Birx visited Nashville Monday "with a message for Tennesseans." Birx "said bars should
be closed, indoor dining should be limited and everybody should be wearing a mask always."
Birx: "So, it's calling on all Tennesseans to make that sacrifice for your family, for your children
- so they can go back to school to really wear a mask and protect each other."
Miguel Almaguer of NBC Nightly NewsVi (7/27, story 2, 2:25, Holt, 6.32M) reported that
Birx made a "public plea" for rural mayors to mandate masks, and WSMV-TVVI Nashville, TN
(7/27, 422K) reported that Birx "had an urgent message to mayors who haven't imposed a
mask mandate, particularly rural mayors who have not imposed a mask mandate." Birx: "If
every rural mayor could mandate mask-wearing. The virus is there. You may not see it today
because it may still be in young people, but it's spreading and it will hit your nursing homes and
it will hit those that have serious consequences to this virus."
WZTV-TVVi Nashville, TN (7/27, 28K) reported that Birx "emphasiz[ed] social distancing,
closing bars and wearing masks" but "she stop[ped] short of supporting a state-wide mandate."
Birx: "We are asking everybody to make a personal sacrifice of responsibility to one another, to
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really decrease these caseloads by doing these recommendations." WTVF-TVVI Nashville, TN
(7/27, 7.33M) reported that Birx "was asked multiple times if she recommended the state
implement a mask mandate, and she wouldn't say yes or no. She did stress that that wearing
masks and closing bars are some of the most effective ways of flattening the curve." WTVF
added that Birx said Tennessee "is at the inflection point" and "she urges every mayor to
mandate masks, to which once again she was asked, why shouldn't the state issue a mandate
across the board." Birx: "I think in this case, we know that the rural mayors understand their
communities the best and would know how to mandate masks specifically. We've talked to the
governor about the importance of mask mandates. I think he has a sound strategy that he's
working through the state."
The Tennessean (7/27, Kelman, 458K) reports that while Birx said the state should close
bars and limit indoor dining, moments later, Gov. Bill Lee (R) "said he had no plans to follow
this recommendation. Lee said he would not close bars or limit restaurants or give county
mayors the authority to take these actions locally." Lee said, "I've said from the very beginning
of this pandemic that there's nothing off the table. I've also said that we are not going to close
the economy back down, and we are not going to. But I appreciate their recommendations and
we take them seriously."
Azar Credits Mask-Wearing For "Plateauing" Of COVID Cases In Key States.
HHS Secretary Azar said on Fox News' Fox & Friends (7/27, 831K) that while White House
coronavirus task force coordinator Deborah Birx "says we are seeing signs of plateauing, we are
not out of the woods yet. It is really important that people remain vigilant. We think it's due to
the fact that people are actually wearing their masks. ... They are social distancing. They are
engaging in good personal hygiene. The governors have closed some of these bars where you
just can't keep socially distant, and you are not going to wear a face covering." Azar added, "I
really hope people will remain vigilant and we go through this because we need to make it
through the next several months because we have so much promise there in terms of just
really credible shots at therapeutics, the next generation of therapeutics, as well as vaccines."
Report: 4,000 Federal Workers Seeking Disability Compensation For Contracting
COVID-19 At Work.
The Washington Post (7/27, Yoder, 14.2M) reports that "about 4,000 federal employees are
seeking disability compensation" because they "contracted the novel coronavirus at work," and
the "survivors of 60 deceased employees are seeking death benefits for the same reason."
According to a report from the Labor Department's inspector general, which "amounts to one of
the first accountings of the pandemic's impact on the health of the federal workforce." The total
number of claims "is expected to increase to 6,000 within weeks."
Ten States Set Single-Day Records For New Infections.
NBC Nightly NewsVi (7/27, story 2, 2:25, Holt, 6.32M) reported that as Florida "surpassed New
York, becoming the second state in the nation with the highest number of confirmed
coronavirus cases," across the country, "at least 10 other states have now set single day
records for new infections." NBC added that many of the new cases are due to "the disregard to
follow social distancing mandates nearly five months into the US COVID crisis." ABC World News
TonightVi (7/27, lead story, 3:30, Muir, 7.11M) reported in its lead story that in the US, there
are "more than 4.2 million confirmed cases and more than 147,000 lives now lost." Manuel
Bojorquez of the CBS Evening NewsVi (7/27, story 2, 2:20, O'Donnell, 4.46M) reported that
"social interactions appeared to be fueling the spread. Nearly three dozen life guards in two
New Jersey towns tested positive after gatherings, as did 40 members of a church in Alabama
after attending services."
Florida Reports Lowest Number Of New COVID Cases In Three Weeks.
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The Tallahassee Democrat (7/27, Kennedy, 180K) reports that Florida on Monday "reported its
lowest daily number of new cases in three weeks. The 8,892 additional cases were the fewest
since July 9. The 77 Floridians reported dead overnight from COVID-19 also is the state's lowest
daily toll in two weeks." The Miami Herald (7/27, Marchante, 1.09M) reports, "As of 3 p.m.
Monday, there were 9,098 COVID-19 patients admitted into hospitals throughout the state,
according to the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration dashboard."
DC Mayor's Quarantine Order Takes Effect.
The Washington Post (7/27, hiedgpeth, Zauzmer, 14.2M) reports an order from District of
Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) took effect Monday putting "restrictions on anyone coming
into Washington from a state that's considered high-risk due to its coronavirus outbreak." Under
the order, anyone coming to the District after "nonessential activities" in one of the high-risk
states must self-quarantine for two weeks. The Post adds, "The list of 27 hot-spot states
includes Arkansas, Arizona, Alabama, California, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa,
Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North
Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington
and Wisconsin." While city officials "acknowledged that local authorities would not be able to
widely enforce the order," they "said they expect residents and visitors to follow it."
Coronavirus Outbreak Could Endanger Baseball Season.
ABC World News TonightVI (7/27, lead story, 3:30, Muir, 7.11M) reported in its lead story that
the coronavirus is "derailing Major League Baseball's new season." Eleven players and two
coaches on the Miami Marlins are "infected, forcing them to cancel their home opener." The
Marlins "played despite four players testing positive on Sunday. Their opponent, the Phillies,
now getting tested." NBC Nightly NewsVi (7/27, story 6, 1:50, Holt, 6.32M) reported that the
Phillies "so far not confirming any new positive tests, but the domino effect already underway,
with the team pulling the plug on their game tonight against the New York Yankees." NBC said
that less than a week after the season began "the sport could be on the brink of closure."
Manuel Bojorquez of the CBS Evening NewsVI (7/27, story 2, 2:20, O'Donnell, 4.46M) reported,
"The ripple effect is already putting the new season in question."
Cain Still Hospitalized For Coronavirus.
Axios (7/27, Fernandez, 521K) reports, "Former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain
is still in the hospital undergoing oxygen treatment more than three weeks after first being
hospitalized with the coronavirus on July 2, according to an update from his Twitter account on
Monday." Fox News (7/27, Phillips, 27.59M) indicates on its website that Cain "had been notified
he tested positive for the virus on a Monday and his symptoms were serious enough to require
medical care by that Wednesday."
NYTimes Analysis: Expanding Data Set Helps Americans Make Sense Of Pandemic.
The New York Times (7/27, Bosman, 18.61M) reports that Americans have "an expanding set of
data to help them interpret the coronavirus pandemic." It includes "the number of sick and
dead" as well as "daily case counts in their cities and states, the percentage of positive tests,
the number of people hospitalized and the weekly change in cases." The availability of the data
is the result of "sophisticated data-gathering operations by newspapers, research universities
and volunteers" that have "sprung up in response to the pandemic, monitoring and collecting
coronavirus metrics around the clock." for many Americans, it provides "a way to make sense of
the pandemic - which is spreading in the South, West and much of the Midwest, but calming in
the Northeast - and to gauge whether things are better or worse in their own cities."
Some Patients With Coronavirus Suffer From Symptoms, Effects Months After Initial
Infection.
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The Wall Street Journal (7/27, Reddy, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports on so-called
long-haul patients with coronavirus who continue to experience symptoms or effects of the
disease for months after being initially infected.
Colleagues Say Doctor Responsible For Discredited Studies Has History Of Cutting
Corners.
The New York Times (7/27, Gabler, Rabin, 18.61M) reports that Sapan Desai, along with a
Harvard professor, "produced two studies in May that almost instantly disrupted multiple clinical
trials amid the pandemic." One study's findings reported that "anti-malaria drugs like
hydroxychloroquine, which President Trump promoted, were linked to increased deaths of
Covid-19 patients. But that study and another were retracted in June by the renowned journals
that had published them, weeks after researchers around the world suggested the data was
dubious." The Times adds that "many people who have known (Desai) described him as a man
in a hurry, a former whiz kid willing to cut corners, misrepresent information or embellish his
credentials as he pursued his ambitions." More than "a dozen doctors who worked with him
during training and residency said they had often found him to be an unreliable physician."
Republicans Say Border-Crossers Responsible For Rise In Coronavirus Cases.
The Washington Times (7/27, Al, Dinan, 492K) reports that several Republican lawmakers have
suggested that both migrants "and legal border crossers might be responsible for part of the
spike in cases in Texas, California and Arizona," and Acting DHS Secretary Wolf "has said U.S.
citizens and legal permanent residents in northern Mexico are fleeing overrun hospitals south of
the border and heading north for care in the U.S. That is contributing to higher numbers in
border states." However, "immigration rights activists say there is no evidence to back up those
claims," and that "U.S. policies are making the situation in northern Mexico worse by invoking a
part of public health law to immediately expel unauthorized border crossers and make asylum
seekers wait in Mexico for their hearings. ... Administration officials say the expulsions have
likely saved many lives in the U.S."
DO) Reaches Settlement With Company That Discriminated Against Permanent US
Residents.
The Washington Examiner (7/27, Mastrangelo, 448K) reports that the Justice Department has
reached a settlement with Asta CRS Inc., "a Virginia-based technology staffing company that it
says discriminated against permanent residents in favor of candidates on temporary work visas
during a recent hiring process." The settlement "is one in a string of deals cut with various
American companies as part of the DO) Civil Rights Division's Protecting U.S. Workers
Initiative," which "targets, investigates, and prosecutes companies that discriminate against
U.S. workers in favor of temporary visa workers."
Trump Lawyers File To Block Manhattan DA's Subpoena For President's Tax Records.
CNBC (7/27, Mangan, 3.62M) reports on its website that President Trump's lawyers on Monday
"doubled-down on their efforts to block Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. from
obtaining his tax records from the president's accountants with a grand jury subpoena." In a
new filing in Manhattan federal court, "Trump's lawyers said that subpoena for the tax returns
and other records from the accounting firm Mazars USA is 'wildly overboard; and 'is not
remotely confined to the grand jury investigation that began in 2018' at the direction of Vance."
The filing argued that "the subpoena demands voluminous documents that relate to topics and
entities far beyond the District Attorney's limited jurisdiction under New York law. ... This is not
a properly tailored subpoena for the President's records." They also claim the subpoena "was
issued in bad faith."
The New York Times (7/27, Weiser, Rashbaum, 18.61M) describes the filing as Trump's
"most forceful and detailed legal attack yet on the subpoena for his tax returns from the
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Manhattan district attorney." Trump's lawyers "asked that the judge issue an order barring Mr.
Vance from 'taking any action to enforce' the subpoena...and that he block Mr. Trump's
accounting firm, Mazars USA, from turning over any of the information." The Washington Post
(7/27, Jacobs, 14.2M) says Trump's lawyers "are expected to push for Vance's office to reveal
more about the scope of its investigation, a move the district attorney opposes."
Senate GOP Relief Plan Would Cut Weekly Unemployment Aid To $200 Per Week.
David Muir reported on ABC World News TonightVi (7/27, story 5, 1:40, 7.11M), "Millions of
Americans on unemployment, out of work in this pandemic, are waiting for word from
Washington, with that $600 supplemental payment now running out. Two months after the
Democrats unveiled their plan, Republicans are out with theirs tonight. It proposes a cut in that
payment." Peter Alexander said on NBC Nightly NewsVi (7/27, story 5, 0:20, Holt, 6.32M), "Top
Senate Republicans unveiled their proposal for the next economic relief package that would cut
emergency unemployment benefits for now from $600 to $200, and would green-light another
round direct payments to Americans." Norah O'Donnell said on the CBS Evening NewsVi (7/27,
story 5, 1:50, 4.46M), "A final agreement with Democrats could be weeks away, but...for
millions of unemployed workers, time is running out."
The AP (7/27, Mascaro, Taylor) reports that the GOP plan is "to cut the jobless boost to
$200 a week as it phases out to a new system that ensures no more than 70% of an
employee's previous pay," and "the boost would be available for up to four months to give
states time to transition to the new system." The New York Times (7/27, 18.61M) says the
"proposal to slash the jobless aid by two-thirds, part of a Republican plan they began rolling out
on Monday afternoon, is likely to be among the most bitterly contested issues in bipartisan
negotiations over the next round of pandemic relief." According to the Times, "Many
Republicans detest the supplement to state jobless aid, put in place by the $2.2 trillion stimulus
law, arguing that it is a disincentive to returning to work because it exceeds what some workers
can earn in regular wages."
The Washington Post (7/27, Al, Werner, Stein, Kim, 14.2M) reports House Speaker Pelosi
and Senate Minority Leader Schumer were set to speak with Chief of Staff Meadows and
Treasury Secretary Mnuchin Monday evening "as they rush to begin negotiations...bumping up
against a tight deadline before expanded jobless aid expires later this week." The Wall Street
Journal (7/27, Al, Duehren, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) says the proposed cut to the
emergency jobless benefit will be the focus of negotiations. Schumer said, "Now our Republican
friends are saying a bunch of things, some say they don't want to expand it at all, some are
saying, 'Let's give a 30% pay cut to these folks: Well, they're losing their jobs through no fault
of their own, and they should get a pay cut?" The Washington Times (7/27, Munoz, 492K)
reports Pelosi criticized the "'piecemeal' coronavirus spending proposal Monday morning,
blaming [Republicans) for slow rolling Congress' response to continued economic hardship."
The New York Post (7/27, Bowden, 4.57M) reports the proposed cut was the result of an
effort by Senate Majority Leader McConnell "to cap a fourth wave of stimulus spending to
around $1 trillion." Politico (7/27, Levine, Bresnahan, 4.29M) reports that McConnell "outlined
the pillars of the proposal, which will include another round of $1,200 in direct payments, more
money for the Paycheck Protection Program, a reduction in boosted federal unemployment
benefits, liability protection and more than $100 billion for reopening schools and colleges." The
Washington Times (7/27, Swoyer, 492K) reports McConnell said on the Senate floor Monday,
"Health, economic assistance, liability. and schools. Another historic package for the next stage
of this historic national fight."
Politico (7/27, Bresnahan, Desiderio, 4.29M) says GOP divisions "forced McConnell to
delay the unveiling of the $1 trillion proposal he released on Monday, an embarrassing setback
for the party at a critical moment. McConnell has also openly said that the plan would have
'fairly significant support' among Senate Republicans but 'probably not everyone' - which is as
close to a tell as McConnell gets to admitting his cards aren't very strong." USA Today (7/27,
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King, Wu, 10.31M) reports that "it appeared [GOP] divisions had not fully healed." Sen. Ted
Cruz (R-TX) told reporters, "There is significant resistance to yet another trillion dollars. The
answer to these challenges will not simply be shoveling cash out of Washington. The answer to
these challenges will be getting people back to work."
CNN (7/27, Mattingly, 83.16M) says on its website, "For most recipients of the $600
federal unemployment benefit enhancement, the final checks went out a few days ago," and yet
Republicans are, "just on Monday, releasing their opening bid, which...Trump's administration is
already moving away from in order to pitch a scaled-back proposal Democrats have already
rejected." Bloomberg (7/27, Doming, Davison, 4.73M) reports, "Replacing the expiring $600-a-
week supplements with a percentage of a worker's former wages could take most states eight
to 20 weeks to implement, after they receive Department of Labor Guidance," according to the
National Association of State Workforce Agencies.
The AP (7/27, Rugaber) reports, "As Congress and the White House resume their efforts
to agree on a new economic aid package, evidence is growing that the U.S. economy is
faltering. And so is concern that the government may not take the steps needed to support
hiring and growth." Economist Nancy Vanden Houten said, "We're in a pretty fragile state again.
The economy needs another shot in the arm." Reuters (7/27), The Hill (7/27, Carney, 2.98M),
and Axios (7/27, Allassan, 521K) are among the other outlets reporting.
Kudlow Says Trump "Disappointed" By Absence Of Payroll Tax Cut. NEC Director
Kudlow said on Fox Business' Varney & Co. (7/27, 64K), "The President was disappointed he
didn't get the payroll tax for political reasons. I'm disappointed. I will just say this as a bit of an
editorial coming from me. You know, at some point, the White House and the Republicans,
Congress, Senate and House, have got to put some investment incentive, tax rate incentives
and regulatory reduction incentives, for long-term economic growth. The checks may be
essential, but the fact is, you can't spend your way into long-term prosperity."
NYTimes Analysis: GOP Bill May Contain "Benefit For Big Banks." The New York
Times (7/27, Flitter, Smialek, Eavis, 18.61M) reports under the headline "Republican Stimulus
Package May Come With A Benefit For Big Banks" that Senate Banking Chairman Mike Crapo "is
working on legislation that would give regulators the discretion to let banks exclude certain
items on their balance sheets when calculating how much capital they are required to hold."
That "could be particularly useful for banks with large Wall Street trading operations, because it
would let them increase their holdings of certain kinds of financial assets, like government
bonds, without requiring a corresponding increase in capital reserves."
Kudlow: "V-Shaped Recovery" Is "Very Much Intact."
NEC Director Kudlow said on Fox Business' Varney & Co. (7/27, 64K), "So far, what we know,
there's a huge housing boom. There's a retailing boom, there's an automobile boom. Trucking is
still very strong. You saw the equipment numbers, the manufacturing equipment numbers up
the chart, beating all expectation. We have had a jobs boom so far. And contrary to some poor
reading, unemployment claims and continuing claims are falling rapidly and the July jobs
number on unemployment and job increases I think is going to look pretty good." Kudlow
added, "I think the V-shaped recovery and the 20% second half growth is still very much
intact."
Stocks Finish Higher. Reuters (7/27, Carew) reports "Wall Street's main indexes
closed higher on Monday as investors monitored progress in US government stimulus efforts
along with rising US COVID-19 cases and bet on some of the market's most high-profile stocks
ahead of earnings reports." The Dow "rose 116.26 points, or 0.44%, to 26,586.15, the S&P 500
gained 23.88 points, or 0.74%, to 3,239.51 and the Nasdaq Composite added 173.09 points, or
1.67%, to 10,536.27." The AP (7/27, Choe, Troise, Veiga) says "Wall Street's rally got back on
track Monday, while gold rushed to a record at the start of a week packed with potentially
market-moving events." The Fox Business (7/27, Garber, 1.73M) website, among other news
outlets, also reports the story.
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Orders For Capital Goods Up By Most In Nearly Two Years. Reuters (7/27,
Mutikani) reports, "New orders for key US-made capital goods increased by the most in nearly
two years in June and shipments accelerated, but the gains were likely insufficient to avert the
deepest plunge in business investment and economic activity since the Great Depression in the
second quarter because of the COVID-19 crisis." Reuters adds "the improvement in
manufacturing reported by the Commerce Department on Monday was driven by pent-up
demand following the reopening of businesses."
Sen. Collins Joins Romney In Opposing Fed Nominee Shelton.
In what is heralded as a "News Exclusive," the Wall Street Journal (7/27, Timiraos, Subscription
Publication, 7.57M) reports that on Monday, Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) announced that she will
vote against economist Judy Shelton's nomination to serve on the Federal Reserve Board of
Governors. Collins becomes the second GOP senator to oppose Shelton, following last week's
announcement from Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) that he could not support the nomination. The
Journal says Shelton can still be confirmed if no more than one additional Republican joins with
Senate Democrats in opposition to Shelton's nomination. Citing the Journal, the Bangor Daily
News (7/27, Andrews, 198K) also reports the story, adding that "Shelton squeaked through the
initial nomination hearing before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
last week with a 13-12 vote along party lines. All Senate Democrats are expected to oppose the
nomination."
Reuters (7/27, Dunsmuir) quotes Collins as saying, "Ms. Shelton has openly called for the
Federal Reserve to be less independent of the political branches, and has even questioned the
need for a central bank." The Hill (7/27, Carney, 2.98M) and Bloomberg (7/27, Wasson, Dennis,
4.73M), among other news outlets, also cover Collins' announcement.
Trump Retweets Praise For Defense Bill He Has Threatened To Veto.
The Washington Post (7/27, Wagner; 14.2M) reports that on Monday, President Trump "shared
tweets...from Republican senators touting the benefits of a $740 billion defense authorization
bill - legislation he has threatened to veto if it retains a provision instructing the Pentagon to
rename military installations honoring Confederate generals." Trump's "Twitter activity was the
latest twist in Trump's efforts to simultaneously claim credit for legislation authorizing pay
increases for troops and other investments in the military while waging a battle over what he
has characterized as an effort to erase US history." Trump "retweeted tweets from 19
Republican senators making the case for passage of the bill, although none of them mentioned
the renaming provision."
Politico Report: White House Aides Struggle To Revise List Of Potential SCOTUS
Nominees.
Politico (7/27, Orr, 4.29M) reports that in an effort to "give disgruntled conservatives a dash of
hope after crushing Supreme Court losses on abortion and LGBTQ protections this summer,"
President Trump "made a promise: He would unveil a new list of reliably conservative jurists
before presidential debate season kicked into high gear. 'I will only choose from this list; he
pledged in a tweet last month." The President's tweet "caught top White House aides and
conservative legal figures off guard. But they quickly mobilized to review the existing 25 names
and decide who should remain in contention, who should be removed and who might qualify as
an acceptable addition."
Trump Says Twitter's "Trending" Tweet Listing Is Illegal.
The President tweeted Monday evening, "So disgusting to watch Twitter's so-called 'Trending',
where s000 many trends are about me, and never a good one. They look for anything they can
find, make it as bad as possible, and blow it up, trying to make it trend. Really ridiculous,
illegal, and, of course, very unfair!"
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Commerce Department Enlists FCC In "Tech Crackdown."
Politico (7/27, Hendel, 4.29M) reports under the headline "Administration Asks FCC To Carry
Out Trump's Tech Crackdown" that the Commerce Department has petitioned the FCC "to
narrow the liability protections of online companies," as President Trump "directed in May in
what he pitched as a crackdown on anti-conservative bias. Monday's petition includes a request
that the FCC impose a regulatory requirement on social media companies, even though the
agency doesn't regulate them." Commerce Secretary Ross said in a statement, "President
Trump is committed to protecting the rights of all Americans to express their views and not face
unjustified restrictions or selective censorship from a handful of powerful companies."
EPA IG Investigating Rollback Of Auto Emissions Standards.
The New York Times (7/27, Davenport, Friedman, 18.61M) reports the EPA Inspector General
has "opened an investigation into the agency's weakening of Obama-era regulations that would
have limited automobile emissions by significantly raising fuel economy standards." The IG
"demanded that top E.P.A. officials turn over briefing materials and other documents pertaining
to the regulation, which was finalized in late March as the Trump administration's single largest
rollback of federal climate change rules."
Lewis Lies In State At Capitol; Trump Says He Will Not Pay Respects.
USA Today (7/27, Groppe, Santucci, 10.31M) reports President Trump said Monday that he "will
not be attending memorial services for civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis this week. Lewis will lie
in state at the Capitol as part of six days of funeral proceedings." Asked by reporters "if he
would pay respects to Lewis Monday or Tuesday" at the Capitol, Trump said, "No, I won't be
going, no." Vice President Pence and Karen Pence were scheduled to pay their respects late
Monday, as were Joe and Jill Biden.
Lester Holt said on NBC Nightly NewsVi (7/27, story 3, 2:35, 6.32M), "He helped change
the course of history. And tonight, 10 days after he died, John Lewis is making history as the
first Black lawmaker to lie in state at the US Capitol Rotunda." ABC World News TonightVi
(7/27, story 4, 2:50, Muir, 7.11M) reported Lewis is "lying in state in the Capitol Rotunda, his
casket resting on the same wooden platform used for Abraham Lincoln." ABC's Pierre Thomas:
"Today, Rep. John Lewis came to Washington, his entire legacy fully embraced by the nation
and saluted by his peers as the 'conscience of Congress." On the CBS Evening NewsVi (7/27,
story 6, 2:25, 4.46M), Norah O'Donnell called it a "hero's farewell" for the "civil rights icon."
The Washington Post (7/27, Kane, Sonmez, Flynn, Brice-Saddler, 14.2M) reports,
"Lawmakers paid tribute to the late congressman and delivered a standing ovation when a
recording of his booming voice - a clarion call for racial justice — echoed through the Rotunda."
House Speaker Pelosi said, "It is fitting that John Lewis joins this pantheon of patriots, resting
upon the same catafalque as President Abraham Lincoln. We knew that he always worked on
the side of the angels - and now, we know that he is with them." The New York Times (7/27,
Broadwater, 18.61M) reports Senate Majority Leader McConnell "invoked the Rev. Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., a friend of Mr. Lewis's, who once said that 'the arc of the moral universe is long,
but it bends toward justice." McConnell said, "But that is never automatic. History only bent
toward what's right because people like John paid the price to help bend it." Politico (7/27,
Caygle, Ferris, 4.29M) also reports.
NBC Nightly NewsVi (7/27, story 10, 1:45, Holt, 6.32M) also aired a piece on the Bloody
Sunday protest in Selma, Alabama in 1965, while the CBS Evening NewsVI (7/27, story 11,
1:40, O'Donnell, 4.46M) looked at the history of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, which some want
renamed to honor Lewis.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
EFTA00150413
Cases Surge Around World, Prompting Lockdowns And Travel Bans.
The Wall Street Journal (7/27, Wen, Wang, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports that areas
such as Australia, Hong Kong, and Japan, which had seen minimal cases earlier in the spring
and summer, reported new highs in daily infections in the past week, illustrating the difficulty of
keeping the virus under control.
Reuters (7/27, Coates, Graff) reports that on Monday, "nations in Asia imposed new
restrictions...while an abrupt British quarantine on travellers from Spain threw Europe's vaunted
summer reopening into disarray, as the world confronted the prospect of a second wave of
COVID-19 infections." According to Reuters, "Surges were reported in a number of countries
previously singled out as places where the virus was under control." Reuters reports that
Vietnam "locked down the city of Danang, forcing tens of thousands of visitors to evacuate,"
and China "confirmed the most locally transmitted cases since early March." Meanwhile, Hong
Kong "banned gatherings of more than two people," and "a surge in infections in Spain
prompted Britain to order all travellers from there to quarantine for two weeks."
Bloomberg (7/27, 4.73M) also says that on Monday, China "reported the most domestic
coronavirus infections in more than four months as it battles outbreaks in its western and
northeastern regions, raising fears of a serious resurgence." According to Bloomberg, "Of the 61
infections reported Monday, 57 were local cases with 41 of them in Xinjiang, the politically
fraught western province where China's treatment of the local Muslim Uighur population has
come under global criticism."
Reuters (7/27, Strauss, Blenkinsop) reports, "Belgium announced measures on Monday
including a sharp reduction in permitted social contact designed to prevent a return to a
nationwide lockdown after a surge of coronavirus infections in the past three weeks." Prime
Minister Sophie Wilmes said that, "from Wednesday, a Belgian family or those living together
would only be able to meet five other people, sharply down from 15 now." Wilmes said, "We are
acting again today to keep the situation under control and to prevent a general lockdown."
Navarro Says He Predicted China Would Create A Deadly Pandemic.
Director of Trade and Manufacturing Policy Navarro said on Bannon's War Room Podcast (7/27)
that in his 2006 book "The Coming China Wars," he said that "because of the way the Chinese
Communist Party runs that country, there was a high likelihood...that China would create a viral
pandemic that could possibly kill millions. ... The reason why I made that prediction was
because of a close study of how China operates. And back then, the big concern there was the
animal husbandry, the way they did their fisheries, just the filthiness with which they created
what I called a viral soup. This was a couple of years after SARS. I looked at it, it's like, 'Wow,
this is coming again."
Iran Moves Mock Aircraft Carrier Into Strait Of Hormuz.
The AP (7/27, Gambrel]) reports satellite photos released Monday show that Iran "has moved a
mock aircraft carrier to the strategic Strait of Hormuz amid heightened tensions with the United
States." The AP describes the move as a signal that Iran "soon plans to use it for live-fire drills."
While "Iranian state media and officials have yet to acknowledge bringing the replica out to the
Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world's oil passes," its "appearance there suggests
Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard is preparing an encore of a similar mock-sinking it
conducted in 2015."
Israel Says It Fired On Hezbollah Fighters Who Crossed Over From Lebanon.
The New York Times (7/27, Kershner, 18.61M) reports that on Monday, the Israeli military
"said...that it had thwarted a raid by a Hezbollah 'terrorist squad' in a disputed area along its
northern border with Lebanon, resulting in an exchange of fire that capped days of mounting
tension there." Hezbollah "denied that there had been an exchange of fire, saying the only firing
had come from the Israeli side." The Times says Israel "had been bracing for retaliation from
EFTA00150414
Hezbollah since the killing of one of its operatives in a strike in Syria last week that was
attributed to Israel."
The Washington Post (7/27, Eglash, Dadouch, 14.2M) reports Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus,
an Israeli army spokesman, "said the flare-up was sparked by an 'infiltration attempt by a
terrorist squad that crossed the Blue Line by a few meters." The Post reports that Conricus"
said that the group was monitored by Israeli army field observers and that the 'infiltration was
successfully thwarted." The Post adds that although the Israel Defense Forces "identified the
fighters as a Hezbollah cell...there were doubts in Lebanon" because Hezbollah "does not shy
from claiming its operations or losses." Reuters (7/27) reports that "the incident occurred in the
Shebaa Farms area, occupied by Israel and claimed by Lebanon." Reuters says the United
Nations "regards the territory as part of Syrian land captured by Israel in the 1967 Middle East
war."
Taliban Executes Prison Guard As UN Releases Report On Violence Against Civilians.
The New York Times (7/27, Mashal, Rahim, 18.61M) reports, "The Taliban abducted and
executed a female prison guard in the eastern Afghan province of Ghazni, officials and relatives
said Monday, as the United Nations expressed concern over the war's unending toll on civilians."
Fatima Rajabi, 23, was abducted "on her way to her home village in the Jaghori district two
weeks ago," and after keeping her in captivity "for two weeks, the Taliban executed the young
woman and sent her body to her family, her brother, Samiullah Rajabi, said." The United
Nations, "in a report released on Monday on civilian harm in the Afghan conflict in the first six
months of the year, expressed particular concern about the rise of abductions and executions
by the Taliban."
China Takes Control Of US Consulate In Chengdu.
Reuters (7/27, Pollard, Peter) reports that China on Monday took control of "the premises of the
U.S. consulate in the southwestern city of Chengdu...after ordering the facility to be vacated in
retaliation for China's ouster last week from its consulate in Houston, Texas." The US consulate
"was closed as of 10 a.m (0200) on Monday, and Chinese authorities had entered the building
from the front door, China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement." Reuters says the
move "capped a dramatic escalation in tensions between the world's two biggest economies
that began when employees at China's Houston consulate were seen burning documents in a
courtyard last Tuesday, hours before Beijing announced that it had been ordered to leave the
facility."
Freedom Summit Speakers Paint "Alarming Picture" Of China's Increasing
Power. The Washington Times (7/27, Wolfgang, 492K) reports that at Liberty University's
Freedom Summit in Washington Monday, "prominent conservatives and defense experts painted
an alarming picture of China's growing power and influence across the globe and what it means
for America's future."
Russian Fighter Intercepts US Spy Plane Over Black Sea.
Reuters (7/27) reports that on Monday, the Russian Defense Ministry "said it had sent a Su-27
fighter plane...to intercept a U.S. surveillance plane over the Black Sea that it said was
approaching the Russian border." The Defense Ministry said the US P-8 Poseidon subsequently
"changed course to move away from the Russian border."
Experts Worry North Korea's Undelivered "Christmas Gift" Will Become An "October
Surprise."
The Washington Times (7/27, Taylor, 492K) reports that North Korea's threat last year of an
unpleasant "Christmas gift" never materialized, and now "national security sources worry that
the Christmas gift may become an 'October surprise' engineered by North Koreans to capitalize
on the rare moment presented by the impending U.S. presidential election." However, there is
EFTA00150415
disagreement among analysts over "whether North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's regime will
seek to project power violently or surprise everyone by engaging in sudden diplomatic
overtures - or perhaps do both with the ultimate goal of tempting Mr. Trump into a third face-
to-face summit."
Ambassador To South Korea Shaves Off Controversial Mustache.
The New York Times (7/27, May, 18.61M) reports that US Ambassador to South Korea Harry B.
Harris Jr. has shaved off his mustache, which he "had held fast to for two years, even as it
threatened to escalate diplomatic tensions." According to the Times, "Some in South Korea had
viewed the mustache worn by Mr. Harris, a Japanese-American, as a distasteful reminder of
those worn by the colonial Japanese governors who ruled Korea from 1910 to 1945, a period
that holds traumatic memories on the peninsula." The Times says Harris "long maintained that
he meant no disrespect with his mustache," but "this weekend...he said that the facial hair had
become intolerable under the masks he had been wearing in the muggy heat."
I
THE BIG PICTURE
Headlines From Today's Front Pages.
Wall Street Journal:
GOP Releases Coronavirus Relief Proposal After Delay
Google To Keep Employees Home Until Summer 2021 Amid Coronavirus Pandemic
Vanguard Challenges Bond Behemoths With Active Funds
Walmart, Kroger Bottle Their Own Milk And Shake Up American Dairy Industry
New York Rats Emboldened By Lockdowns Have A New Enemy: Sundrop
New York Times:
As Republicans Embrace Cut In Jobless Aid, Divisions Weaken Their Leverage
A Small Georgia City Plans To Put Students In Classrooms This Week
The Doctor Behind The Disputed Covid Data
Hoping To Understand The Virus, Everyone Is Parsing A Mountain Of Data
Miami Marlins Outbreak Postpones 2 Games And Rocks MLB's Return
Susan Rice Wants To Run For Office. Will Her First Campaign Be For VP?
Washington Post:
Coronavirus Relief Talks Ramp Up As GOP Unveils Plan
Virus Fuels Widening Gap Between Buyers, Renters
More Federal Agents Being Dispatched To Portland
Big Tech Is Next Industry To Face Congress's Glare
Fragmented Virus Rules Stir Tensions
For Now, Outbreak Won't Derail MLB Season
Financial Times:
Dollar Sinks To Two-Year Low On Concern Over US Virus Toll
Tesla's Market Ride Reflects Larger Forces At Work
European Travel Shares Slide As New Curbs Hit Recovery Hopes
Washington Times:
Danger Zone: US Finds F-35 Breakup With Frenemy Is Hard To Do
Black Lives Matter's Anti-Police Brutality Crusade Obscures Violent, Marxist Agenda
Experts Fear North Korea's Undelivered 'Christmas Gift' May Become 'October Surprise'
EFTA00150416
Border Crossers Driving Coronavirus Spike In Texas, California And Arizona, Lawmakers Says
White House, Democrats Start Negotiations Over New Coronavirus Relief
Trump: American 'Genius' Will Unleash Coronavirus Vaccine In 'Record Time'
Story Lineup From Last Night's Network News:
ABC: Coronavirus-Rising Cases; Coronavirus-Vaccine; National Security Adviser-Coronavirus;
John Lewis Tribute; Congress-Relief Bill; Hurricane Hanna; FDA-Hand Sanitizers; Violent
Protests; California-Pilot Makes Emergency Landing; New York-Changes to 9/11
Commemoration; Remembering Regis Philbin.
CBS: Coronavirus-Vaccine; Coronavirus-Rising Cases; National Security Adviser-Coronavirus;
Trump-Racial Issues; Congress-Relief Bill; John Lewis Tribute; Violent Protests; Hurricane
Hanna; FDA-Hand Sanitizers; Louisiana-Mom & Daughter Graduate Med School Together;
Alabama-Edmund Pettus Bridge.
NBC: Coronavirus-Vaccine; Coronavirus-Rising Cases; John Lewis Tribute; National Security
Adviser-Coronavirus; Congress-Relief Bill; Coronavirus-Sports; Coronavirus-Schools; Violent
Protests; Remembering Regis Philbin; Alabama-Edmund Pettus Bridge.
Network TV At A Glance:
Coronavirus - 19 minutes, 40 seconds
John Lewis Tribute - 7 minutes, 50 seconds
National Security Adviser-Coronavirus - 5 minutes, 30 seconds
Congress-Relief Bill - 3 minutes, 50 seconds
Violent Protests - 3 minutes, 20 seconds
Story Lineup From This Morning's Radio News Broadcasts:
ABC: Coronavirus-Rising Cases; Trump-FBI Headquarters; LAPD-New Bureau; John Lewis
Tribute; Hurricane Douglas.
CBS: GOP-Relief Bill; Coronavirus-Vaccine; Brian Kemp-Atlanta Lawsuit Dropped; John Lewis
Tribute; Unsolicited Foreign Seeds Shipments; Stocks.
FOX: Coronavirus-Vaccine; Congress-Relief Bill; Smithsonian Museum for Latinos.
NPR: Portland-Federal Agents; Coronavirus-California; Coronavirus-Kentucky; GOP-Relief Bill.
WASHINGTON'S SCHEDULE
Today's Events In Washington.
White House:
• President Trump — Has no public events scheduled
• Vice President Pence — Has no public schedule released
US Senate:
• Dem Rep. John Lewis continues to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol - Democratic Rep. John
Lewis continues to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol, following his death 17 Jul, from pancreatic
cancer, aged 80 * Agenda includes second day of public viewing at the top of the East Front
Steps (8:00 AM EDT - 10:00 PM EDT) * Lewis died on the same day as late civil rights
leader Rev. C.T. Vivian, whose funeral was held last week * He is the second Black lawmaker
to lie in state, alongside late Rep. Elijah Cummings, who died in October 2019
Location: U.S. Capitol, Washington, DC; 8:00 AM
• Senate Natural Resources Committee hearing on large-scale carbon dioxide management
technologies - Hearing 'To Examine Development and Deployment of Large-Scale Carbon
Dioxide Management Technologies', with testimony from Assistant Secretary of Energy for
Fossil Energy Steven Winberg; Energy Futures Initiative President and CEO Ernest Moniz
and Principal Joseph Hezir; Carbon Utilization Research Council Executive Director Shannon
EFTA00150417
Angielski; Columbia University Center on Global Energy Policy's Dr S. Julio Friedmann; and
Bipartisan Policy Center Director of The Energy Project Sasha Mackler
Location: Rm 366, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, DC; 10:00 AM
• Senate Commerce subcommittee hearing on the PACT Act and Section 230 of the
Communications Decency Act - Communications, Technology, Innovation, and the Internet
Subcommittee hearing on 'The PACT Act and Section 230: The Impact of the Law that
Helped Create the Internet and an Examination of Proposed Reforms for Today's Online
World, with testimony from NetChoice director Christopher Cox; U.S. Naval Academy Cyber
Science Department assistant professor Jeff Kosseff; Fordham University professor of law
Olivier Sylvain; and Internet Association deputy general counsel Elizabeth Banker
Location: Rm 106, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, DC; 10:00 AM
• Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing on 'How Does the DMCA Contemplate Limitations
and Exceptions Like Fair Use?' - Intellectual Property Subcommittee hearing on 'How Does
the DMCA Contemplate Limitations and Exceptions Like Fair Use?', with testimony from
Wikimedia Foundation Lead Public Policy Manager Sherwin Siy; National Press
Photographers Association General Counsel Mickey Osterreicher; Columbia University School
of Law Professor of Literary and Artistic Property Law Jane Ginsburg; Software and
Information Industry Association Vice President for Intellectual Property and General
Counsel Christopher Mohr; songwriter, producer, engineer, and educator Rick Beato;
GRAMMY Award winner Yolanda Adams; Durie Tangri partner Joseph Gratz; Caplin &
Drysdale Political Law Group Co-lead Matthew Sanderson; and Alter, Kendrick & Baron
partner Jacqueline Charlesworth
Location: Rm 226, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, DC; 10:00 AM
• Senate Governmental Affairs Committee hearing on coronavirus financial relief packages -
Hearing on 'Oversight of COVID-19 Financial Relief Packages', held via videoconference, with
testimony from former Sen. Phil Gramm; Project on Government Oversight Executive
Director Danielle Brian; Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget President Maya
MacGuineas; George Mason University Mercatus Center Senior Research Fellow Dr
Veronique De Rugy; and former Troubled Asset Relief Program Special Inspector General
Neil Barofsky; 10:00 AM
• Senate Finance Committee first hearing on protecting the reliability of the medical supply
chain during coronavirus - Hearing on 'Part 1: Protecting the Reliability of the U.S. Medical
Supply Chain During the COVID-19 Pandemic', with testimony from Customs and Border
Protection Office of Field Operations Executive Director of Cargo and Conveyance Security
Thomas Overacker; Immigration, Customs, and Enforcement Homeland Security
Investigations Global Trade Investigations Division Assistant Director Steve Francis; and
Department of Homeland Security Chief Procurement Officer Soraya Correa
Location: Rm 215, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, DC; 10:15 AM
• Senate Governmental Affairs subcommittee hearing on telework and coronavirus -
Regulatory Affairs and Federal Management Subcommittee hearing on 'Modernizing
Telework: Review of Private Sector Telework Policies during the COVID-19 Pandemic, held
via videoconference, with testimony from Deloitte Consulting Principal Sean Morris; The
Williams Companies Senior Vice President and General Counsel T. Lane Wilson; Reconciled
CEO Michael Ly; and Acronis SCS CEO John Zanni; 2:30 PM
• Senate Armed Services Committee nominations hearing - Nominations hearing considers Lt.
Gen. Glen VanHerck to be a general and U.S. Northern Command Commander and North
American Aerospace Defense Command Commander; and Lt. Gen. James Dickinson to be a
general and U.S. Space Command Commander
Location: Rm 106, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, DC; 2:30 PM
• Closed Briefing: Intelligence Matters
EFTA00150418
Location: CVC 217, U.S. Capitol Visitor Center, Washington, DC; 2:30 PM
US House:
• Dem Rep. John Lewis continues to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol - Democratic Rep. John
Lewis continues to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol, following his death 17 Jul, from pancreatic
cancer, aged 80 * Agenda includes second day of public viewing at the top of the East Front
Steps (8:00 AM EDT - 10:00 PM EDT) * Lewis died on the same day as late civil rights
leader Rev. C.T. Vivian, whose funeral was held last week * He is the second Black lawmaker
to lie in state, alongside late Rep. Elijah Cummings, who died in October 2019
Location: U.S. Capitol, Washington, DC; 8:00 AM
• House Infrastructure subcommittee hearing on experiences of vulnerable populations during
disaster - Economic Development, Public Buildings, and Emergency Management
Subcommittee hearing on 'Experiences of Vulnerable Populations During Disaster; with
testimony from Virginia State Coordinator of Emergency Management Curtis Brown (on
behalf of Institute for Diversity and Inclusion in Emergency Management); Second Harvest
Community Food Bank CEO Chad Higdon; World Institute on Disability Executive Director
and CEO Marcie Roth; and National Low Income Housing Coalition President and CEO Diane
Yentel; 10:00 AM
• House Technology subcommittees joint online hearing on countering-people trafficking -
Investigations and Oversight Subcommittee and Research and Technology Subcommittee
joint online hearing on 'The Role of Technology in Countering Trafficking in Persons, held via
Cisco Webex, with testimony from Polaris CTO Anjana Rajan; Massachusetts Institute of
Technology Lincoln Laboratory Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief Systems Group
Technical Staff Dr Matthew Daggett; Marinus Analytics President and co-founder Emily
Kennedy; and Business for Social Responsibility Associate Director of Ethics, Technology,
and Human Rights Hannah Darnton; 10:00 AM
• House Administration subcommittee virtual hearing on voting rights and election
administration in the U.S. territories - Elections Subcommittee hearing on 'Voting Rights
and Election Administration in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Other Territories, held via Cisco
Webex; 10:00 AM
• AG Barr testifies to House Judiciary Committee on Do) oversight - Hearing on 'Oversight of
the Department of Justice', with testimony from Attorney General William Barr * Committee
follows guidelines including maintaining six-foot social distance spacing as much as
practicable, use of a face covering required for all attendees, and no allowance for the
general public to attend in person * AG Barr agreed to testify after Committee Chairman
Jerry Nadler threatened to subpoena him to appear, amid accusations that he has
'politicized' the Do), over cases including those of Roger Stone and Michael Flynn plus the
removal from office of U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Geoffrey Berman
Location: CVC 200, U.S. Capitol Visitor Center, Washington, DC; 10:00 AM
• House Natural Resources Committee hearing on U.S. Park Police response to Lafayette
Square protests - Hearing on 'Unanswered Questions About the US Park Police's June 1
Attack on Peaceful Protesters at Lafayette Square; with testimony from U.S. Park Police
Acting Chief Gregory Monahan; and District of Columbia National Guard Major Adam
DeMarco * Held via Cisco Webex and in Rm 1324, Longworth House Office Building; 10:00
AM
• House Commerce subcommittee remote hearing on reforming the nation's drinking water
standards - Environment and Climate Change Subcommittee remote hearing on 'There's
Something in the Water: Reforming Our Nation's Drinking Water Standards', held via Cisco
Webex, with testimony from Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality Water Quality
Division Director Shellie Chard (on behalf of Association of State Drinking Water
Administrators); Association of Metropolitan Water Agencies (AMWA) CEO Diane VanDe Hei;
EFTA00150419
and Natural Resources Defense Council Healthy People and Thriving Communities Program
Senior Director of Health and Food Mae Wu; 11:00 AM
• House Rules Committee hearing - Hearing on 'H.R. 7617 - Defense, Commerce, Justice,
Science, Energy and Water Development, Financial Services and General Government,
Homeland Security, Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, Transportation, Housing,
and Urban Development Appropriations Act, 2021', held via Cisco Webex; /1:00 AM
• House Homeland Security Committee hearing on 'Protecting the Integrity of the 2020
Elections' - NO LONGER ON CALENDAR: Cybersecurity, Infrastructure Protection, &
Innovation Subcommittee hearing on 'Secure, Safe, and Auditable: Protecting the Integrity
of the 2020 Elections, with testimony from German Marshall Fund of the United States
Alliance for Securing Democracy Elections Integrity Fellow David Levine; Common Cause
Director of Voting and Elections Sylvia Albert; National Vote at Home Institute CEO Amber
McReynolds; and Center for Internet Security President and CEO John Gilligan
Location: Rm 310, Cannon House Office Building, Washington, DC; 12:00 PM
• House Climate Crisis Committee remote hearing on 'Building a Vibrant and Just Clean
Energy Economy' - Remote hearing on 'Solving the Climate Crisis: Building a Vibrant and
Just Clean Energy Economy, held via Cisco Webex, with testimony from The New School
Tishman Environment and Design Center Associate Director Dr Ana Baptista; BlueGreen
Alliance Executive Director Jason Walsh; Clean Grid Alliance Executive Director Beth Soholt;
and Environmental Progress founder and President Michael Shellenberger; 2:00 PM
Cabinet Officers:
• Annual Australia-U.S. Ministerial Consultations in the U.S. conclude - Annual Australia-
United States Ministerial Consultations (AUSMIN 2020), with Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo and Secretary of Defense Mark Esper co-hosting Australian Foreign Affairs Minister
Manse Payne and Defence Minister Linda Reynolds, conclude
Location: State Department, Washington, DC
• AG Barr testifies to House Judiciary Committee on Doi oversight - Hearing on 'Oversight of
the Department of Justice', with testimony from Attorney General William Barr * Committee
follows guidelines including maintaining six-foot social distance spacing as much as
practicable, use of a face covering required for all attendees, and no allowance for the
general public to attend in person * AG Barr agreed to testify after Committee Chairman
Jerry Nadler threatened to subpoena him to appear, amid accusations that he has
'politicized' the DoJ, over cases including those of Roger Stone and Michael Flynn plus the
removal from office of U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Geoffrey Berman
Location: CVC 200, U.S. Capitol Visitor Center, Washington, DC; 10:00 AM
Visitors:
• Annual Australia-U.S. Ministerial Consultations in the U.S. conclude - Annual Australia-
United States Ministerial Consultations (AUSMIN 2020), with Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo and Secretary of Defense Mark Esper co-hosting Australian Foreign Affairs Minister
Manse Payne and Defence Minister Linda Reynolds, conclude
Location: State Department, Washington, DC
This Town:
• Dem Rep. John Lewis continues to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol - Democratic Rep. John
Lewis continues to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol, following his death 17 Jul, from pancreatic
cancer, aged 80 * Agenda includes second day of public viewing at the top of the East Front
Steps (8:00 AM EDT - 10:00 PM EDT) * Lewis died on the same day as late civil rights
leader Rev. C.T. Vivian, whose funeral was held last week * He is the second Black lawmaker
to lie in state, alongside late Rep. Elijah Cummings, who died in October 2019
Location: U.S. Capitol, Washington, DC; 8:00 AM
EFTA00150420
• USIP Bipartisan Congressional Dialogue on `Advancing International Religious Freedom' -
'Advancing International Religious Freedom' online Bipartisan Congressional Dialogue hosted
by the U.S. Institute of Peace, with National Prayer Breakfast honorary co-chairs Republican
Rep. John Moolenaar and Democratic Rep. Tom Suozzi sharing their experiences advancing
issues of international religious freedom in Congress and abroad, and how international
religious freedom impacts fragile states, from violent extremism to human rights to the
protection of vulnerable communities; 9:00 AM
• Do] virtual public workshop on competition in the licensing of public performance rights in
the music industry - Department of Justice holds virtual public workshop on competition in
the licensing of public performance rights in the music industry, to 'provide a further venue
for industry stakeholders to weigh in on the American Society of Composers, Authors, and
Publishers (ASCAP) and Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI) consent decrees and their implications
for antitrust law enforcement and policy as we enter the third decade of the 21st century
and as music distribution continues to evolve through technological innovation'. Day one
speakers include LeAnn Rimes and Pharrell, National Music Publishers' Association President
and CEO David Israelite, Songwriters of North America Executive Director Michelle Lewis,
ASCAP CEO Elizabeth Matthews, BMI President and CEO Michael O'Neill, National Association
of Broadcasters President and CEO Gordon Smith, Universal Music Publishing Group Chief
Counsel David Kokakis, and Nashville Songwriters Association International Executive
Director Bart Herbison; 12:30 PM
• CFA Virtual National Food Policy Conference - Consumer Federation of America Virtual
National Food Policy Conference, focusing on how the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic is
affecting the food system, with day one keynote from Food and Drug Administration
Commissioner Dr Stephen Hahn; 1:00 PM
• Chilean president speaks as part of Washington Conference on the Americas Virtual Series -
Washington Conference on the Americas Virtual Series - `After the Pandemic: Restoring
Hope and Growth in the Americas' - continues with Chilean President Sebastian Pinera *
Event held in partnership with the State Department Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs
* Virtual series replaces in-person conference, originally scheduled for May, due to the
coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic
• U.S. Federal Open Market Committee meeting - Federal Open Market Committee meeting,
first day of two-day meeting, with interest rates decision tomorrow * The FOMC decided to
maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 0-0.25% at its last meeting in June
as it continued to deal with the impact of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic on the U.S.
economy
Location: Washington, DC
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EFTA00150421
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