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“He took my breath away”: Dyan Cannon on loving Cary Grant and making his biopic series “Archie”

Adapted in part from Dyan Cannon’s memoir, “Dear Cary,” and produced by Cannon and her daughter, Jennifer Grant, “Archie” is an absorbing four-part miniseries on BritBox that examines episodes from the life of Cary Grant (Jason Isaacs).

The series toggles back and forth in time as actor Cary Grant, on stage in Joliet, Ill., recounts episodes from his childhood, as well as his relationships with Cannon (Laura Aikman) and his mother Elsie (Harriet Walter). As a child in London, Archibald Leach suffered a series of tragedies, including the early death of his brother. His young mother, Elsie (Kara Tointon) is committed to a mental institution by his father, Elias (Henry Lloyd-Hughes). When his father leaves him, teenage Archie (Oaklee Pendergast) decides to join a theatrical company and tour New York. He chooses not to return and struggles to find a work in showbusiness, eventually launching his film career in a Mae West vehicle, “She Done Him Wrong.” 

“Archie” also depicts Grant’s romance with young actress Dyan Cannon, which goes from flirtation to eventual marriage and parenthood, with several bumps along the way. Grant is incredibly controlling, and Cannon leaves him more than once because of how he micromanages her — picking out her clothes, putting coasters under every glass, hoarding imported candy bars, making career decisions for her and even correcting her Thank You cards. He also introduces her to LSD, against her will. 

It is only after the birth of his daughter Jennifer that Grant makes some decisions about his life and how to be better toward those around him. 

Cannon, who is as accomplished behind the camera as in front of one — she was the first Oscar-nominated actress nominated for an Academy Award in the best short film, live action category for her 1977 short “Number One” — chatted with Salon about making “Archie” and her life with Cary Grant. 

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What was your impression of Grant, before and after meeting him, as well as while you were with him? Did he exude that charm that everyone feels? 

[Laughs.] Before I met him, I was in Rome, filming. I got a call from my agent saying Cary Grant wants to meet you; he has a part in a movie for you. I asked if they would pay my way back, they said, “No.” I said, I’m staying in Rome. When I came back, my agent, unbeknownst to me, said I was going on another interview and took me to Universal to meet Cary Grant, who had been calling my agent. I was escorted into his office, and it was like being hit by stun gun. The guy was tanned, wearing a white shirt open to the waist, and white slacks. He took my breath away. We sat for four hours and talked about life. He called me the next morning, and every morning after that. He would ask me out, and I’d say, “No, I can’t.” I’d lie and make up an excuse. My little voice said, “Don’t go there. He’s been married three times, and older than your father. He’s reported to do LSD, so don’t do it.” He called me for eight months. And, finally, his charm really won me over.  We started to date, and in the beginning, it was absolutely amazing; it was wonderful.

It has to be awkward for you to relive these things and present him fairly in a relationship that was abusive. Can you talk about the process of taking an episode from your life and memoir and turning it into a series?

It took me six years to write my book, and the reason it took that long was because I wanted to present the fair side of both of us. I have a daughter, and I have grandkids, and the public loves him. I did not want to take the stars out of their eyes. It was our relationship that was challenging for me. The book is one thing — reading something on the page is an experience. Jeff Pope came to me after reading my memoir and said, “Let’s make a movie.” And I said, “Let’s talk about what you want that movie to be.” We talked about it for about a year, and he would bring me what he wrote, and I would say that I liked this and not that. He said, “Let me option your book.” It took 10 years to evolve into a four-hour miniseries. I’m very proud of it, but is it easy for me to look at all of it? No. The third episode I have to turn away. It is very difficult for me to watch because it’s on the screen for people to see, and that’s awkward.

ArchieLaura Aikman as Dyan Cannon and Jason Isaacs as Cary Grant in "Archie" (Matt Squire/ITV Studios)

Laura Aikman nails Dyan. What can you say about casting, and how you worked with her to capture your personality as well as the dynamic between Cary and Dyan? Did you have discussions with Jason Isaacs to bring Cary to life? What advice did you offer about playing him?

We spent a great amount of time. I was involved in casting, and I was bowled over by Laura. I didn’t realize she was a Brit. Her accent was so perfect, and she got my laugh. I never heard anyone have my laugh before. We worked for many hours. They would ask me very personal questions and there are things we shared that no one will ever know about. Jason got the heart and soul of Cary. He did his work and that was not an easy job to take on.

“Archie” paints Grant as a control freak and touches on your age difference, his drug use, and how you were skeptical about taking LSD, as well as his bisexuality, which you overlooked. 

You say, “his bisexuality that I overlooked.” I never saw any indication of that during our marriage. He was faithful to me. I was faithful to him. If he had relationships before our marriage, I can’t attest to that. But during our marriage, he was with me, and I was with him. I never saw him flirt with a guy, but if that happened, that was up to Cary. That would not have impressed me one way or the other. 

Can you talk about the episodes you included in the series and why you included them?

I wanted to be fair. I wanted to protect his audience. Cary is beloved all over the world. There were many things I left out of the book. It boiled down to control. He felt if he could control the scene, and how I looked, and walked, and talked, and wrote, and did everything, his life would be OK. But that is not the way it works, is it? I thought, I would do that if I could make him happy — if I could give him that happiness he didn’t have as child; if I could make him feel safe and loved and wanted and cared for. But those are things we all have to work out for ourselves in life. You can’t really make anyone happy. 

I was very young. He was older than my dad. I loved him enough to want to make that happen. I gave up my career. After we divorced, I was stopped from working in Hollywood. He was on the board at Faberge. They offered me the part; he said if I took the part, he’d leave the board. They reneged the offer. It took me a long time to heal. We all have cracks. I had mine and he had his. The trick is to heal the cracks.

Why do you think Grant wanted to be with you? 

Honestly, Cary felt safe with me. He knew if he asked me to do something, I’d do it for him. He would not have sex. He had his first child with me. There is a reason for that. He felt safe with me and trusted me. And he could until I said, “No more.” He offered me a movie to stay with him. But I couldn’t do it. I knew what a movie starring opposite him would do for my career. But I couldn’t breathe in that atmosphere anymore.

Grant says on stage in Joliet, Ill., that it is wise to “Leave the past in the past, where it belongs.” However, you are bringing this past to light, first in your memoir from 2012 and now with this series, more than a decade later. Why keep telling this story? 

I think people will love him more after this miniseries. What I want them to take away from it is what this man had to go through as a child and, in spite of it, he became one of the biggest stars the world has ever known. I want them to understand what he went through as a child and remember all the amazing movies he made for us and the inspiration he was to so many. 

“Archie” suggests Grant was a better father than a husband. Why do you think that was? 

When there is intimacy between male and female it changes everything. A relationship between a husband and wife is different from a child and its father. He can feel safe again. He can protect the child, and the child won’t leave him or abandon him. I think he got to be the father he hoped his father would be and wasn’t.


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You have had a distinguished career in front of and behind the camera. Much of your success occurred after your relationship with Grant ended. Can you talk about how you focused your career after the relationship ended?   

It took me a while to heal from all that. I worked here and abroad and made a lot of movies. There came a time when I just decided I didn’t want to act anymore. The pressure of the industry and all that it includes, so I just stepped back. I turned down offers for years, and then I wrote the book, which needed to be written. A week after Cary passed away, Swifty Lazar, the top literary agent, said let’s write the book. I said “I’m not ready. It’s not time.” Twelve to 15 years later, Jackie Onassis said, “It’s time to write your book.” I said, “I’m not healed yet.” She said, “You don’t even have to mention Cary. You have enough of your own to talk about.” I said, “No, I need to be healed.”

It took me a long time. I really loved the man and more than that, I had to learn how to love myself. He wanted me to take LSD to save our marriage. I knew I shouldn’t take it. The corny thing is that he and his ex-wife Betsy took it — and they are divorced! So why are you telling me to take it?! He said, “I love you differently, and we have a baby, and it will save our marriage.” The LSD made me crazy. It messed up my mind terribly. It took me time to heal and get myself straight and understand why I caved. I used to be that girl who said “No.“ That is what attracted him. I said “No” for all those months. Once I said “Yes,” It changed. Isn’t that interesting?  


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I really thought I loved him, and he said he loved me, and it was going to be forever. I thought I better figure out what love really is. Because I don’t have the slightest idea what it is. I became a big spiritualized God girl. I finally found something that was for real. I’m happier now than I ever have been in life, and I found out what love is. This has brought a happy closure for me. 

A new episode of “Archie” premieres every Thursday on BritBox through Dec. 28.

Psychedelic-like drug MDMA inches closer to FDA approval

MDMA, the popular psychedelic-like drug also called "ecstasy" or "molly," has a storied reputation in underground rave culture but also has a long-established history of clinical use before it was banned in the 1980s. Officially known as 3,4-methyl​enedioxy methamphetamine, researchers have been exploring its possible effectiveness at treating alcoholism and social anxiety in autism. But for now, MDMA remains highly illegal to possess or sell. Now, the drug may be coming full circle as it inches ever closer to approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

The biotech company MAPS Public Benefit Corporation (MAPS PBC) is a step closer to official approval for its MDMA-based therapy that supposedly treats post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In a press release, MAPS PBC wrote that the company filed a new drug application (NDA) on Tuesday with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to approve MDMA for the first legal treatment of its kind in the United States. The FDA has 60 days to decide on both whether to accept MAPS PBC's NDA for review and, if so, whether to deem it a priority review (six months) or a standard review (ten months). If approved, MDMA would then have to be rescheduled so it can be available as a prescription medication. MDMA has been a Schedule 1 drug under the Controlled Substances Act since 1985, meaning it has not been available to public for medical use outside of clinical trials.

The proposed therapy uses "a combination of MDMA, psychotherapy (also known as talk therapy) and other supportive services to treat PTSD," the release stated. A 2021 meta-analysis in the Journal of Clinical Pharmacology found that although "MDMA-assisted psychotherapy has been shown to be an effective therapy for patients with PTSD with a reasonable safety profile, use of unregulated MDMA or use in the absence of a strongly controlled psychotherapeutic environment has considerable risks."

“Improper”: Legal analyst says gag order appeal was rejected because “Trump screwed up”

A New York appellate court on Thursday rejected former President Donald Trump's attempt to overturn gag orders in his civil fraud case that prohibited him from attacking the principal law clerk of the presiding state judge, The Messenger reports. In a four-page ruling, the New York Appellate Division, First Judicial Department stated that "the gravity of potential harm is small, given that the Gag Order is narrow, limited to prohibiting solely statements regarding the court’s staff" and noted that Trump's method of making the request "is not the proper vehicle" for challenging gag and contempt orders.

"The appellate court rules that Trump’s petition for a writ of prohibition was improper. Instead, Trump has to move to vacate the contempt orders and then appeal the denial of those motions if he wants to seek appellate relief," MSNBC legal analyst Katie Phang wrote on X, formerly Twitter. "In other words, Trump screwed up." Since the second day of his civil fraud trial, Oct. 3, 2023, Trump has been under a gag order barring him from making statements about court staff after he attacked the judge's principal law clerk on Truth Social.

New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron has since fined Trump twice for violating that order — penalties that amount to $15,000 — and expanded it to include Trump's defense team. "Another court rules that judges can protect the integrity of their proceedings & the safety of people involved in them with a gag order," former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance tweeted of the appellate court's ruling. "And when courts uphold these orders, they are implicitly saying judges can enforce them if they are violated."

Ariana Madix on the “weird” new season of “Vanderpump Rules” and the commodification of heartbreak

After a whirlwind nine months, Ariana Madix is ready for a vacation — but she’s going to settle for starring in a Broadway show instead. The “Vanderpump Rules” star has not slowed down since the news that her partner of nearly 10 years had cheated on her with a fellow cast member and former friend, a revelation that broke the internet and earned the Bravo reality show an Emmy nomination. Since “Scandoval” broke in March, Madix has starred in commercials, graced the cover of magazines, nearly won “Dancing With the Stars,” and soon she’ll live out a childhood dream by playing Roxie Hart in “Chicago.” 

All of these positives come at the unique cost of a devastating heartbreak and then getting through it in front of a camera crew, something that Madix hasn't lost sight of, even if her life today resembles Kacey Musgraves' "Golden Hour" more than Alanis Morissette's "You Oughta Know." “It felt like there was this commodification of my actual real life, and it was like, OK, it doesn't even belong to me anymore,” Madix said on “Salon Talks.” 

Telling her story on her own terms is just one way that Madix says she is taking back ownership over her experience. She joined “Salon Talks” to discuss the latest of her numerous projects that are part of her process of turning lemons into lemonade a la one of her favorite singers, Beyoncé: “Single AF Cocktails: Drinks for Bad B****es.” Madix opened up about what it means to be putting out a cocktail book that’s all her own, the new details she decided to share about her ex’s affair and the “scream-cry-dance parties” she had with friends while processing the breakup. 

With another season of “Vanderpump Rules” set to air in late January, Madix knows that this moment in her life will be back up for discussion and dissection, but at this point, she's used to it. “That's just the nature of living life publicly,” she told me. You can watch my full "Salon Talks" interview with Madix here or read a transcript of our conversation below.

The following interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

Can you tell me about how you created these drinks in order to tell a story?

Following in the footsteps of women that I really admire, like Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, Kelly Clarkson, women who are able to take their personal experiences and then channel them creatively into, well, their medium is music, and for me, my medium is cocktails. I'm telling the story of my past relationship from beginning to very messy end, but I'm also using cocktails in fun photography to illustrate that story. 

The photographs, Kelly Paleo, who actually did the photos for my first cocktail book with my former co-author, she also did the photos for this book. It was a really big deal for me to have her involved because she is the most incredible photographer. As you've seen, the photos are just amazing. She's awesome.

Is there one drink that you're really excited for fans to either try or perhaps read the backstory of?

We Ride at Dawn is one of my absolute favorites. Number one, it's a mezcal cocktail and mezcal is my favorite spirit, but it's also, the story attached to it is about my support system and just how amazing my friends and family are. That's something that I'm really proud of is being able to talk about them.

This book takes us on a journey through your relationship from the good times to the bad times to the good times, and when I was reading it, I was really struck by the inclusion of the good times. I thought that was so brave and honest, and after what happened, I don't know if I would do it, so that was very big of you.

It was tough.

What was it like revisiting those moments and why did you want to include them?

I just felt like it was really important to, if I was going to tell the story, to be able to also go there with it. I have to say that was the hardest part of writing this, and it was because obviously I wrote this months ago and I was in a much different place, a much more intense raw place at that time, so it was tough to go there. 

Of course, there are the bad times, too. Fans and readers are going to get some new details about the affair. What is it like to still be able to share those moments with an audience and be heard? 

"In order for me to really give every detail, I would need a “War and Peace” thickness of a book."

I feel like in order for me to really give every detail, I would need a “War and Peace” thickness of a book, but I felt like there were just certain things that I had learned that I felt like it was important for me to include just because this is my story and I feel like whether people maybe don't want to hear it or not, I'm entitled to share my experience and for people to be receptive to it, I am really grateful and I'm really lucky that people give a s**t. 

But also I think that there's so many things about this that other people can relate to because they've been through something similar. As sad as that is of how many people have been through something similar, I think that's part of why we're all able to kind of bond together and get through these things together. In me sharing those things, I was hoping that other people would be able to connect and maybe somehow if I took away something from it, that they would be able to as well.

Another thing I love about this book, which you actually already started to bring up, is that this is your breakup album because this is your medium. You talk about some of your favorite breakup albums, and some of mine, shout out to Kacey Musgraves.

Yes, yes. I love her.

Can you talk more about the role that music played in your healing?

Music is something that, I mean, I think most people just, there's something about connecting with music that's unlike anything else, and I'm someone who just, I don't know how to explain how pivotal music is for me, just in all aspects of life. No matter where I'm at, emotionally, music is where I go. 

Kacey, another person who I really, really admire, and her music was something that, I mean, if you go through my Spotify Wrapped, it's like top artist Kacey Musgraves this year. It's like that was just where I went, and I remember early on, back in March, me and my best friends just turning up the “Lemonade” album to full blast on the television and just having scream-cry-dance parties because it's something that I don't know, a new way of connecting to these songs that I always loved before.

Is there a song right now that describes the current phase that you're in?

I feel like “Golden Hour” by Kacey Musgraves is kind of how things are feeling right now.

That's a good place to be.

That or the new Beyoncé, “My House.”

Continuing with this music track, you just wrapped up with “Dancing With the Stars” and you crushed it. What did you learn about yourself through this process?

"Our show always has really thrived when it is at its realist, and I think that this is going to be a very real season in a lot of ways."

I learned that I was capable of much more than I thought. I would have full-blown anxiety attacks every Tuesday before the show, or even sometimes right before dancing, and then we would magically get through the dance, and everything would be fine. It was kind of this ongoing lesson and learning to trust myself and trust that I could do it and also trust that my partner’s got my back. I think part of what made that possible is just how incredibly supportive the entire cast and crew of that show is. Every contestant, every pro, all the hair and makeup and costume people, everyone just constantly rooting for each other.

That was what was so cool is, I think for me, the ultimate goal was getting to the finale. I didn't want to have FOMO of missing out on anything. We all made it to all the semi-finalists. We all made it to be finalist. And all week me and Alyson [Hannigan] would be like, “Hey, finalist,” “Hey, finalist.” And then getting to share in that moment of just everybody being up there and the confetti and the pyro going, when Xochitl [Gomez] and Val [Chmerkovskiy] won, it really felt like, I don't know, it felt like it's their win, but it felt like a win for all of us just because it was just such a cool family to be a part of.

Now you're taking it one step further; you're about to be on Broadway.

Crazy.

I know that was a lifelong goal. You just announced, but what can you tell us about it? Have you started rehearsing?

I start rehearsing I think in January, but I will be starting with photo shoot fitting, things like that soon. I'm so excited. I'm so nervous. But again, I'm trying to tell myself in the same way that “Dancing with the Stars” happened, that we'll rehearse and it will be good, that it'll be all OK and that it'll all work out. I'm just so excited and I just want to make sure that I do the best job because it really is a lifelong dream.

As is evidenced by this conversation, you have been nonstop since March. It just keeps getting bigger and better. When Scandoval broke in March, that's when this all started. You agreed to pick back up filming, which was very brave. You and your castmates were doing so much press and media and podcasts. You started in commercials that are still stuck in my head, but it's just been go, go, go. What was the impact of this media frenzy on your healing?

I think in some ways it was a really good distraction. I feel like my initial instinct is to isolate or retract and just kind of go away when I'm feeling things and then reemerge when I've been able to process. Because I was almost pushed to process while being so busy, it almost felt like it was a really good distraction and also a really good way of having to process in real time as opposed to being like, “I'll see you guys in six months” kind of thing. 

I also think that in some ways it was really nice to feel like because it was so public that in some ways I wasn't going through it alone. It definitely got to a point where it felt a little weird because it felt like there was this commodification of my actual real life, and it was like, OK, it doesn't even belong to me anymore. It belongs to other people somehow, which is weird, but I think that that's just the nature of living life publicly.

Have you been able to do anything that makes you feel like you're taking it back for yourself?

I think writing this book for sure, and I think just being honest with myself, and if someone says something like, “Get over it. It's been nine months” or something like that, thinking to myself that this doesn't belong to that person, that commenter, that whatever. This is mine. I'll make the decisions on how I'm feeling. Just kind of telling myself that is how I've been dealing with that.

It's already almost time for another season of “Vanderpump Rules.” We got a tiny snippet of it at BravoCon. I'm sure you can't say much, but what was it like filming this season?

It was interesting. Obviously it was very different from seasons past for obvious reasons, and who knows what it's going to be like when it's all put together. I know how it felt. I know it felt weird. It was really difficult at times. I think that our show always has really thrived when it is at its real-est, and I think that this is going to be a very real season in a lot of ways. That'll be really interesting for viewers.

There's one woman, of course, at the center of all of this. At the end of the day, Mrs. Lisa Vanderpump herself, we just saw her with tears in her eyes supporting you at “Dancing at the Stars.”

Oh my gosh.

What's your relationship like with her today and more generally, how do you navigate all of these relationships that are so interconnected, not only with your ex, but your livelihood and your career? 

"I learned that I was capable of much more than I thought."

Lisa is incredible, and seeing her was awesome. I got to see her before the show too, in the backstage area. Having her be there to support was awesome. It was amazing too because she's been in Vegas opening a restaurant, she's been in France, she's been all over the place, but she made it a point to come to the finale, so it was really awesome. 

For the most part, as far as the navigation of those types of relationships, there hasn't been a lot of that because there aren't a lot, are not many mutual connections at this point, so that part has been a little bit less stressful than most of other things.

The world is your oyster right now. You're about to be on Broadway, you got to write a cocktail book that is finally just your own, and it's even better. How have you been approaching all of these opportunities that have been coming your way, and are you going to slow down anytime soon?

I think that when everything with Broadway starts, that will be my sole focus and I'm going to do my best to not have any other things going on just so that I can really be primarily focused on that because it is so important to me to be doing the best job. 

I would love a vacation. That would be cool. At least the holidays are coming up. No one works on the holidays, so I have that. It's just been awesome. I think that as far as things that come my way, I think it's just a matter of can I do a good job of this? Is this something I can handle? And also, is this something that I connect with that feels right for me that I actually like?

You just got the big one. You're going to be on Broadway, but is there anything else you want to manifest right now?

Oh, a nap.

Where are you going to go on vacation? Where do you want to go?

I'm thinking maybe Mexico, or just my bed. 

Legal experts: Giuliani backed out of “crazy” testimony — but it may backfire with the jurors

Lawyers for Rudy Giuliani announced that Donald Trump's former personal attorney would not take the stand in his defamation damages trial just minutes before the proceedings were set to begin Thursday, the day he was expected to sit for testimony, Politico first reported.  

Giuliani told reporters outside the courtroom Wednesday that he intended to testify. “I intend to. You always leave them guessing, right?” he said, per The Messenger, after trial proceedings ended for that day.

The reason why Giuliani will not be taking the stand has not yet been revealed. But legal experts argue that the decision was in the former New York mayor's best interest.

"Allowing Rudy Giuliani to take the stand would have been the stupidest thing in the world from his attorneys' perspective— and by that I really mean his Georgia legal team— and so I am not terribly surprised he isn't taking the stand. I would have been shocked had it happened," Anthony Michael Kreis, a Georgia State University law professor and political scientist, wrote on X, formerly Twitter. 

"As I expected, Giuliani has followed in Trump's footsteps and decided not to take the stand after saying he would," George Washington University law professor Randall Eliason tweeted. "It would have been crazy for him to testify with the criminal charges hanging over his head. Crazy even for him, I mean."

MSNBC legal analyst Katie Phang noted that jurors had expected to hear from Giuliani on Thursday.

"When you make these kinds of promises & then you don’t deliver, jurors will hold it against you," she wrote. "Giuliani clearly doesn’t have problems speaking *outside* of the courtroom: jurors will take note of this, too."

The Georgia election workers who brought the defamation lawsuit against Giuliani two years ago — Ruby Freeman and her daughter, Shaye Moss — delivered emotional testimonies in the trial earlier this week. 

While on the witness stand Wednesday, Freeman said she was already overwhelmed by a violent campaign of racist threats against her three years ago when Trump placed a bigger target on her back, Politico reports.

She described how Giuliani falsely accused her of tampering with ballots during the 2020 election in a smear campaign that resulted in her receiving a deluge of threatening messages and capsized her life. But after the former president amplified those claims in an infamous phone call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, the threats became more virulent. 

“I just felt like ‘really?’ This is the former president talking about me? Me? How mean, how evil? I just was devastated,” Freeman recalled, holding back tears. “I didn’t do nothing. It just made me feel … you don’t care that I’m a real person.”

“He didn’t know what he was talking about really,” Freeman continued, addressing Trump as “45" in a refusal to use his name. “He had no clue what he was talking about. He was just trying to put a name to somebody stealing ballots, which was totally a lie.”

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Trump referred to Freeman 18 times during the Jan. 2, 2021, call with Raffensperger, an audio recording of which was published in the media the following day. Freeman's attorneys pointed out in court that Trump's rhetoric mirrored language crafted by Giuliani's legal team as part of a last-ditch PR campaign related to their effort to overturn Trump's 2020 electoral defeat. 

As the claims caught fire among Trump's base — even while Georgia election officials sought to debunk and quell them — Freeman testified that the threats intensified. People began to show up at her home, send her threatening voicemails and letters, and blast her social media accounts en masse with violent and racist messages. 

Following advice from the FBI, Freeman said, she eventually left her longtime home after learning that her name was on a "death list" someone who had just been arrested had kept. That part of her testimony likely referred to Thomas Caldwell, an affiliate of the far-right extremist Oath Keepers who was one of the defendants arrested just days after the Jan. 6 Capitol attack. 

Giuliani is the only remaining defendant in the lawsuit, and U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell has ruled he is liable as part of a civil conspiracy for Trump and others' statements connected to his 2020 presidential campaign. The women did not sue Trump in this case.

After finding that Giuliani had eluded demands for evidence related to the civil case, Howell ruled that Giuliani was legally responsible for defaming the duo and left jurors to decide the amount of damages the former mayor must pay Freeman and Moss. Jurors could begin deliberation as soon as Thursday. 


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The women are seeking between $14 million and $41 million from Giuliani for defamation and emotional distress alongside punitive damages. The judge previously ordered Giuliani to pay the women's legal fees, and he owes them $230,000 for failing to respond to parts of their lawsuit.

Freeman recounted some of the threats she received during her Wednesday testimony, often sobbing, choking up or wiping away tears with a tissue. 

“Kill yourself now so we can save AMMO,” one message read.

“I hope the Federal government hangs you and your daughter from the Capitol dome you treasonous piece of shit!” read another. “I pray that I will be sitting close enough to hear your necks snap.”

Giuliani had been present in the courtroom as Freeman and Moss recalled how his lies had upended their lives, but exited the first two days of trial this week issuing defiant statements to reporters, defending his attacks against the duo and calling the case a "political hit job."

According to Politico, like during Moss' testimony Tuesday, Giuliani had little reaction to Freeman's testimony as he recounted the terror she felt as the false claims began to proliferate. 

“I felt horrible. I felt I was terrorized. I was scared,” Freeman said. “The phone just kept ringing and ringing.”

Freeman said she now wears a mask and sunglasses outside her new home, which she's outfitted with security cameras and alarm systems. 

“My life is just messed up. It’s really messed up all because somebody put me on blast, just tweet my name out to their millions of followers,” she said.

Freeman spent approximately 90 minutes on the witness stand before Giuliani's attorney, Joseph Sibley was given the chance to cross-examine her. He instead chose not to, simply telling Freeman — who had appeared at the trial since it began Monday — that it was nice to "finally" have the chance to meet her. 

Sibley had previously said that he planned to call Giuliani to the stand to respond to the allegations against him but has since acknowledged incongruences between him and his client since the former mayor has contradicted him in statements to the press multiple times. 

Treatment for morning sickness likely on the horizon after scientists discover its source

In the first trimester of pregnancy, a majority of women will experience so-called morning sickness

Unlike what its name suggests, morning sickness is not a condition where a pregnant woman just casually vomits in the morning and goes on with her day feeling fine. Even in its mildest of forms, it can be an all-consuming nausea, where the sight and smells of very specific foods result in gagging and vomiting. It’s like having the flu, or a really bad hangover, that lasts weeks or months. Sometimes, it can last the entire pregnancy. 

In its most extreme form, a condition called hyperemesis gravidarum (HG), a pregnant person becomes so sick that even standing is intolerable. In this state, they are usually persistently vomiting and many times have to be hospitalized to be rehydrated with IV fluids. An estimated 2 percent of women who experience pregnancy will get hyperemesis gravidarum. Previous research has shown that women with hyperemesis gravidarum in one pregnancy have a high chance of recurrence for the next one. Yet, there’s never been a full understanding of it or the possibility of a treatment available until now. 

"What we now know is that if you have lower levels before pregnancy, then you're more sensitive to the rapidly rising levels during pregnancy."

In a new study published in the journal Nature, scientists say they have identified “extensive evidence” that the source of severe morning sickness is a hormone called GDF15 that’s produced by the placenta during pregnancy. A pregnant woman’s likelihood of getting HG depends on her sensitivity to the hormone before pregnancy, the research found. 

“We found by looking at the levels of the hormone in blood during pregnancy that people with more severe nausea and vomiting had higher levels [of the hormone] than normal,” Marlena Fejzo, PhD, the paper’s lead author, told Salon. “So what we now know is that if you have lower levels before pregnancy, then you're more sensitive to the rapidly rising levels during pregnancy.” 


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Scientists used a variety of approaches to distinguish the link between GDF15 and extreme morning sickness, which included blood tests, genetic analyses and studying human and mice cells. One notable finding was that a genetic mutation in the female body that leads to abnormally low levels of GDF15 prior to pregnancy can put women at a greater risk of getting HG while pregnant. Another genetic analysis found that women with an inherited blood disorder called beta thalassemia, which produces chronically high levels of GDF15, can protect against morning sickness. Adding to their research, in an experiment on mice, scientists played with the dosages of GDF15 before and during pregnancy which seemed to affect the severity of morning sickness symptoms. 

“If you give the mice a large dose similar to the dose that you have in pregnancy, the mice don't vomit, but the mice will lose their appetite and lose weight,”  Fejzo said. “But if you give them a lower dose, prior to that high dose, they were desensitized to it and the mice were able to eat normally and not lose weight.”

Fejzo said this was an exciting finding because it suggests that HG, and maybe all morning sickness, can be prevented in pregnancy.

The next step for researchers is to test if exposure to GDF15 prior to pregnancy can reduce nausea and vomiting. Fejzo said she has already applied for funding to test whether metformin, a drug that increases GDF15 levels, could work.

"What we think is happening is that this hormone has evolved to tell the human or animal that they need to rest and recover more than they need food."

Metformin is most commonly used to treat and prevent Type 2 diabetes by lowering blood sugar. Off label, it’s been used to treat prediabetes, gestational diabetes and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). Researchers are also investigating whether it can help lower the risk of cancer, dementia and stroke, long COVID and even increase lifespan. Fejzo said since metformin is sometimes used to help women with PCOS conceive, and it’s a viable option as a contender to treat severe morning sickness, and then maybe even all nausea in pregnancy.

The role GDF15 and morning sickness plays in pregnancy remains unknown. But there are theories, Fejzo said, that date back to hunter-gatherer days. All humans have the GDF15 gene, not just pregnant people. Its levels increase in stressful situations, especially when the physical body is under a lot of stress. It’s what causes a lack of appetite and extreme levels of nausea, when for example, you're physically injured or have a viral infection. 

“What we think is happening is that this hormone has evolved to tell the human or animal that they need to rest and recover more than they need food,” Fejzo said. "It's kind of a balance of risk-benefit, where the benefit to resting and recovering in some kind of adverse state is more important than going out and getting food.”

For example, if someone was injured in a hunter-gatherer community, it would be more beneficial for that person to rest than risk being attacked by another animal while finding food. In pregnancy, it’s been hypothesized that when a pregnant woman is in a more vulnerable state, it’s best to rest and avoid predators than eat. It could be that the hormone rises to keep pregnant women from eating foods that might be toxic to the mother or fetus, too. 

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Of course, the question on many peoples’ minds is how soon a possible treatment will go to market. Fejzo emphasized it’s important to take trials like this slowly. It's possible that with drug like metformin, women who are sensitive to high levels of GDF15 could get sick from being on the drug. 

“We need to do this slowly, to figure out what the levels are, so we don't make these patients sick,” she said. “So we can really figure out the right dose, the right timeframe and the right formulation to really make this work.”

While she couldn’t specify a timeframe, Fejzo ended on a hopeful note. Instead of trying to figure out the cause, researchers can now move forward. 

“The trials are imminent,” she said. “We can move forward now.”

“I think they got the message”: Kid Rock talks Bud Light boycott with Tucker Carlson

Kid Rock has had quite a fickle year when it comes to beer juggernaut Bud Light. After being especially vocal about his opposition to Bud Light's partnering with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, it was discovered several months later that his Nashville bar Kid Rock's Big Ass Honky Tonk & Rock 'n' Roll Steakhouse did indeed still sell Bud Light. 

Last month, he seemingly changed his tune again, telling Sean Hannity that he "didn't want to be in the party of cancel cultures and boycotts that ultimately hurt working-class people.” and that "as a God-fearing man, as a Christian, I have to believe in forgiveness. They made a mistake, all right. What do you want, hold their head under water and drown them and kill people's jobs? I don't want to do that.” 

Now, in a recent appearance on Tucker Carlson's show on X, formerly Twitter, Kid Rock said that "Bud Light deserved a black eye and they got one," before continuing his stepping back, saying "Do I want to hold their head underwater and drown them because they made a mistake? No, I think they got the message."

Jordan Valinsky reports for CNN that Bud Light sales are still down about 30%. As Salon's Ashlie Stevens wrote last month, Benoit Garbe — the US chief marketing officer — is also resigning from Anheuser-Busch at the end of this year. 

Ming Tsai’s essential comfort food recipes

With his affable, genuine nature, Ming Tsai has been a go-to for many home cooks looking for inspiration for over 20 years.

After attending Yale, Cornell and Le Cordon Bleu throughout the 1980s, Tsai became recognized for his restaurant Blue Ginger, as well as becoming a burgeoning television personalty in the nascent days of Food Network. He's been a staple ever since his first started appearing on the network back in the late 90s, first as a fill-in on Sara Moulton's show and then as a host on his own show, East Meets West. 

In addition, he's competed on and judged many other shows, from "Cooking Under Fire" to "The Next Iron Chef" to "Top Chef". He also hosts "Simply Ming", has released five cookbooks, is an advocate for awareness of food allergens and most recently opened a restaurant in Montana. He's also the founder of MingsBings, which is a new product that is a gluten-free, "wrap" or flatbread consisting of both plant-based and meat-based fillings. 


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When it comes to comfort food, Tsai is a master, with elevated, varied recipes that will satiate and soothe. On the hunt for some recipes for this holiday season? Look no further. 

It doesn't get much more simple (or comforting) than this. Charred scallions — and we mean charred: They cook for 20 minutes! — are mixed with udon noodles and a rich, sticky sauce made of two types of soy, honey and Chinese Chinkiang vinegar (you can also opt for Balsamic with Chinese five-spice powder). It's a perfect late-night dish or an amazing snack to whip up after a night out.
 
The original recipe is for one to two servings, but you can certainly double that — or if you're feeding an army, why not quadruple it? We doubt any of it will go to waste . . . trust us. 
Fried chicken is always amazing and a surefire comfort food experience, but the Asian spices here (sambal, coriander, five spice), plus the customary buttermilk takes this dish to a new level entirely. The cooking process is like any regular good ol' fried chicken method, but the end product is clearly something special. Make sure to get the chicken super crispy, let drain on a rack of paper towels and drizzle with a final shower of salt. You'll be a very happy camper. 
This dish is a bit more involved with a few more ingredients and a longer cooing time, but it is so worth it. The sauce is elevated and immensely flavorful, with wine, soy sauce, ginger, garlic, scallions, cinnamon, chilies and star anise, which acts as the braising liquid for bone-in chicken. It gets super tender and rich and the bok choy and sweet potatoes are the perfect complement for the savory, umami-filled chicken. The sauce cooks down and almost becomes a glaze of sorts, which you may just drink straight from the pot or casserole dish. This dish is filling and comforting and is sure to impress. 

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If you're unfamiliar with cooking lamb shanks, this might be an ideal introduction. It's a pretty straight-forward brown-and-braise situation, but the deep, rich flavors (with a bit of mouth-tingling spice from the Thai bird chiles) and uber-tender, fall-apart lamb shank is a thrilling final product. The barley, cooked in risotto style, is the perfect carb-y complement to the slightly fatty lamb and rich sauce. The leftovers are even better.
A classic, timeless dish of beef stew over mashed potatoes that's gussied up with shiitakes, garlic, fermented black beans and shaoshing wine, this dish is a deeply warming, nourishing dish that is perfect for an especially cold night. It could also double as a perfect dish for Christmas dinner. The dish does take some time, so make sure you have set aside a good 3 hours or more for the entire shebang.
 
You also may make your mashed taters like this forever and for always . . . the caramelized garlic does something magical to the humble tuber. 

Why Chrismukkah is “the greatest super holiday known to mankind”

In 2003, when "The Sopranos" was having a gap year and shows like "Six Feet Under," "The Wire" and "The Shield" defined our perception of quality TV, a Fox teen drama that debuted in August introduced "the greatest super holiday known to mankind": Chrismukkah. It's a portmanteau that rolls off the tongue with the sweetness of a kosher marshmallow.

Twenty years later, Chrismukkah, which "The O.C." gifted us in the first season episode "The Best Chrismukkah Ever," is a part of the pop culture lexicon, regardless of whether you know its origin story. Ultimately, we know that we're talking about blending Hanukkah with Christmas.

If a holiday episode is only as memorable as its details, then the durable appeal of Chrismukkah can be explained in "The O.C." character Seth Cohen’s episode opening pitch. "So what's it gonna be, huh? You want your menorah? Or a candy cane? Hmm? Christmas or Hanukkah?" he asks. "Don't worry about it! Because in this house, you don't have to choose."

From there, Seth raves about the new holiday that is sweeping the nation, or "at least the living room."

"I showed that scene to my kids this year, in part because I did the book," author Alan Sepinwall told Salon, a reference to his latest release, "Welcome to the O.C." "And they came out of it like, 'Can we just do Chrismukkah? That sounds awesome.'"

Credit "Dexter" writer Lauren Gussis, who started as a production assistant on the show, for planting the seed that grew into the Chrismukkah bush. Sepinwall's oral history of the show, told to him by its cast and producers, sets the scene marvelously. Gussis blurted out the word during a brainstorming session in the writers' room in response to series co-creator Josh Schwartz envisioning Ben McKenzie’s Ryan Atwood and Adam Brody's Cohen having a good natured debate pitting candy canes against menorahs.

"And I’m like, "Oh, it’s Chrismukkah," Gussis said, bringing the room to a halt. She continued by describing an upbringing in which her household was among four Jewish families in the neighborhood, but all of their friends were gentile. "'I grew up celebrating Chrismukkah and also Eastover, but we’re not there yet. That's a different part of the season.' And Josh looked at the room and said, 'Write me an episode about Chrismukkah.'"

Interfaith families had blended their holiday traditions long before "The O.C.," such as on the "Sex and the City" episode that showed Charlotte York attempting to reconcile her conversion to Judaism with her love of Christmas trees, which aired for the first time earlier that year.

But Schwartz's co-creator Stephanie Savage, for whom the episode represents her first produced script, gave Brody the kind of dialogue that sold Seth’s annual tradition as "drawing on the best that Christianity and Judaism have to offer."

"Allow me to elaborate," Seth says. "You see, for my father here, a poor struggling Jew growing up in the Bronx, well . . . Christmas, it meant Chinese food and movie. And for my mom over here — WASPy McWASP — well, it meant a tree, it meant stockings and all the trimmings."

"Highlights include eight days of presents, followed by one day of many presents. So, what do you think?"

He clinches the sale with the following line: "Other highlights include eight days of presents, followed by one day of many presents. So, what do you think?"

Never mind what I think. I asked Sepinwall what he thinks, since he wrote the book on television (no joke, he co-authored “TV: The Book”) before writing the breezy, entertaining "Welcome to the O.C.," which came out in November.

The relationship between Sepinwall, who is Rolling Stone's chief TV critic, and the show stretches all the way back to 2004 and his first book, "Stop Being a Hater and Learn to Love the O.C." Like Seth's dad, Sandy Cohen, Sepinwall has spent his life navigating the holidays as a Jewish person, providing him with a keen perspective on Seth's enthusiastic reason for the season and what it symbolizes.

The following interview has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

Let's start with the basics. What were the holiday traditions in your household growing up?

I grew up in a Jewish household, so we would do Hanukkah. We would light the candles, spin the dreidel, eat the latkes, sing the songs. I know a lot of Hanukkah songs in both Hebrew and English.

With my own family, we do some of that but not everything. Certainly, we always love to light the candles and eat the latkes as much as we can now that I'm in middle age. One of the things that we struggle with is we're a family who loves to watch TV and movies together, and there’s not really a lot of Hanukkah content out there. That "Rugrats" special is basically it, unless you want to watch "Eight Crazy Nights," which nobody wants to do.

Was it Hallmark that did a Hanukkah movie recently?

I know there's a new Hanukkah movie this year. It's called "Round and Round," and it sounds like "Groundhog Day" but on Hanukkah. We'll be checking that out later this week, but, yes, there's not a lot, in part because Hanukkah is not a major Jewish holiday. It just happens to occur right around Christmas. Before there were lots of Jews in America . . . it wasn't a big deal. Now, because it occurs around the biggest holiday here for our gentile friends, we make a much bigger deal out of it.

There are many blended families of all different faiths, but I believe "The Best Chrismukkah Ever" took off in part because the idea that Christmas was secular was much more prevalent in 2003, prior to the so-called "war on Christmas." As "The O.C." expert, what do you think was the hook?

It was a few things: Obviously, it happened at the right moment. The show was sort of at the peak of its powers then. (It was still pretty early in the first season.) Everyone was excited, and everyone was talking about it. The show hadn't exhausted itself creatively the way it had in some of the later seasons.

"Christmukkah is such a good portmanteau," Sepinwall says.

And people loved, loved, loved Seth Cohen. Along with Marissa Cooper, he was one of the two breakout characters on the show at that point. I would argue he was more of the breakout character by this particular moment. People just adored what Adam Brody was doing.

You open an episode where he's trying to explain this holiday to a befuddled Ryan Atwood, as well as being so enthusiastic about explaining it in such detail. It's such a funny scene on a show that could be really funny but could also be really dark.

It's just the exuberance with which Adam Brody says "Chrismukkah" — how excited he is when he hears the word escape Ryan's mouth — and just the phrase "eight days of presents, followed by one day of many presents." Who wouldn't want that?

When I was growing up, I went to a school with many cultures, ethnicities and faiths represented. I had a couple of friends in my class who were Jewish. I remember one of them saying, "You guys are lucky. I get, like, a piece of chocolate and a dreidel."

You get, like, a 12 pack of socks. It's things along those lines.

I'm glad you brought up that line. It kind of sealed the idea that this can be something extra magical. Of course, it also makes the holiday into something that isn't only secular but also consumerist.

I grew up in a community with a lot of Jewish kids, who I went to Hebrew school with, as well as public school. I remember some of them would have what was called the Hanukkah bush. It became this attempt to be like, "OK, we're Jewish, but this stuff seems cool — and we don't want our kids to feel left out — so we're going to find a way to convert it to this."

Christmas is everywhere, and it feels so seductive. It's like the line in the Adam Sandler song when you feel like the only kid in town without a Christmas tree. That is hard — like, it's hard to the point where literally the song is just him listing people who are Jewish to make you feel better. That is how not seasonal depression, but seasonal envy, can sometimes feel.

That song is very memorable. One of my favorite lines is "So drink your gin and tonic-ah / And smoke your marijuana-kkah." I mean, that is good times.

Exactly.

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Returning to "The O.C.," I wonder if part of the episode’s draw is there's almost kind of a cultural intelligence assigned to the idea of Chrismukkah.

I think that is right. You know, there's the line early in the opening scene when Sandy (Peter Gallagher) and Kirsten (Kelly Rowan) come in and admit they didn't really know how to raise Seth because the two of them come from such different backgrounds as the Bronx Jew and the Orange County WASP. They sort of left it to him to decide what he wanted. You see even more now where parents are like, "We're going to let them decide what faith they want to observe and what traditions they care about.” Sometimes, you'll see parents say, “We're going to teach them this stuff, but we're not going to make it mandatory." I think I think the show was definitely ahead of the curve on that.

Chrismukkah has become part of our lexicon. Where would you say the word rates in terms of its cultural stickiness?

It's pretty high. I mean, you've got your Festivus, you’ve got Galentine’s Day, you’ve got "Treat Yo Self." ("Parks and Rec" has two, so they did very well there.) There's a tradition of fake TV holidays that somehow crossover. I was shopping for holiday cards the other day, and there were Festivus cards at CVS.

Christmukkah is such a good portmanteau. Chrismukkah has multiple K sounds. It's very appealing to the ear on top of very, very efficiently getting off what it's trying to be. It's way, way up there. Now, you have people who have never seen "The O.C" who don't even know that Chrismukkah was popularized by a show called "The O.C." who still know what Chrismukkah is. That right there is a legacy in and of itself.

To talk a little bit about the significance of "The O.C." more broadly, this is a show that arrived in the midst of prestige TV’s rise. I don't find that it gets as recognized in general conversations about our "Golden Age of Television" as other shows do. What is it about "The O.C." that makes it resonate similarly to other shows of its time? Do you think it's properly respected in popular culture for its reach?

Let me take the second question first because I think it's easier: I think the answer is no, unfortunately.

If people remember the show, they remember it as, “Oh, that was really great for a year, and then it went off the cliff. First of all, I would argue after revisiting the show — rewatching it again and talking to people — there's a lot of very good stuff after the first year. There's also a lot of God awful stuff that nobody would be willing to defend in the book. The point is: Because it was like this comet — it streaked across the sky, it lit up so brightly and it was so exciting but so briefly — it hasn't lasted in the overall TV culture as much as something like Chrismukkah has or as much as the idea of using indie rock as your soundtrack has.

That is unfortunate. I would like to think that this book and the conversation around it surrounding the show's anniversary has brought people back to it and reminded them of how good it was — especially in that first year.

As to the second point, not to make this all about me, but if you look at my bibliography, I've written a book about "The Sopranos," a book about "Breaking Bad" and a lot of other super highbrow shows like "The Wire," "Deadwood," "Lost" and "Battlestar Galactica." I've also written a compendium about the greatest TV shows of all time.

"I love shows that can be six things at once. 'The O.C.' was a really good example of that," Sepinwall says.

I've done all of these things, and here I've written a book about "The O.C." You would say one of these things isn't like the other. The counter argument I would make is, yes, it was like a teen soap opera, a high school melodrama. "Pretty crying white kids," as the casting director put it at one point in the book. It's all of those things.

But it's a really smart, really self-aware, really funny — and on the dramatic end — really well-executed version of that. It's the best possible version of what it's trying to be. Then, on top of that, you add that layer of comedy, you add that layer of self-awareness where you could open an episode like this one with the Chrismukkah monologue, where you could do an episode where they meet Colin Hanks, basically playing the Adam Brody character on a show within the show that is supposed to be "The O.C." You could do all of that crazy stuff.

I love shows that can be six things at once. "The O.C." was a really good example of that.

In the book, around the part where Josh Schwartz says, "We need to write this episode" about Chrismukkah, he also quips, "Gotta, trademark that [expletive]."

Which they didn’t.

They didn't?

They didn't. "Parks and Rec" didn't trademark "Treat Yo Self," and Mike Schur's still mad about it because it never occurs to anyone that other people are going to start making money off of this silly idea you have that you put into your show.

In the end, has any of your "O.C." rewatch influenced how you're celebrating the holiday?

A couple of nights ago, we lit the menorah, we spun the dreidel and we all sat down like, “Well, what are we going to watch now?" I said, "Guys, I'm going to show you five minutes of something." I put on the opening scene of "Best Chrismukkah Ever," and everyone came out of it very happy.

"Welcome to the O.C." by Alan Sepinwall is available for purchase from major booksellers. "The Best Chrismukkah Ever" — and all four seasons of "The O.C." — can be streamed on HBO Max.

How police have undermined the promise of body cameras

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When Barbara and Belvett Richards learned that the police had killed their son, they couldn’t understand it. How, on that September day in 2017, did their youngest child come to be shot in his own apartment by officers from the New York Police Department?

Miguel Richards, who was 31, grew up in Jamaica and had moved to New York about a year earlier after coming to the United States through a work-study program. His father’s friend gave him a job doing office work, and he rented a room in the Bronx. But he started to struggle, becoming reclusive and skipping days of work. His mother, with whom he was particularly close, pleaded with him to return to Jamaica. “It’s as if I sensed something was going to happen,” she says. “I was calling him, calling him, calling him: ‘Miguel, come home. Come home.’”

His parents knew he had never been violent, had never been arrested and had never had any issues with the police. What details they managed to gather came from the Bronx district attorney: Richards’ landlord, who hadn’t seen him for weeks, asked the police to check on him. The officers who responded found Richards standing still in his own bedroom, holding a small folding knife. And 15 minutes later, they shot him.

Richards’ death marked a historic turning point. It was the first time a killing by officers was recorded by a body camera in New York. The new program was announced just months before as heralding a new era of accountability. Now, a week after the shooting, the department posted on its website a compilation of footage from four of the responding officers. The video, the department said in an introduction to the presentation, was produced “for clear viewing of the event as a totality.” And as far as the department was concerned, the narrative was clear. Sometimes “the use of deadly force is unavoidable,” the police commissioner at the time, James O’Neill, wrote in an internal message. The level of restraint shown by all officers, he said, is “nothing short of exceptional.” And, he added, “releasing footage from critical incidents like this will help firmly establish your restraint in the use of force.”

Richards’ parents were not convinced. Belvett watched footage at the district attorney’s office. What he saw, and what was released, did not, in fact, show that the use of deadly force was unavoidable. He later learned that the department had not released all the footage. What else didn’t they know about their son’s death?

When body-worn cameras were introduced a decade ago, they seemed to hold the promise of a revolution. Once police officers knew they were being filmed, surely they would think twice about engaging in misconduct. And if they crossed the line, they would be held accountable: The public, no longer having to rely on official accounts, would know about wrongdoing. Police and civilian oversight agencies would be able to use footage to punish officers and improve training. In an outlay that would ultimately cost hundreds of millions of dollars, the technology represented the largest new investment in policing in a generation.

Yet without deeper changes, it was a fix bound to fall far short of those hopes. In every city, the police ostensibly report to mayors and other elected officials. But in practice, they have been given wide latitude to run their departments as they wish and to police — and protect — themselves. And so as policymakers rushed to equip the police with cameras, they often failed to grapple with a fundamental question: Who would control the footage? Instead, they defaulted to leaving police departments, including New York’s, with the power to decide what is recorded, who can see it and when. In turn, departments across the country have routinely delayed releasing footage, released only partial or redacted video or refused to release it at all. They have frequently failed to discipline or fire officers when body cameras document abuse and have kept footage from the agencies charged with investigating police misconduct.

Even when departments have stated policies of transparency, they don’t always follow them. Three years ago, after George Floyd’s killing by Minneapolis police officers and amid a wave of protests against police violence, the New York Police Department said it would publish footage of so-called critical incidents “within 30 days.” There have been 380 such incidents since then. The department has released footage within a month just twice.

And the department often does not release video at all. There have been 28 shootings of civilians this year by New York officers (through the first week of December). The department has released footage in just seven of these cases (also through the first week of December) and has not done so in any of the last 16.

Asked about the department’s limited release of footage, a spokesperson pointed to a caveat, contained in an internal order, that footage can be withheld because of laws or department policy. “The NYPD remains wholly committed to its policy of releasing such recordings as quickly and responsibly as circumstances and the law dictate,” the spokesperson wrote. “Though transparency is of the utmost importance, so too is the Police Department’s commitment to preserving privacy rights.” The department did not say which policies require the withholding of footage and did not address other questions about its record on the cameras. (Mayor Eric Adams’ spokesperson did not make him available for comment.)

For a snapshot of disclosure practices across the country, we conducted a review of civilians killed by police officers in June 2022, roughly a decade after the first body cameras were rolled out. We counted 79 killings in which there was body-worn-camera footage. A year and a half later, the police have released footage in just 33 cases — or about 42%.

This article is the product of more than six months spent investigating how the police have undermined the promise of transparency and accountability that accompanied the body-camera movement. We interviewed dozens of department insiders, government lawyers, policing experts and advocates and reviewed hundreds of pages of internal reports, obtained through Freedom of Information requests, and dozens of hours of surveillance-camera and body-camera footage, including some that the New York Police Department fought against disclosing. The reporting reveals that without further intervention from city, state and federal officials and lawmakers, body cameras may do more to serve police interests than those of the public they are sworn to protect.

To Seth Stoughton, a former police officer who is now a professor at the Joseph F. Rice School of Law at the University of South Carolina, body cameras represent the latest chapter in America’s quest for a technological fix to the deeply rooted problem of unchecked state power. “Dash cams were supposed to solve racial profiling,” he says. “Tasers and pepper spray were supposed to solve undue force. We have this real, almost pathological draw to ‘silver bullet’ syndrome. And I say that as a supporter of body-worn cameras.” He later added, “We just said to police departments: ‘Here’s this tool. Figure out how you would like to use it.’ It shouldn’t be a surprise that they’re going to use it in a way that most benefits them.”

Jeff Schlanger, a former New York deputy commissioner who had an oversight role during the implementation of body-worn cameras and left the department in 2021, believes that the police have often failed to use the cameras for accountability and that political leaders need to do more. “Mayors, City Council members, all locally elected officials,” he says, “should be losing sleep over the lack of meaningful independent oversight of the police.”

When full footage has been released, often by prosecutors or after public pressure, it often contradicts initial police accounts. In 2015, a white officer in Cincinnati killed a Black man during a traffic stop. The officer said his life was in danger. But his body-camera video showed that was a lie, and he was prosecuted for murder. (Charges were dropped after two mistrials.) And in Philadelphia this August, an officer shot and killed a man after, the police said, he lunged at officers with “a weapon.” In fact, footage released by the district attorney — who charged the officer with murder — shows that the man was sitting in his own car.

In New York, Miguel Richards’ parents weren’t the only ones who had doubts about the department’s claims that the shooting was unavoidable. The footage the department released stopped right when the officers fired at Richards. It didn’t include the minutes after the shooting, and it didn’t include footage from other police units that responded.

Ruth Lowenkron, a disability rights lawyer who specializes in mental health issues, wanted to see it all. Working for New York Lawyers for the Public Interest, a legal-advocacy nonprofit, she and her colleagues, along with activists, had begun pushing the city to find an alternative to using the police as first responders to people in crisis. On her second day on the job, a sergeant shot and killed a 66-year-old woman who had schizophrenia and was holding a baseball bat in her Bronx apartment. The department’s own investigators concluded that the sergeant escalated the situation and caused the shooting.

Now, watching the video the department released of Richards’ shooting, Lowenkron feared that the same thing happened to him. The department’s edited footage showed the officers making a few attempts to connect with Richards early in the encounter. “What’s your name, man?” one officer asked. But they were also barking increasingly terse commands. “You are seconds away from getting shot,” one officer said. “Do you want to die?” A few minutes later, as one of them warned that Richards might have a gun, the officers fired.

Lowenkron filed a records request, certain that there was more to the story. In releasing the partial footage, the police commissioner had vowed that the “NYPD is committed to being as transparent as possible.” But nearly three weeks after her request, Lowenkron received a different message from one of the department’s records officers: “I must deny access to these records.”

Body-worn cameras were adopted by police departments across the country in the wake of widespread Black Lives Matter protests in 2014, sparked when Michael Brown was killed by the police in Ferguson, Missouri. The officer who shot Brown was not equipped with a camera, and there was a dispute about what happened in the last moments of Brown’s life. Amid deep schisms over race, justice and policing, there was at least agreement that police interactions should be recorded. Brown’s mother pressed for the technology to become standard equipment. “Please,” she begged Missouri legislators, “let police-worn body cameras be a voice of truth and transparency.”

President Barack Obama put the cameras at the center of his plans to restore trust in policing. Cities quickly began spending millions on the devices, expenditures that continue today for storage and software. Los Angeles has spent nearly $60 million since getting cameras in 2016. In Philadelphia, where footage is rarely released, the cameras have cost taxpayers about $20 million. New York City has spent more than $50 million. But whether citizens benefit from the cameras they’re paying for is often up to the police, who have often been able to keep footage hidden from the public in even the most extreme cases. In 2018 in Montgomery, Alabama, an officer unleashed his police dog on a burglary suspect without warning, severing the Black man’s femoral artery and killing him. The police and the city have refused to release footage for five years, arguing that it could cause “civil unrest” and that the officers could face “embarrassment.” But a lawyer for the man’s family, which is suing the city, got a copy of the transcript in the discovery process and entered it into the court record. “Did you get a bite?” an officer asked the one who had the dog, according to the document. “Sure did, heh, heh,” the K-9 officer responded.

The secrecy undercuts the deterrent effect on officer behavior that many had presumed body cameras would produce. Three years before the Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin murdered George Floyd by kneeling on his neck, body-camera video caught him kneeling on the necks of others. In 2017, Chauvin dragged a handcuffed Black woman out of her house, slammed her to the ground and then pressed his knee into her neck for nearly five minutes. Three months later, Chauvin hit a 14-year-old Black boy at least twice in the head with a heavy flashlight, choked him and pushed him against a wall. The boy cried out in pain and passed out. Chauvin pushed a knee into his neck for 15 minutes as the boy’s mother, reaching to help him, begged, “Please, please do not kill my son!”

The footage was left in the control of a department where impunity reigned. Supervisors had access to the recordings yet cleared Chauvin’s conduct in both cases. Minneapolis fought against releasing the videos, even after Chauvin pleaded guilty in December 2021 to federal civil rights violations in one of the cases. A judge finally ordered the city and the police to release the tapes this April, six years after Chauvin abused the boy. “Chauvin should have been fired in 2017,” says Robert Bennett, a lawyer who represented both of the victims. If the police had done that, “the city never burns. We’d have a downtown still. It’s a parade of horribles. All to keep something secret.”

A Department of Justice report from this summer found that the secrecy and impunity was all part of a larger pattern in the Minneapolis Police Department. Shootings, beatings and other abuse had routinely been captured on video. But the department didn’t make the footage public or mete out punishment.

There was a similar dynamic in Memphis, Tennessee, where officers in a street-crimes unit regularly abused residents. They wore body cameras but faced no consequences until the case of Tyre Nichols, who was beaten to death this January by officers in the unit, attracted national attention. The footage showed that some of the officers took their cameras off. Others knew they were being recorded and pummeled Nichols anyway. It was only after public outcry that the department took the rare step of releasing footage, which contradicted initial police accounts and led to state and federal charges for five officers.

Some politicians have often quietly enabled obstacles to this kind of accountability. When South Carolina became the first state in the nation to require the use of cameras in 2015, Nikki Haley, the governor at the time, made the announcement with the family of Walter Scott standing behind her. Scott was a Black man who, two months earlier, was stopped by the police for a broken taillight and was shot in the back and killed when he tried to run away. A witness filmed the shooting, and that video contradicted official police accounts.

“This is going to make sure Walter Scott did not die without us realizing that we have a problem,” Haley said as she signed the legislation. What the governor didn’t say was that the same law stipulated that footage from cameras is “not a public record subject to disclosure,” thus relieving police departments from any obligation to release it. And indeed, little footage has ever become public in South Carolina.

In 2021, York County sheriff’s deputies responding to a call for a wellness check found a young man sitting in his pickup truck with his mother standing next to him. They fired at him nearly 50 times. The sheriff, who refused to release body-camera footage, said the man pointed a shotgun at deputies. When the man, who survived, obtained the footage after suing, it showed no such thing. So far this year, the police in South Carolina have killed at least 19 people. The police have released footage in only three of those cases. When we asked one department, the Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Office, why it had not, a spokesperson pointed to the law, writing, “We never release that footage.”

The pattern has become so common across the country — public talk of transparency followed by a deliberate undermining of the stated goal — that the policing-oversight expert Hans Menos, who led Philadelphia’s civilian police-oversight board until 2020, coined a term for it: the “body-cam head fake.” And there is no place that illustrates this as well as New York City, the home of the world’s largest municipal police force, some 36,000 officers strong.

New York’s adoption of body-worn cameras started with a moment of unintentional inspiration. In 2013, Judge Shira Scheindlin was hearing testimony in a federal lawsuit in which multiple advocacy groups claimed that the Police Department’s aggressive “stop and frisk” policy was racially biased and unconstitutional. One day during the trial, an expert witness for the city mentioned a new tool for accountability — body-worn cameras — in passing.

“My head snapped when I heard the words,” Scheindlin recalled this year. “I thought, ‘That could be a useful remedy!’”

Two months later, Scheindlin issued a historic ruling that New York’s stop-and-frisk practices were unconstitutional. She ordered the Police Department to begin piloting body-worn cameras, writing that they were “uniquely suited to addressing the constitutional harms at issue in this case.” Scheindlin laid out three ways the cameras would help: “First, they will provide a contemporaneous, objective record of stops and frisks.” She continued, “Second, the knowledge that an exchange is being recorded will encourage lawful and respectful interactions on the part of both parties. Third, the recordings will diminish the sense on the part of those who file complaints that it is their word against the police.”

But in a preview of obstacles that would follow, the department was slow to roll out the devices, even as they were becoming common in other cities. More than two years after Scheindlin’s ruling, the department hired researchers at New York University to conduct a survey about what residents wanted from a body-camera project. The community’s answers were overwhelming and clear: transparency and disclosure.

Officers, however, wanted the opposite. They were concerned that the recordings would “show a different side of the story than what would otherwise be told,” according to a separate NYU survey. To Scheindlin and the plaintiffs in the stop-and-frisk case, that was exactly the point.

When the department released its policy in April 2017, it was clear whose opinions held more sway. No video would automatically become public. Anyone that requested it would have to go through an opaque, often slow-moving Freedom of Information process — in which the department itself would be the arbiter of what would be released (though the courts could review that decision).

The policy blunted the technology’s potential for accountability in other ways. Officers could decide when to start filming, instead of at the beginning of all interactions as the public wanted. And while the public had little access to footage, the police had privileged access: Officers who were the subjects of complaints would be allowed to watch the footage before having to give any statements — something that could allow them to tailor their accounts to the video.

The policy was “so flawed that the pilot program may do little to protect New Yorkers’ civil rights,” Ian Head and Darius Charney of the Center for Constitutional Rights wrote in a guest essay in The New York Times. “Instead, it might shield police officers from accountability when they engage in misconduct.”

Still, on April 27, 2017, Commissioner James O’Neill and Mayor Bill de Blasio held a news conference at a precinct in Washington Heights to celebrate the rollout of body-worn cameras. Stepping up to the lectern, O’Neill said he was initially skeptical of the cameras but had become a believer. “I’m totally convinced now that this is the way forward,” he said. “These cameras have a great potential to de-escalate.”

Then the mayor went to the lectern. Officers had long felt that de Blasio, a self-proclaimed progressive, was too supportive of Black Lives Matter protests and not sufficiently supportive of the police. That sentiment turned into rage when a man espousing hatred of the police murdered two officers in late 2014. Hundreds of police officers turned their backs on the mayor at the funerals. Ever since, de Blasio had been working to repair the relationship.

“This is an historic day for New York City,” de Blasio said, with O’Neill by his side. “This is the first day of the era of body-worn cameras, and that means we are going on a pathway of transparency and accountability that will benefit everyone.”

Five months later, officers killed Miguel Richards, making his case the first in which the potential of body-camera video would be tested. But Ruth Lowenkron, the public-interest attorney who filed a request for the footage, was getting little from the Police Department. After it rejected her initial request, she appealed the decision. The department sent her some redacted footage but again rejected her request for all of it.

Disclosing the full footage would be an “unwarranted invasion of personal privacy,” the department wrote. Whose privacy — the dead man’s or the officers’ — was not explained. Releasing the full footage, the department insisted, could “endanger the life or safety of any person.”

The letter came from the department’s legal unit, led by its deputy commissioner, Larry Byrne, who was known for his fierce advocacy for the department. From the outset of the body-worn-camera program, Byrne made it clear that he was resistant to widespread release of footage. “They are not public records in the sense that, because the officer turns the camera on, they are now in the public domain,” Byrne told NY1 in 2015. In fact, he insisted, “most of this footage” would never be made public.

Lowenkron kept requesting the Richards footage and kept getting rejected or sent redacted video. In July 2018, she and her colleagues decided to file a lawsuit in state court demanding the full footage. They even got a former Police Department lawyer, Stuart Parker, to help litigate the suit pro bono. The department’s various explanations for its denials “pissed me off,” Parker recalls. He retired from the department as an assistant commissioner in 2016, the year before cameras were widely rolled out. But he had been excited by their potential and was frustrated by the department’s kneejerk secrecy. “There’s a good side to the department,” he says, “but there’s always been a self-serving dark side to it too.”

In response to the suit, the department argued in legal filings that it had blurred the footage “in order to protect the privacy of both Richards and his family.” But Lowenkron and her team had obtained affidavits from Richards’ parents saying that the department never asked them whether they wanted the footage released or redacted. And what the Richardses wanted, they said, was for the full footage to be released to the public.

Public disclosure of footage isn’t the only path to hold officers in New York accountable for misconduct. For 70 years, the city’s Civilian Complaint Review Board had been vested with the responsibility to investigate New Yorkers’ allegations against the police. From the start, though, its powers were weak. The agency was actually part of the Police Department, and its board consisted of three deputy police commissioners. The department fought efforts over the years to make the agency independent. In the face of a plan in the mid-1960s to include civilians on the Civilian Complaint Review Board, the head of the largest police union, then called the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association, said, “I’m sick and tired of giving in to minority groups with their whims and their gripes and shouting.”

The agency eventually became independent in 1993 after stiff opposition months before from off-duty officers. Thousands of them — along with Rudy Giuliani, then a mayoral aspirant after losing the previous election — staged a huge protest outside City Hall, with many of them going on to block the Brooklyn Bridge. After the changes, the review board still relied on an often noncooperative Police Department for records, and its investigations frequently petered out amid competing accounts. And like many civilian oversight boards across the country, in the rare cases when it substantiated misconduct, it could only recommend discipline to the police commissioner, who could and often did ignore it.

Many civilians, whom the board relied on to initiate complaints, had long grown skeptical of the agency’s ability to ensure that officer misconduct had consequences. But the advent of body-camera video promised to fundamentally change how the agency worked. For the first time, staff members would have an objective record of the incidents they investigated. That was Nicole Napolitano’s hope when she joined the review board as its new director of policy and advocacy in September 2017 — the same year body cameras were rolled out in New York and one week after officers killed Richards. “We talked about it in detail” at the agency, she says of the initial footage of the Richards shooting. “We thought, ‘Look at what body-worn cameras can show us.’”

Napolitano, who is married to a retired detective, knew it would be a challenge. As a senior policy manager in the Office of the Inspector General for the New York Police Department, she had seen how the department could simply ignore the recommendations in her reports. Napolitano hoped she would have more direct impact in her new, more senior position at the review board. But what she hadn’t appreciated was how much the police controlled the literal tools of their own oversight.

As with most civilian boards across the country, the agency did not have its own access to footage. Like the public, it, too, had to rely on the cooperation of the department. To try to obtain footage, the board had to navigate a baroque multistep process. Written requests were submitted to a department “liaison” unit, which in turn forwarded them to the legal unit for review. Then the department had to locate the footage, which was a significant undertaking because it wasn’t cataloging the footage in any systematic way. Unlike in many other cities, the department’s cameras had no GPS location data. If a civilian making a complaint didn’t know an officer’s name or badge number, investigators and even the department could have a hard time finding footage.

Perhaps most problematic for Napolitano, though, was the fact that the review board’s investigators had to agree to a strict set of conditions before watching videos of incidents. If they spotted other, unrelated misconduct, they were not allowed to investigate it. “If you were setting up a system to be shitty,” one agency insider says, “this is the system you’d create.”

At times, the department’s animosity toward the board was palpable. Napolitano remembers one meeting in 2017 between board officials and Kerry Sweet, then a top official at the department’s legal bureau who helped oversee the body-camera rollout. As other police brass shuffled in, Sweet said they had missed a chance to “bomb the room” when only board officials were there, which would have “solved everything.” (Sweet, who has since retired, says he doesn’t recall saying that, but added, “On reflection, it should have been an airstrike.”)

Napolitano and her colleagues noticed an even more troubling trend: The department would often tell the review board that the footage it requested didn’t exist — only for the civilian agency to later discover that wasn’t true. According to an analysis the agency put out in early 2020, this happened in nearly 1 of every 5 cases.

Napolitano thought there was a straightforward solution to the department’s stonewalling: The review board should be able to directly log in to the department’s system where footage is stored. That’s how it worked with civilian oversight boards in a few other major American cities, including Chicago, which revamped civilian oversight after Laquan McDonald was killed in 2014 and the city tried to withhold footage that contradicted officers’ accounts. Chicago’s oversight board now not only has direct access to videos but also regularly releases footage publicly, and its investigators have used it to successfully push for officers to be fired for misconduct. Napolitano didn’t see a reason for it to be otherwise in New York. So in her first semiannual report, at the end of 2017, she noted the challenges of getting footage — and called on the city to give the review board direct access. Both the department and City Hall, Napolitano says, “freaked” out.

“It was a rough time for de Blasio when it came to public safety,” Napolitano added, referring to the mayor’s tenuous relationship with the police. “In a dispute between CCRB and NYPD, City Hall always chose the NYPD. Always.”

“I don’t agree,” de Blasio says. “The tension between the CCRB and the NYPD is natural and built-in. I decided each issue on the merits and according to my values.” He went on, “The blunter truth is when a progressive challenges the police culture and the police unions and the status quo of American policing, the left is not going to have their back. You’re not getting that thank-you card. And the right will viciously attack.”

While the department fought Lowenkron and Napolitano on the release of body-camera footage, there was one group that had access to all of it and could use it to check for misconduct: the department’s own investigators. After every police shooting, detectives with the Force Investigation Division review the incident to see whether officers complied with department policy. The Richards case was the first time body-worn-camera footage could let them see what actually happened in a killing by officers. As investigators dug through the video and interviewed officers in the weeks and months after the shooting, they saw a far more complicated picture than the one the police commissioner painted.

As the tape began, one officer, Mark Fleming, beamed his flashlight into the far side of Richards’ nearly bare, unlit bedroom. Richards was standing perfectly still in the dark, seemingly catatonic, wearing a blue polo shirt and sunglasses and holding a knife in his left hand.

Department guidelines for dealing with people in crisis who do not pose an immediate threat say officers should try to “isolate and contain” the person. “The primary duty of all members of the service is to preserve human life,” department policy states. Officers are also instructed to wait for a supervisor’s permission before trying to subdue someone in crisis.

At first, it appeared that the officers who encountered Richards were following their training. “Look, we could shut the door,” Officer Redmond Murphy suggested to his partner. But Fleming, who had served more years in the department, quickly rejected the idea. He kept telling Richards to drop the knife, and he radioed for an officer with a Taser.

Two officers from the specially trained Emergency Services Unit, which deals with people experiencing mental health crises, arrived. Then Murphy said he thought he saw something, perhaps a gun, in Richards’ right hand, which was obscured behind a backpack on the bed. “Hold up,” one of the ESU officers told Fleming and Murphy before heading back downstairs to grab protective gear. “I don’t know if it’s a toy or a gun,” Murphy quickly added.

As the specialists went downstairs, the officer with the Taser, Jesus Ramos, went upstairs and joined Fleming and Murphy outside Richards’ room. “Do you want to take him down now?” Ramos asked them. “Yeah,” they both answered.

At nearly the same moment, a radio command came from headquarters, emphasizing department guidelines. “Isolate and contain,” the dispatcher told the officers. “Use nonlethal force whenever possible.” As Ramos lifted his Taser and stepped into the room, Fleming — who later said Richards was raising his arm — fired his gun. Murphy fired, too. It’s impossible to see that moment in the grainy, shaky footage. The clearest angle would most likely have been Fleming’s camera, but it was covered by his arm as he held his flashlight.

Fleming and Murphy fired 16 times, hitting Richards seven times, including twice in the chest, rupturing his aorta. As gunshots rang out, the supervisor they were supposed to wait for arrived. (None of the officers responded to requests for comment.)

The internal investigators asked the officers to explain. “We kind of handle everything on our own,” Murphy offered. An internal investigator pressed Fleming about what had “situationally changed” and prompted the decision to “take him at that point.” Fleming said everything changed once his partner said Richards might have a gun. “I perceived that his intentions were lethal,” Fleming said. But his answers suggested that he hadn’t fully grasped Richards’ mental state. “Why would any sane person hide a fake gun?” Fleming asked.

When the investigators asked why the two officers did not broadcast that Richards was an “EDP” — or an emotionally disturbed person — with a knife, as protocol dictates, Murphy told them he and Fleming had handled people in crisis before. Asked why they made the decision to use force, Murphy simply said, “We wanted to, like, end it.”

While the Force Investigation Division ultimately concluded that the officers had been “justified” in shooting — because they were facing an “individual armed with a knife and an imitation firearm” — the investigators also said that Fleming and Murphy should still be punished. Richards, their September 2018 internal report noted, “was contained and posed no immediate threat of danger.” And the officers violated policy by not asking permission from their supervisor before they acted. The department’s full investigative record was first reported by the independent journalist Michael Hayes in his 2023 book, “The Secret Files.” The review recommended that the officers face disciplinary charges that could ultimately result in their firing.

But in New York, as in almost all cities in the United States, the police commissioner has absolute power over punishment. In March 2019, O’Neill, who had extolled the promise of body cameras just two years earlier, overruled his own investigators. He decided that neither Fleming nor Murphy would be punished for killing Richards. Instead, the commissioner docked them three vacation days for something else they did: stopping for pizza before responding to the call for the wellness check. (O’Neill did not respond to questions or requests for comment.)

It would be another three months before anyone outside the department would see the full footage. That June, a New York judge ruled that the “public is vested with an inherent right to know” and ordered the department to turn over the recordings to Lowenkron’s organization.

She received a package with a DVD a month later from the department. Bracing herself, she sat down to view it on her computer. The footage that the department publicly released cut off when the officers fired. Lowenkron now saw the aftermath: Richards collapsed to the floor, crumpled and bleeding in the same spot where he had been standing rigidly seconds before.

“He’s still alive,” Fleming said.

“Holy shit,” Murphy replied. “Just fucking cuff him.”

The officers then flipped over Richards, severely injured, so roughly that his head could be heard bouncing off the floor.

They searched around the room for the firearm they thought Richards had. Eventually, Fleming found a palm-size, silver-colored plastic toy gun. “It’s some fucking little thing,” he said. (The video does not show Richards holding the toy gun.) More than three minutes passed before anyone administered any type of aid to the dying man. It was an Emergency Services Unit specialist who retrieved medical equipment after hearing the shots.

Outside the apartment building, more video recorded other officers milling about. One told a colleague, “They were just hurling fucking shots.”

Lowenkron was shocked. Officers had shot a young man and roughly handled him as he bled to death. “The utter disrespect,” Lowenkron says. “It was a horror movie.”

New York Lawyers for the Public Interest would go on to share the footage with journalists. It would also use the footage in a webinar for mental health advocates in November 2020. “The point,” Lowenkron told me, “was to get more people engaged on this issue: transforming New York and this country’s response to people in crisis.”

But by then, for another man in distress, it was too late.

In April 2019, one month after O’Neill decided against punishing the officers for the Richards shooting, another officer shot and killed a man named Kawaski Trawick.

The circumstances were remarkably similar to those in the Richards case. Trawick was also a young Black man who lived in the Bronx and was experiencing a mental health crisis in his own apartment. He was also holding a knife when the police arrived. And he was also shot soon afterward. At the Civilian Complaint Review Board, Napolitano was immediately struck by the parallels: “I remember reading the headline on Trawick and thinking, ‘Didn’t I read this already?’”

This time, though, the victim’s family filed a complaint with the review board, providing an opening for civilian investigators to use body-worn-camera footage to make a case that the department and others couldn’t ignore.

But despite repeated requests over many months, the department wouldn’t share the footage — or any other records — with the review board, leaving the oversight agency effectively unable to begin its own investigation of the case. The refusal was in line with the department’s longstanding practice to withhold footage from the board until the department’s internal investigation was over, a process that often takes more than a year. Such delays can effectively torpedo the review board’s investigations: Under New York civil-service law, any disciplinary cases against police officers must be brought within 18 months of the incident.

In the Trawick case, the review board obtained the full body-camera video in January 2021 — more than a year and a half after the killing — and only after a state judge ordered the department to hand it over to Lowenkron’s organization, New York Lawyers for the Public Interest, which had sued for it. The judge determined that the department had been withholding the footage “in bad faith.”

What it showed was even more damning than what was captured in the Richards shooting. As the police entered his apartment, Trawick demanded to know, “Why are you in my home?” One officer, Herbert Davis, who was Black and more experienced, then tried to stop his white junior counterpart, Brendan Thompson, from using force. “We ain’t gonna tase him,” Davis said in the video.

Thompson didn’t listen. Instead, he fired his Taser at Trawick, sending roughly 50,000 volts pulsing through him. As Trawick started rushing toward the officers, Thompson lifted his gun and prepared to fire. “No, no — don’t, don’t, don’t, don’t, don’t,” Davis said, pushing his partner’s arm down. But Thompson fired four shots, hitting Trawick twice and killing him almost instantly, 112 seconds after they arrived at the apartment. (Davis and Thompson did not reply to requests for comment.)

There was also troubling footage of the aftermath of the shooting. Officers swarmed outside Trawick’s apartment. “Who’s injured?” a sergeant asked. Two officers replied in near unison: “Nobody. Just a perp.”

With all that in hand, the review board completed its investigation in June 2021. The agency, through one of the few powers it had gained over the years, can file and prosecute disciplinary cases against officers — which triggers a Police Department trial, after which a departmental judge sends a provisional decision to the police commissioner, who makes the final call.

This September, the police judge overseeing the Trawick case recommended that there should be no discipline. Her reason had nothing to do with the shooting itself; in fact, the judge wrote that she had “serious doubts” about the decisions of the officer who killed Trawick. But the review board, she said, had failed to file charges within the 18-month statute of limitations, as outlined under state law. In the end, the department’s refusal to give the footage to the review board had effectively run out the clock on any chance the officers would be punished.

“That should not be tolerated,” says Jeff Schlanger, the former deputy commissioner. “Both CCRB and NYPD are city agencies. This is something the mayor needs to resolve.”

In the wake of George Floyd’s murder in 2020, huge demonstrations for racial justice and against police brutality rolled across the country and the world. It was a global reckoning brought on by footage — the video, recorded by a teenager on her smartphone for more than eight minutes, showing Derek Chauvin ending Floyd’s life.

Napolitano and her team at the review board had collected data showing how footage could make a difference in New York too. Access to body-camera footage roughly doubled the likelihood that agency investigators would be able to decide a case on its merits rather than dismiss it as inconclusive. But the backlog was growing. That May, the board filed 212 requests with the Police Department for body-worn-camera footage — and the department sent only 33 responses. (While the pandemic slowed the work of all city agencies, the backlog predated it.)

“The withholding of footage stops investigations and prevents the CCRB from providing adequate and meaningful oversight of the NYPD,” an internal agency memo warned. “The situation for New York City oversight of the police has steadily grown worse during the duration of a BWC program intended primarily to aid oversight.”

Napolitano campaigned internally for a law that would take away the department’s absolute control over footage and give the review board its own access. That November, she was let go, along with three other staff members who had sent pointed emails and memos about the department’s withholding of footage. The four filed a lawsuit claiming that their firing violated their First Amendment rights and received an undisclosed settlement. A review-board spokesperson wrote in an email that the agency has “publicly and repeatedly called on legislators to support the fight for direct access. No employee has ever been fired for supporting direct access to BWC footage.”

This spring, the City Council speaker, Adrienne Adams, and the New York City public advocate, Jumaane Williams, sponsored a bill that would give the review board direct access to footage so that it wouldn’t be beholden to the department for cooperation during investigations. “There are difficult split-second decisions that have to happen” in policing, Williams told me. “But if we’re not able to look at the same thing, if we have to take the word of the NYPD, that doesn’t make this conversation any easier.”

The Police Department has opposed the bill. A department official insisted at a City Council hearing in March that the department “does not fear transparency.” But the official argued that it would be an “insurmountable obstacle” to give the review board direct access while following state confidentiality laws. The bill has been stalled for months.

The city, meanwhile, paid out at least $121 million in settlements last year for lawsuits alleging misconduct by police officers — the highest total in five years.

With footage remaining in the control of the Police Department, body-worn cameras have made little difference to the public. This year, a federal court monitor wrote a scathing report about persistent problems with stop-and-frisk, the unconstitutional policing tactic that prompted Scheindlin to order the department to adopt body cameras a decade ago. The monitor found that contrary to Scheindlin’s expectations, police supervisors weren’t using footage to flag misconduct. In a sample of cases the monitor looked at, supervisors reviewing footage of stop-and-frisk encounters concluded that 100% of the cases they looked at were proper stops. The court monitor reviewed the same footage and found that 37% of the stops were unconstitutional.

“It was an experiment,” Scheindlin says, one that didn’t anticipate issues like control over footage. Scheindlin, who stepped down from the bench in 2016, says she now believes that the Police Department should no longer be the sole custodian of its own video. “That troubles me,” she says. “It should always be somebody independent.”

In interviews with a half-dozen former commanders and high-level officials, most of whom were involved in the body-camera program itself, they said that despite its public pronouncements, the department hasn’t committed to using footage for accountability. “Body cams are essential, if done right,” says a high-ranking commander who just retired and who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he still works in law enforcement. “They are a game changer.” He added, “If there’s a problem, you flag — and potentially there’s discipline. But that’s not happening in most cases.” Instead, he says, body cameras have become “an exercise in just work they have to do. It’s a culture thing.”

Rudy Hall has a particularly useful vantage point. He was part of the team that rolled out the body cameras, visiting police departments around the country to see how they were using the technology, and has gone on to work for the federal monitor overseeing the department’s compliance with Scheindlin’s now-decade-old order on stop-and-frisk. “I watch a lot of body-cam videos,” Hall told me. “I have absolutely seen supervisors approve problematic conduct.”

“Body-worn cameras have not been exploited the way they should be,” says Jeff Schlanger, the former deputy commissioner. “The way to true reform is through using body cams as an early-warning system, as a way to correct small mistakes before they become big mistakes. But there weren’t a lot of discussions about it. The NYPD needs to do a lot better.”

One of the most comprehensive studies of the use of body cameras, a 2019 meta-analysis led by researchers at George Mason University, recommended that police departments consider using footage the way sports teams use game tape, to regularly review and improve performance. That’s essentially what the New Orleans Police Department did after the U.S. Department of Justice put it under federal oversight about a decade ago in response to the police killings of several Black men and persistent police violence. Body cameras were a “critical engine for us to continuously evaluate performance,” says Danny Murphy, who ran a unit at the department overseeing compliance with the federal mandate.

Four auditors were hired to join the police force and comb through footage. They looked to make sure that officers were using their cameras and that supervisors were flagging any problematic behavior. “If officers know they’re being viewed, if supervisors know they’re being reviewed, it creates a pressure for accountability,” says Murphy, who left the department four years ago. A 2020 report from the city’s civilian oversight agency — which has direct access to footage — noted a reduction in both the use of force and citizen complaints, which the department attributed to “the use of the body-worn cameras and the increased scrutiny and oversight these cameras provide leadership.” The police in New Orleans also regularly and quickly release video from shootings and other major incidents. But in the end, it’s the police chief who has the final say on discipline.

During his tenure at the New York Police Department, Schlanger had, in fact, started a kind of internal oversight system similar to the one in New Orleans. Schlanger and other senior officials would meet with each of the department’s 77 precincts every six months and look at body-camera footage to identify problematic trends and officers. “It was CompStat for constitutional policing,” Schlanger says, referring to the department’s data-heavy program for tracking crime. “If we saw a precinct doing poorly, we’d work to help them. It made a difference.”

The department quietly ended the review program last year.

A civil suit on behalf of Miguel Richards’ estate was filed against the city in 2018. New York is seeking the dismissal of the case. A judge has been considering the request for two and a half years. “I want answers,” his mother told me, “and haven’t been able to get them.”

The three officers involved in the Richards shooting were honored in 2018 by the largest New York police union, the Police Benevolent Association, which gave them its Finest of the Finest award for “extremely brave and tactically sound action” in the Richards shooting, noting that “the officers had no choice but to open fire.”

The officers were later deposed in the lawsuit. One of them, Mark Fleming, said in his testimony in September 2020 that he had learned a lesson: that the Emergency Services Unit — whose help he told department investigators he didn’t need — is in fact better equipped and trained to deal with situations that involve people having a mental health crisis.

It’s not clear what, if any, lessons the department itself has taken in. Since Richards’ death in 2017, when cameras were widely rolled out, officers have killed at least 11 people in crisis. There is no evidence that officers have been punished in any of the cases.

On a Sunday morning in the Bronx this spring, there was another shooting. Santo de la Cruz called a city emergency line. His son, 42-year-old Raul de la Cruz, was in the middle of a schizophrenic episode and had posted a disturbing video on Facebook that morning. Wearing camouflage clothing and a hat with a patch of an Israeli flag, Raul complained about racist police officers. His father called 311, avoiding 911 because he was afraid of what would happen if the police showed up. “I thought they would send someone capable of dealing with a situation like that,” he says in Spanish. “Because I was calling for a sick person, not to send the police to shoot him up.” But it was the police who arrived, with body cameras rolling. And Raul was holding a knife.

The officers shot him 28 seconds after arriving. He was hospitalized for more than a month before being released, having lost a kidney and part of his liver. A department commander cited the body-camera footage when he gave a brief news conference the day of the shooting to describe what happened. “This situation was fast, volatile and dangerous,” he said. The officers’ “quick response saved at least one civilian and protected themselves.”

But the department has not released the footage or commented in the eight months since.

Lowenkron’s colleagues at New York Lawyers for the Public Interest have once again requested the video, so far to no avail. The department has also withheld the footage from the Civilian Complaint Review Board, per the practice of sharing records with the agency only after its own investigation is done.

On Dec. 5, weeks after we sent questions to the department about that practice, the department signed a memorandum of understanding with the board to send footage to it within 90 days of a request.

But for now, nobody outside the department knows exactly what happened in the de la Cruz shooting, including the family. They have not heard anything from the department. They want to see the footage.

Trump fraud trial judge evacuated from courthouse after testimony concludes

The lower Manhattan courthouse where former President Donald Trump's civil fraud trial has taken place for the last 10 weeks was evacuated Wednesday afternoon after someone set papers on fire and used multiple fire extinguishers on the same floor as the courtroom, just four hours after testimony in the trial concluded. The presiding judge in the lawsuit, New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron, was in his robing room when he heard shouting on the floor. He was safely escorted from the courthouse and was unaware of any specific potential personal threat at the time he evacuated. 

Two courthouse officials told Business Insider that a man ignited a small fire with a firework and then set off two or more fire extinguishers. The man, who was not a courthouse employee and was not identified, was arrested, the officials said. Fire and police personnel responded quickly to the incident. The judge and other courthouse employees were permitted to return to the fourth floor at around 5 p.m. to collect their personal items before leaving for the day. One officer told the judge and others heading upstairs to wear a mask if they had one because chemicals from the fire extinguishers had contaminated the area. No one was hurt, and it was not immediately clear what prompted the man to start the fire.

Monkeys are marvelous, but face a bleak future thanks to other primates: Humans

Step into the lush landscapes of tropical rainforests or the wide-open spaces of savannas, and you might witness a captivating show unfolding high in the treetops – the world of monkeys. These clever creatures, distant relatives to humans, bring joy and wonder to the wild. Monkeys have a lot to teach us, from their stunning diversity, unique traits, the threats they faces and the important work being done to keep them safe.

Monkeys form a diverse and sizable mammal category, encompassing the majority of primates. While humans, chimpanzees and other apes share a common ancestor with monkeys, they belong to a distinct primate group that diverged from monkeys millions of years ago. Monkeys generally are smaller than apes and typically possess tails, a feature absent in apes. It's important to note that lemurs, another branch of the primate family tree, reside in Madagascar and are not part of the monkey group. 

The world is home to many monkeys, each exhibiting distinct lifestyles. These creatures vary significantly in size, shape, and color, yet they share common traits of intelligence and sociability. Some, like the spider monkey, effortlessly swing through branches, while others, like the capuchin, display remarkable problem-solving abilities. Their expressive faces and lively behaviors make them both fascinating and endearing.

Monkeys are facing numerous threats that put their existence at risk. Habitat loss, illegal wildlife trade and conflicts with humans are challenges they grapple with.

Monkeys inhabit all continents except Australia and Antarctica, with a penchant for making their homes in trees within warm and humid tropical rainforests. Notable locations include the Amazon rainforest in South America and the Congo Basin in Central Africa. However, certain monkey species have demonstrated remarkable adaptability, thriving in challenging environments such as arid savannas or snow-covered mountains. A prime example is the Japanese macaque, commonly known as the snow monkey, equipped with dense fur that aids their survival in the northern regions of Japan, where snow covers the landscape for a significant portion of the year.

Geoffroy´s Spider MonkeyGeoffroy´s Spider Monkey (Getty Images/Juan Carlos Vindas)

However, a more serious reality lies beneath the surface of this enchanting world. Monkeys are facing numerous threats that put their existence at risk. Habitat loss, illegal wildlife trade and conflicts with humans are challenges they grapple with. 

Some species, such as the Javan langur and the Cross River gorilla, are on the verge of disappearing due to the relentless impact of human activities.


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The struggle becomes even more evident when we look at endangered species like the Tana River red colobus. These primates, once abundant in their habitats, are now critically endangered, pushed to the brink by deforestation, climate change and poaching. Their plight serves as a stark reminder of the delicate balance of our ecosystems and the urgent need for conservation action. 

Adding to these concerns is the involvement of monkeys in scientific experiments, raising ethical debates due to their genetic similarities to humans and worries about their welfare. While monkeys are often utilized in research to enhance our understanding of human physiology and diseases, ethical concerns stem from the treatment of these intelligent and social creatures in laboratory settings. Critics argue that invasive procedures, isolation and potential harm to monkeys prompt ethical questions regarding the pursuit of scientific knowledge. 

White-handed GibbonWhite-handed Gibbon (Getty Images/AYImages)

The ongoing debate emphasizes the need for increased transparency, enhanced welfare standards and the promotion of alternative research methods. This ethical dilemma highlights the importance of striking a careful balance between scientific progress and the compassionate treatment of animals, underscoring the urgency for comprehensive conservation efforts to ensure the well-being and survival of these remarkable creatures. 

In the face of these challenges, however, there is hope. Conservation efforts are underway across the globe, led by organizations committed to protecting monkey habitats, combating illegal wildlife trade, and involving local communities in sustainable practices. Initiatives like the Gibbon Conservation Center and the Pan African Sanctuary Alliance exemplifies the dedication to safeguarding these primates and the ecosystems they call home. 

The Gibbon Conservation Center, for instance, focuses on the well-being and conservation of gibbons, working to rehabilitate and release them back into the wild. Similarly, the Pan African Sanctuary Alliance collaborates with sanctuaries to rescue and rehabilitate monkeys, providing them a safe haven from the threats they face.

Yet, the road to conservation is not without its challenges. It requires not only the efforts of dedicated organizations but also the collective responsibility of individuals. Supporting eco-friendly practices, raising awareness about the importance of preserving natural habitats, and rejecting products linked to wildlife exploitation are small yet impactful steps everyone can take. 

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In the tapestry of life, monkeys play a vital role, adding color and vibrancy to the natural world. Their survival is not just their own concern; it is a shared responsibility for all of us. As we learn about the enchanting world of monkeys, we must recognize that their fate is intertwined with ours. The disappearance of these playful guardians would not only diminish the beauty of our planet but also reflect a failure in our role as caretakers of Earth.

By supporting conservation initiatives, we contribute to the protection of not only monkeys but the rich biodiversity that sustains life on our planet. It is a call to action, urging us to appreciate and protect the wonders of the wild, ensuring that future generations can also marvel at the playful antics of these incredible creatures. The fate of monkeys is, in essence, a reflection of our commitment to preserving the delicate balance of nature, and by safeguarding them, we secure a brighter, more harmonious future for all living beings.

“It’s a very sick thing”: Trump rages at Iowa rally after Jack Smith turns the tables

Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday complained that special counsel Jack Smith turned to the Supreme Court to decide whether presidential immunity shields Trump from prosecution.

Trump’s attorneys earlier this month argued in an appeal that he is immune from prosecution because his alleged efforts to subvert the 2020 election were part of his official duties. Smith in response leapfrogged the appellate court and filed an emergency petition to the Supreme Court, asking the justices to rule on the matter in an apparent effort to speed up the process.

“Now they’re saying, ‘Let’s rush it to the Supreme– we gotta rush it, rush it, rush it,” Trump complained at a rally in Iowa on Wednesday. “They could have started three years ago. Everything– nothing changed. They could have started three years ago, but they didn’t. They started just recently with this crap.”

Trump claimed that “they’re fighting like hell because they want to try and get a guilty plea from the Supreme Court,” which is not a thing since the Supreme Court is not the one under indictment and cannot rule on Trump's guilt.

“But they want to get that because that’s the only way they’re going to win the election. It’s a very sick thing,” Trump claimed.

Former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance explained on MSNBC that the former president’s recent moves show that his filings in the D.C. case are a “delay game.”

“And here’s how we know that and there can no longer be any questions, not that there was,” she said. “Trump has filed a motion to dismiss the charges against him on immunity grounds and now today we see him in front of the court of appeals saying ‘but wait a second, don’t rule on my motion too fast. No need to expedite it. Let’s take our time here.’ And, of course, any criminal defendant who’s under indictment, who has a serious motion to dismiss the charges wants to see that motion ruled on as quickly as possible. Yes, this is a delay game. Even Trump understands that his immunity motion is a loser.”

Former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman called Smith’s decision to go around the appeals court and straight to the Supreme Court a “masterly move” that is “likely to upend Trump’s chief strategy of delaying” the trial.

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“The standard playbook would suggest sitting tight while forcing Trump to press the issue in the higher courts. But Smith realized that Trump could string out the review process by plodding through every possible step, preventing the Supreme Court from taking up the issue soon enough to allow a trial before the November election,” Litman wrote in a Los Angeles Times column. “So the special counsel wisely decided to jump ahead,” he said, crediting former deputy solicitor general Michael Dreeben, a former member of special counsel Bob Mueller’s team who filed the Supreme Court petition on behalf of Smith’s team.

The Supreme Court in response to Smith’s filing ordered Trump’s team to submit a response by next Wednesday, which Litman called “warp speed by the court’s standards.”

“It’s a promising sign for Smith that the Supreme Court jumped on the question with the urgency the special counsel advocated,” he wrote, adding: “Indeed, the court might welcome Smith’s motion. If the immunity issue were to come to them much later, they would be taking it up in the shadow of the election.”


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Former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, who also served on Mueller’s team, noted that an appeals court ruled earlier this month that Trump is not immune from lawsuits from victims of the Jan. 6 attack even though he was president at the time.

“So, if you are committing crimes as part of your campaign to stay in office, that is not something within the function of the office of the White House,” Weissmann told MSNBC, arguing that the ruling "bodes very well for Jack Smith, and not so good, obviously, for Donald Trump."

“You know, it really cannot be the case that just because you're president of the United States, that you can kill somebody or you can just decide to — could you imagine what this would mean?” he added. “Can you really have a second term where the president who was told, by the way, you have absolute immunity to commit crimes in office. Just cannot be the case."

The speech Joe Biden should give — and we need to hear

I prefer to be a dreamer among the humblest, with visions to be realized, than lord among those without dreams and desires — Khalil Gibran

I went to sleep last night and fell into a feverish dream about politics and the coming presidential election.

I woke in a cold sweat of reality. If the dream was only real.

In this dream, the American public was open to critical thinking and took its time to gather vetted factual information before offering an opinion. That’s how I knew I was dreaming. 

And in this dream I heard a president speak. Their face was obscured by clouds. Maybe it was smog or cigar smoke. But his or her voice resonated and sounded hopeful; it was filled with joy and laughter. I didn’t recognize it as belonging to anyone in the real world.

Watching Donald Trump speak is like watching a festering carbuncle explode in a spray of pus and blood. Listening to Donald Trump speak reminds one of the adults in a Charlie Brown cartoon, or worse yet, a braying ass with terminal flatulence. He remains an inchoate, irredeemable, iconic mess of humanity developmentally stuck between diapers and nursery school. Or, if you prefer, an infected face wart that John Candy’s Uncle Buck would suggest a rat gnaw off your body.

On the other hand, listening to Joe Biden is like listening to that folksy professor whose stump speech looks like laundry drying on a clothesline. Biden is knowledgeable and empathetic, while Trump is ignorant, crude and narcissistic. But Trump is far more demonstrative. His fans like watching him wrap himself around a flag, smile and dance like his feet are glued to the ground while he snarls at his enemies, licks his self-inflicted wounds and proclaims himself both a victim and our one true savior.

Biden’s standard stump speech is always filled with words of hope and highlights his many accomplishments as president. He often says we should remember that we are the United States of America — with an emphasis on “United” — but though he talks about hope, his stage presence won’t sway the undecided voter. 

What brings us together is the knowledge that we are all involved in this grand experiment of self-government. None of us gets everything we want, but by working together we all get what we all demand and need — justice and equality.

Biden, however, is the only one on the national stage right now, including all the current Democrats, Republicans or Independents running for President, who could pull off my dream speech — provided he brings the right energy to it.

In my dream, it occurred on national television. If it occurred in reality, it would take place with the president either in the Oval Office or, even better, standing at a podium in the East Room with the press corps and guests in attendance. It would be planned for a national holiday. It would begin  with remarks of hope for the future and then would continue like this:

…I know some of you are fearful. Some of you are adamant. Some of you believe that to change your mind now shows weakness. But look around. Everyone fails. Everyone makes mistakes. It is not weakness to admit your mistakes and change your mind. It is weakness not to.

Thomas Edison famously said, “I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.” And “there are no rules here — we're trying to accomplish something.”

And we are trying to accomplish something in this country too. Majority rule. Democracy, and a government of by and for the people. We’ve made mistakes. But we’ve made great strides. And every time we’ve made a mistake we’ve corrected ourselves.

We should not be afraid to do so now.

The Republicans say they are the party of “limited” government.

That’s not true. They are the party that wants to limit you.

They want to limit your access to health care.

They want to limit what you read, what you see and what you hear.

They want to limit the way you worship in your own home.

They want to limit your access to Social Security — which is your money.

They want to limit your access to education.

They want to limit who can call themselves patriots, Americans, and citizens to those who only think exactly as they do.

They want to support the fetus, so they say, but they do not support the mother or the child.

They denigrate the homeless while claiming to be Christians.

They are proponents of the equivalent of modern-day slavery: They actually want an unlimited government that dictates to you how to live.

We cannot sit idly by and hope that our democracy is in good hands.

And we know why some of us are listening to this message. It is from fear and anger: Fear that the government is not listening to you and anger that nothing is being done about it. But there is no “Deep State.” There is only the United States.

And our problems cannot be solved by one man stepping forward saying he is the only one who can solve all of our problems.

We all know about false messiahs.

What this will take is the efforts of a majority of us working together to get the job done. Every single one of us has a right to our opinions. I may disagree with what you say, but will defend to death your right to say it — that’s the cornerstone of free speech.


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What brings us together is the knowledge that we are all involved in this grand experiment of self-government. None of us gets everything we want, but by working together we all get what we all demand and need — justice and equality. Everyone has a vested interest in this country’s success, and everyone — including and especially the extremely wealthy — must pay their fair share. We all need to place value on vetted, factual information upon which we can make sound and wise decisions. This isn’t possible without solid public education and a robust free and independent press.

We need to invest more in community journalism, which is the backbone of all journalism. There are vast news deserts in our country where local journalism simply doesn’t exist. There are dozens of shell corporations that produce newspapers but don’t have a single reporter on staff. 

Instead of giving tax breaks to the largest corporations, we need to give tax breaks, low-interest loans and other incentives to local, small media businesses that will hire and invest in the new generation of young reporters and editors who cover city and county council meetings, the local high school PTA, local sports and community fairs — and in so doing, strengthen the foundations of democracy at the local level.

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On the national level, we need to support a national shield law, favored by both Republicans and Democrats and sponsored by a wide variety of legislators from Jamie Raskin to Jim Jordan. We must support anti-SLAPP (that’s strategic laws against public participation) legislation so the richest among us cannot threaten independent media with meritless lawsuits.

We are living in a time where our passion for democracy compels us to become more involved than we’ve ever been in the past in order to guarantee our children and grandchildren benefit from the fruits of the labors of all of our ancestors who demanded a government of, by and for the people. 

We cannot sit idly by and hope that our democracy is in good hands. We must all take part, vote, get people out to vote, stay informed, ask questions of everyone running for office and, yes, run for office ourselves. Do not leave it to “professional” politicians.

To those who support the Constitution, there is room for everyone in this great country. For those who do not support the Constitution, you’ve chosen poorly. We may not all agree on how we obtain our goals, but we all must agree that our goals are freedom and equal rights for everyone of all faiths, genders and races. Give us your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free. We are the wretched refuse, the homeless, and we will always lift the lamp beside the gold door.

This is the United States of America (emphasis on “is” and not “United”). We have proudly stood the test of time for the last 250 years. We recognize that everyone has equal rights under the law, we are and have been the beacon that cuts through the fog of theocracy, despotism and political malignancy.

Our best days are ahead of us. There is nothing we cannot do, no goal we cannot accomplish when we work together. 

We were the first to put a man on the moon. Our science and technological achievements have made what was once only science fiction a reality. Look ahead and see where that takes us. We will never look backward. Our greatness only increases when we look forward. Music. The arts. Math. Science. Equality. Hope.

The United States of America I see in the future leads to peace, understanding and prosperity around the globe, into space and beyond. We choose this path because we are driven by our curiosity, our love and compassion and the knowledge gained from centuries of history and the undeniable understanding that when we all work together . . . even the sky is not the limit.

The only thing I can offer is my life — to paraphrase Winston Churchill — my blood, my sweat and my tears as a bridge from today to the leadership of tomorrow. Our work is not done. Our vision is large enough for everyone. Our servicemen and women in the military know the saying “leave no one behind.” 

That is the vision of this government. We hope it is something we can all share. . .

* * *

(I’d say join together with the band, but you know politicians don’t like to often quote British rock musicians. Who? Exactly.) 

Anyway, that was my dream. No wonder I woke up in a cold sweat.

It is my Christmas holiday wish to hear someone deliver it.

And it is ultimately a dream that, should it become reality, would make the world a less angry, more enjoyable place. Heaven can be here on Earth, and so can Hell.

I’m tired of this dystopian, hellish existence.

You may say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one.

“Life without liberty is like a body without spirit,” Kahlil Gibran taught us, along with this: “Yesterday we obeyed kings and bent our necks before emperors. But today we kneel only to truth, follow only beauty, and obey only love.”

Earth may have had all the elements needed for life within it all along

For many years, scientists have predicted that many of the elements that are crucial ingredients for life, like sulfur and nitrogen, first came to Earth when asteroid-type objects carrying them crashed into our planet’s surface.

But new research published by our team in Science Advances suggests that many of these elements, called volatiles, may have existed in the Earth from the beginning, while it formed into a planet.

Volatiles evaporate more readily than other elements. Common examples include carbon, hydrogen and nitrogen, though our research focused on a group called chalcogens. Sulfur, selenium and tellurium are all chalcogens.

Understanding how these volatile elements made it to Earth helps planetary scientists like us better understand Earth’s geologic history, and it could teach us more about the habitability of terrestrial planets beyond Earth.

Why it matters

The popular “late veneer” theory predicts that Earth first formed from materials that are low in volatiles. After the formation of the Earth’s core, the theory says, the planet got volatiles when volatile-rich bodies from the outer solar system hit the surface.

These objects brought around a half a percent of Earth’s mass. If the late veneer theory is right, then most elements that make up life arrived on Earth sometime after the Earth’s core had formed.

But our new research suggests that Earth had all its life-essential volatile elements from the very beginning, during the planet’s formation. These results challenge the late veneer theory and are consistent with another study tracing the origin of water on Earth.

How we did our work

To study the origin of volatiles in the Earth, we used a computational technique called first-principles calculation. This technique describes the behaviors of isotopes, which are atoms of an element that have varying numbers of neutrons. You can think of an element as a family – every atom has the same number of protons, but different isotope cousins have different numbers of neutrons.

Isotopes have a host of useful applications, from archaeology and medicine to planetary science.

Different isotopes behaved slightly differently during each stage of Earth’s formation. And the isotopes left behind a signature after each formation stage that scientists can use as a kind of fingerprint to track where they were throughout Earth’s formation.

First-principles calculation allowed us to calculate what isotope signatures we’d expect to see for different chalcogens, depending on how the Earth formed. We ran a few models and compared our isotope predictions for each model with the actual measurements of chalcogen isotopes on Earth.

We found that while many volatiles evaporated during Earth’s formation, when it was hot and glowing, many more are still left over today. Our findings suggest that most of the volatiles on Earth now are likely left over from the early stage of Earth’s formation.

What’s next

While chalcogens are interesting to study, future research should look at other critical-for-life volatiles, like nitrogen. And more research into how these volatiles behave under extreme conditions could help us know more about how isotopes were behaving during each of the growth stages of Earth’s formation.

We also hope to use this approach to see whether some exoplanets – planets beyond our solar system – could be habitable to life.

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

Shichun Huang, Associate Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Tennessee and Wenzhong Wang, Professor of Planetary Science, University of Science and Technology of China

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

“I don’t regret it”: Rudy Giuliani’s defense is Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman should accept his abuse

Rudy Giuliani has lost a lot due to his fanatical devotion to Donald Trump. Once referred to as "America's mayor," his reputation is now in tatters. He's broke and faces disbarment. The former mayor of New York city may very well lose his freedom as one of the 19 co-defendants charged in Georgia for conspiring to steal the 2020 presidential election. Despite all this, Giuliani's faith in his glowering orange idol has not wavered. He is even borrowing directly from Trump's playbook in defending himself in a lawsuit filed by two Georgia election workers he defamed as part of the attempted coup

Here is the MAGA defense strategy: Refuse to admit error and instead double down on the very lies that led to so much legal trouble to begin with. 

"Everything I said about them is true," Giuliani told reporters outside the courtroom Monday, repeating his false allegations that the two election workers, Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman, were "engaged in changing votes." 

Giuliani's attempt to play this game is especially silly, as the judge has already ruled that he's guilty of defamation for repeatedly lying about Moss and Freeman.

"Of course I don't regret it," he snapped when asked if he had second thoughts about the lengthy campaign to smear the two women. Giuliani then played another card from the Trump B.S. deck, promising evidence was forthcoming: "Stay tuned." Trump uses this tactic to create the illusion that his lies are still being litigated, but of course, the promised "proof" never comes. 

Giuliani's lawyer, Joseph Sibley, also tried this gambit during cross-examination of a witness on Wednesday, asking, "You know that today’s misinformation might be tomorrow’s truth?"

Of course, the false accusations against the two women are now four years old, and if there were a shred of evidence, it would have come out by now. Plus, defamation law is meaningless if every false accusation was rendered not false on the .000001% chance some proof manifests one day to validate a lie the defendant pulled directly out of his read end. 


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Giuliani's attempt to play this game is especially silly, as the judge has already ruled that he's guilty of defamation for repeatedly lying about Moss and Freeman. The jury trial currently underway in Washington D.C. is merely about assessing how much Giuliani will owe in damages. The plaintiffs are asking for $43 million, but expert witness Ashlee Humphreys, a professor at Northwestern University, testified that they may deserve even more. 

Throughout the week, lawyers have been laying out the damage Giuliani's lies have caused. They played tapes for the juries of the barrage of racist and threatening phone calls Moss and Freeman received from Giuliani's unhinged fan base. Then Moss took the stand to explain how she continues to suffer panic attacks, cannot find a job, and fears leaving her house due to Giuliani's targeting. Freeman testified that she's borrowed and spent over $100,000 to make her home safe from MAGA threats. Eventually, she told the court, she had to move after her address was circulated online. 

Moss testified that she couldn't even get a job at Chick-Fil-A because the interviewer saw the lies about her online and demanded to know if she was the "traitor" Giuliani falsely accused her of being. 

“I was scared to come home at dark, you know,” Freeman told the jury. “I was just scared, I knew I had to move.”

Moss sobbed during her testimony: "I’m most scared of my son finding me and or my mom hanging in front of our house on a tree having to get news at school that his mom was killed."

But to hear his lawyer speak, Giuliani's the real victim here. During arguments, Sibley pled poverty on his client's behalf, calling it the "civil equivalent of the death penalty" if the jury awards the women the millions they are asking for.

The arrogance is breathtaking. While Giuliani is no doubt cash-poor after all the trouble he's gotten into as a Trump stooge, he's still got a $5 million apartment to sell and a likely lucrative career as a right-wing propagandist. Meanwhile, Moss testified that she couldn't even get a job at Chick-Fil-A because the interviewer saw the lies about her online and demanded to know if she was the "traitor" Giuliani falsely accused her of being. 

The underlying assumption tying Giuliani's behavior together is white privilege: A belief shared by him and his MAGA followers that he, a white man, should get to do whatever he wants to whomever he wants. And his victims, two Black women, are expected to simply take it. That it's the "death penalty" for Giuliani to lose his fancy Manhattan apartment. But when it comes to these two women suffering fear and poverty because of Giuliani's lies, he and his allies view that as the natural order that MAGA is meant to restore. 

As Jamelle Bouie of the New York Times recently reminded us, Giuliani has always been a loudmouthed, unapologetic racist. 

The easiest way to establish this is just to look at one of the formative moments of Giuliani’s political career. On Sept. 16, 1992, thousands of off-duty police officers crowded in front of New York’s City Hall to protest against Mayor David Dinkins. “The cops held up several of the most crude drawings of Dinkins, black, performing perverted sex acts,” Jimmy Breslin, the Newsday columnist, who was present at the riot, wrote. “‘Now you got a n****r right inside City Hall,’ one officer reportedly said,” Breslin continued. “‘How do you like that? A n****r mayor.’” Other officers chanted slogans like “Dinkins gotta go!” and “The mayor’s on crack!”

Giuliani walked right into this racist mob, jumped on stage, and declared Dinkens had to go. No wonder he liked Trump so much, as Trump ran for president in a similar fashion, as a way for racist whites to "reclaim" power after the historic election of a Black leader. In 1992, it was Dinkins. In 2016, Trump was gunning for President Barack Obama. 

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Giuliani's unreconstructed racism may lead him to believe Black women have no rights he is bound to respect, but the same cannot be said for the judge, and hopefully for the jury. Certainly, the MAGA track record for the "no regrets" strategy shows it's not effective in defamation cases. Infowars host Alex Jones embraced belligerence as a strategy when sued by the survivors of the Sandy Hook shooting, who he had falsely accused of lying about the deaths of their children. His entitlement defense, however, did him no favors in court, and his legal penalties have reached $1.4 billion as a result

Same story with E. Jean Carroll suing Trump for sexual assault and defamation after he falsely accused her of making up the story of him raping her in a department store in the 90s. Trump lost in court, leading to a $5 million decision in Carroll's favor. But then he went straight to CNN and defamed her again. So she re-upped her lawsuit and this time, there's a good chance she wins a lot more than $5 million. The D.C. judge has already warned Giuliani that, if he keeps lying about Moss and Freeman, they will have a chance to sue him again. 

Giuliani's protestations of innocence are silly, but they fit into the larger MAGA mythology, which likes to pretend white men are the "real" victims and people of color and women are all-powerful oppressors. Giuliani has been leaning into this, by whining about how he is supposedly under-represented compared to Moss and Freeman.

What Giuliani is leaving out, of course, is that Moss and Freeman are represented by a non-profit legal firm called Protect Democracy. Without this help, it's unlikely-to-impossible that they would have been able to sue, as they weren't exactly swimming in cash even before Giuliani made it impossible for Moss to get a job. Giuliani, on the other hand, has the private representation he has enjoyed his entire career as a wealthy man. No doubt, Giuliani's audience knows all this. But such is the victim complex of the right that they are spinning this to paint him as the wronged party, because, ultimately MAGA believes it's the duty of both women and people of color to shut up and take white men's abuse. 

“Incredibly significant” Supreme Court case could derail Trump prosecution: Legal expert

The Supreme Court on Wednesday agreed to hear an appeal brought by a man who was charged with "obstruction of an official proceeding" relating to the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the U.S. Capitol — and although this case does not directly involve Donald Trump, it could have significant implications for the criminal prosecutions of the former president. 

The central question in this case revolves around whether the criminal statute on obstructing an official proceeding can be invoked for actions leading to the disruption of Congress' certification of the 2020 presidential election results on Jan. 6.

The justices will consider a case brought by Joseph Fischer, who is seeking to have a criminal charge dismissed which claims that he obstructed an official proceeding — the certification of Joe Biden's election victory — along with the mob of Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol. 

Trump has been charged with the same offense in his federal election interference case, as have other individuals. The Supreme Court's involvement could provide Trump with additional grounds to seek a delay, potentially pushing back his federal court trial in Washington from its scheduled start date on March 4 until after the 2024 presidential election.

The court’s decision to review this issue is “significant” because it suggests that some justices may agree that the obstruction statute does not apply to the events of Jan. 6 efforts, former U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade, a University of Michigan law professor, told Salon. 

Many Jan. 6 rioters have been tried using this statute — and it is the “main charge” in special counsel Jack Smith's case against Trump, which makes this Supreme Court decision “incredibly significant.”

A favorable decision for the defense could undermine the two counts in Trump's indictment based on “the same theory,” McQuade said. However, the other two counts, alleging conspiracy to defraud the United States and violation of voting rights, would not be affected. 

“Trump might attempt to leverage the court's examination of these other cases to request a trial delay, but this request is expected to face opposition,” she added,

Many of the Jan. 6 rioters have been tried using the same statute and it is the “main charge” in special counsel Jack Smith's prosecution of Trump, which makes the case “incredibly significant,” Laurie Levenson, a law professor at Loyola Marymount University, told Salon.

The issue at hand here, Levenson explained, is whether the certification of election results is an "official proceeding" under the statute, and what evidence is required to prove that the defendant acted "corruptly" in trying to stop it.

“If the Supreme Court holds against the government, it will make it extremely difficult to prove the heart of the case against Trump,” Levenson said.

Temidayo Aganga-Williams, white-collar partner at Selendy Gay Elsberg and former senior investigative counsel for the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack, expanded further. 

The defendant in this case is challenging the government’s application of 18 U.S.C. 1512(c), which, in part, prohibits any efforts to “corruptly” obstruct, influence or impede an official proceeding, Aganga-Williams said. The government has interpreted this statute “more broadly” to apply to various forms of obstruction of “any official proceeding,” including the congressional certification that must happen by Jan. 6 following a presidential election. 

“Fischer contends that this statute applies just to actions taken toward tampering with or destruction of a document or record,” Aganga-Williams continued. “He points to the fact that the provision was enacted as part of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, which was primarily aimed at white-collar crime.”

While one federal judge agreed with Fischer's narrower interpretation, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals — generally considered the second most powerful court in the country — ruled that the statute’s use of broad language supported the government’s interpretation, he added.

A straightforward interpretation of the law, coupled with the intent of Congress, implies a “broader interpretation,” David Schultz, professor of political science at Hamline University, told Salon. Congress aimed to criminalize a wide range of obstructive actions, extending beyond the “mere destruction” of documents and not confined to corporate entities. The law as written is a comprehensive obstruction of justice statute, he said.

Schultz cited the precedent of Arthur Andersen LLP v. U.S., a case that revolved around allegations of document shredding at the disgraced energy firm Enron and the accounting firm Arthur Andersen. As a result of problems interpreting and applying the obstruction statute in that case and “bad jury instructions,” Congress then revised the law. 


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“There is no indication that Congress should narrowly apply the law to document destruction only," Schultz said. It was meant to "have broader application to intentional efforts to obstruct justice and impede an official government investigation.” 

More recently, the government has used the revised statute to prosecute Jan. 6 rioters, Schultz explained. But in the current case, Fischer v. U.S., a dissenting lower court judge ruled that the Corporate Fraud Accountability Act of 2002 does not apply to alleged crimes beyond document destruction.  

Since Fischer’s case is not on an expedited schedule, it will likely take months for the court to hear oral arguments and issue a ruling, Aganga-Williams pointed out. With the Supreme Court’s current term continuing until next June, a final ruling will likely come well after Trump’s scheduled March 2024 trial. 

“I expect Trump will seek a delay of his trial to allow the Supreme Court time to rule on this issue, which impacts two of the four charges faced by the former president,” Aganga-Williams said. “Such a request for another delay would be part of Trump’s admitted plan to avoid seeing the inside of a courtroom until after the election. No court should allow him to succeed.”

If the Supreme Court were, in effect, to overturn hundreds of Jan. 6 convictions based on an interpretation of this law, that would enormously “disrupt” what Aganga-Williams called the Department of Justice’s “largest investigation in its history."

“It would snatch away accountability of so many that chose to violently attack the U.S. Capitol and undermine American democracy,” he continued. “It would also be a severe blow to holding accountable the person ultimately responsible for the attack on the Capitol — Donald Trump. It would be unsupported by a plain reading of the statute and, above all else, it would be a moral travesty.”

“Oh my god! Consider the source”: Students frustrated by derailment of campus free speech debates

In testimonies before Congress last week, the presidents of Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology personally and vehemently condemned rising antisemitism and antisemitic speech on their campuses. But their responses to a representative's question about demonstrators calling for the genocide of Jews in campus protests has ignited a sharp backlash and bipartisan demands for their resignation, that just over a week out from the remarks have only seemed to ramp up.

Last week's contentious and viral moment from the five-hour-long House Education and the Workforce Committee hearing titled "Holding Campus Leaders Accountable and Confronting Antisemitism" saw Republican Rep. Elise Stefanik, N.Y., a Harvard alum, questioning a panel of Ivy League presidents about whether "calling for the genocide of Jews" violates each universities' code of conduct. While the presidents of Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology personally and vehemently condemned rising antisemitism and antisemitic speech on their campuses, their responses to Stefanik's grilling have ignited a sharp backlash and bipartisan demands for their resignation.

“It is a context-dependent decision,” UPenn President Liz Magill responded near the end of their tense exchange, to which Stefanik fired back, “Calling for the genocide of Jews is dependent on the context? That is not bullying or harassment? This is the easiest question to answer ‘yes,’ Ms. Magill.”

Harvard President Claudine Gay answered the question in kind, telling Stefanik, “When speech crosses into conduct, we take action.” MIT President Sally Kornbluth echoed that standpoint and asserted that such language would only be “investigated as harassment if pervasive and severe.”

Stefanik demanded the college leaders also declare whether chants of "intifada," an Arabic word meaning uprising that many Jews see as a call for violence against them, violate their universities' codes of conduct. While the university leaders again personally condemned the word and rebuked its use, Magill and Gay said that chants of it rising to the level of inciting violence or violating policy is more complicated an answer.

"Legally, their responses were correct. I think everyone who watched that testimony, however, thought the answers were clearly lacking," Alex Morey, a First Amendment attorney with the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, told Salon. The First Amendment, Morey said, protects "true threats or discriminatory harassment or incitement," which rise to higher legal bars than saying "intifada" or "from the river to the sea," a phrase that many Palestinians and supportive protestors see as a call for Palestinian liberation while many Jews associate it with calls for genocide. 

While it may seem "nonsensical" to say that calls for genocide are protected speech, the protection is there for "good reason" because people disagree about what genocide means, Morey explained, noting that many Americans don't fully understand the scope of what the First Amendment protects. 

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The massive fallout since the hearing suggests many Americans might not agree with it either. Notable alum have questioned the leadership of the university presidents — who have each led their institution for less than two years. Donors have threatened to pull their funding and encouraged others to follow suit. and public officials have called for their terminations. The blowback has also ignited a debate about free speech on U.S. campuses in the face of the ongoing crisis in the Middle East and the role of universities in balancing the protected right with the concerns of students and faculty about the presence of antisemitic speech in on-campus protests. On Wednesday, the House of Representatives voted to call for the resignation of Gay and Kornbluth. 

"From a free speech perspective, we were going, 'Oh my god. Consider the source,' Morey told Salon of her organization's reaction to the hearings. "These are the same presidents that are censoring all kinds of speech on their campus all the time, and now they're citing the First Amendment and saying, 'Gosh, this is a context-dependent question.'"

Morey, who also serves as FIRE's director of campus rights advocacy, noted that Harvard, MIT and Penn have repeatedly scored low on the organization's campus free speech rankings, with the 2024 report showing Harvard ranking the lowest with an "abysmal" score out of more than 250 schools and Penn ranking just above the Cambridge-based university.

MIT, though scoring "average" and falling toward the middle of the ranking, is among the "bad actors," Morey said, citing the school's reneging of a 2021 invitation for a geophysicist to give a lecture after he voiced criticism of affirmative action and diversity programs.

"On these college and university campuses, we have had administrators sometimes unilaterally making decisions about whether or not they think a certain political statement is punishable," Morey told Salon. "So do you want someone like Liz McGill or Claudia Gay making the decision about which side here — when it comes to Israel-Palestine — is really calling for genocide, which side should be punished? In practice, that is, how these policies have to be enforced."

In the two months since Oct. 7, when militant group Hamas carried out a deadly attack in Israel that, per its government, killed 1,200 Israelis, university presidents have attempted to balance the right to free speech of Pro-Palestinian student protestors — many of whom decry Israel's retaliatory invasion of Gaza that has killed about 18,000 Palestinians, according to the Hama-run Gaza Ministry of Health, as a genocide — with concerns from students that the language those demonstrators use is antisemitic. 

But such a balance, which fears of violence in the face of rising antisemitism and anti-Arab harassment make more complicated, is hard to strike, according to Jacqueline Pfeffer Merrill, the director of the Bipartisan Policy Center's Campus Free Expression Project.

"The university president has the tricky task of fostering a diversity of viewpoints and also stewarding a sense of community so that people feel that they have a shared place in the academic enterprise of the university, and I think managing that diversity and plurality while also creating a shared sense of participating in the educational mission is challenging," she told Salon before last week's hearing.

The Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights has opened a slate of Title VI shared ancestry inquiries into U.S. colleges in response to complaints about antisemitic and Islamophobic harassment on the campuses since Oct. 7. Harvard and Penn are among a dozen universities currently under investigation.

"These are very fraught issues. There's no one answer that suits the mission of every campus. And no matter what a president does, some people are going to be dissatisfied," Pfeffer Merrill added, noting that the president bears the responsibility of setting the tone and assuring the institution pursues the academic mission, values student safety and maintains a sense of "wide open inquiry and expression."   

Many critics of the leaders' answers to Rep. Stefanik's questioning believed they failed in fulfilling that responsibility. 

Democratic Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, said he found Magill's responses, "unacceptable" and told reporters last Wednesday that she "failed" to "speak and act with moral clarity," according to The New York Times. Ross Stevens, a hedge fund manager started pulling a donation valued at around $100 million from Penn, while petitions circulated calling for the three presidents' resignations. One public petition for Magill, who resigned Saturday after issuing an apology on Wednesday, garnered over 26,000 signatures. 

Stefanik, the House GOP conference chair, announced Thursday that the committee would be launching congressional probes "with the full force of subpoena power" of Harvard, MIT, Penn and other universities "to hold these schools accountable for their failure on the global stage."

By Friday more than 70 members of Congress, including the New York Republican, had also signed a letter demanding the three presidents' firing. When Magill did resign, Stefanik celebrated and called on Gay, who apologized for her remarks last Thursday after issuing a clarifying statement, and MIT's Kornbluth to follow suit. 

Bill Ackman, a billionaire and Harvard alum, echoed those calls in a scathing letter to members of Harvard's Governing Boards, accusing Gay of "[squelching] speech she disfavors while defending and thereby amplifying vile and threatening hate speech," and urging the board to terminate her. 

This backlash is the "conflagration" of a long history in the politics of higher education, according to Amy Binder, a sociology professor at John Hopkins University researching education and politics, who likened the outrage to a bonfire that's had fuel, kindling and newspaper added to it for years. 

On the political right, various actors and organizations have long been "obsessed" with the notion that higher education is a place that indoctrinates students with progressive views and foments bias against conservatives, she explained, pointing to conservative writer William F. Buckley's 1951 book "God and Man at Yale" as an origin point. On the other hand, the left has often accused higher education of "paying lip service" to issues of diversity and inclusion and attempting to "buy off progressive concerns by putting things in committee."

"There's just a lot of mistrust surrounding higher education so that when an issue like this blows up, the various sides are ready to just engage and engage very visibly and vocally," Binder told Salon. 


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Stefanik's probing appeared to be in service of a broader political aim, Binder added, saying that her question was framed as "a gotcha" for the leaders rather than a genuine inquiry.

"When you are posing a yes or no question to somebody and you expect a yes or no answer, you're really not asking for somebody to engage with you on a question or to be nuanced about an answer, but rather to really play into the hands of the questioner," Binder told Salon.

Others, like Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., have also drawn attention to the hypocrisy in Stefanik and other Republicans' seemingly sudden concern for hate speech.

“Where does Elise Stefanik get off lecturing anybody about antisemitism, when she’s the hugest supporter of Donald Trump, who traffics in antisemitism all the time?” Raskin asked during an interview with MSNBC’s Ali Velshi per The Hill. He said that she didn't "utter a peep of protest" when Trump invited to dinner Kanye West and white nationalist Nick Fuentes, who Raskin said believes Oct. 7 to be an Israeli propaganda move.

“The Republican Party is filled with people who are entangled with antisemitism like that and yet somehow she gets on our high horse and lectures a Jewish college president from MIT,” Raskin, who is critical of the university leaders' responses, added. 

Some, however, have also come to the president's defense. More than 700 faculty at Harvard rallied behind Gay amid the mounting pressure for her to resign, signing a letter urging leadership to "defend the independence of the university and resist political pressures," including calls for Gay's removal. The 24-page document included the signature of liberal Harvard legal scholar Laurence Tribe, who criticized Gay's testimony last week, a signal that the controversy may be more nuanced than presented.

Despite the increased pressure from big-name critics, the Harvard Corporation announced Tuesday that Gay would remain the university's president in a statement declaring its unanimous support for her. The MIT Corporation rallied behind Kornbluth in a statement released last week, and Kornbluth has not indicated any plans to step down. 

"Standing strong for values like open inquiry and academic freedom even in the face of the inevitable pressures that will come from legislators, from donors, from Twitter, from students and faculty" is what university leadership and governing boards are supposed to do, Morey told Salon, adding that they should prioritize furthering that core mission and know "when it's not their place to make a political statement."

Open inquiry, according to Pfeffer Merrill, is a "threatened value" on college campuses against a backdrop where politicians, notable figures and even students are better rewarded for using social media to "call out" others. 

"In our democracy, we make decisions by having conversations about ideas. It's not by the loudest voice, by violence, by even simple majority vote, but by having the difficult conversations about ideas and policies that are central to our time," she told Salon, acknowledging that elevated tensions in the current moment make it harder for those conversations to happen. "When people have very deep disagreements, that's what should be happening on a college campus," Pfeffer Merrill added. "It's a success when people are able to start having those conversations, however fraught and difficult and even painful they are."

Respiratory viruses are on the rise. Did COVID-19 make us more vulnerable to other illnesses?

If it seems like everyone is sick right now, it’s not just all in your head. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) over a dozen U.S. states are experiencing higher-than-usual rates of infections this winter. Of course, COVID-19 is on the rise again, yet another indicator that the pandemic isn't truly over. Recent CDC data reports COVID hospitalizations are up 17% and deaths are up 25% from last week. But respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) cases are also “elevated," in addition to pneumonia and flu cases. There's a lot going around right now, making a lot of people wonder, is this normal?

Similar to the urban myth with children, which is that more kids are getting sick more frequently post-pandemic, a similar belief is circulating that more people are getting more sick in post-pandemic winters. In July 2023 the CDC estimated 77.5% of the U.S. population had antibodies from at least one COVID-19 infection, meaning only 1 in 4 had yet to get the infection.

As Salon has previously reported, severe cases of COVID can trigger a hyperinflammatory response called a "cytokine storm" so intense that it seems to exhaust the T cells and decrease their number. More recently, there has been evidence to suggest this can affect the immune system fighting future infections from both COVID-19 and other diseases as well.

Previously, experts were seeing the consequences of measures that the country took to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. Social distancing, masking, school closures not only worked for the coronavirus, but they also helped prevent people from other respiratory viruses such as the flu. Indeed, flu numbers hit a record low in the 2020-2021 season. The number of children in pediatric intensive care units for bronchiolitis and pneumonia also plummeted between April and June 2020. Viruses seemingly came back with vengeance. But is it possible that COVID-19 has left us more vulnerable to other illnesses and more COVID-19 infections?

Viruses like the flu and RSV are starting to spread earlier than in pre-pandemic winters, hence the perceived increase in prevalence. 

“Having COVID is a risk factor for RSV and respiratory illness,” Dr. Rajendram Rajnarayanan, of the New York Institute of Technology campus in Jonesboro, Arkansas, told Salon, pointing to a study published last October in the journal Family Medicine and Community Health. The study found that prior COVID infections can make children five and under more vulnerable to RSV.

But Rajanarayanan said we have yet to pin down what the exact mechanism is behind this relationship. “We need to invest some more money to study what's going on.”

He emphasized this is just one study involving children. However, separate studies on adults have found that having COVID-19 can be a risk factor for Type 2 diabetes. A previous COVID-19 infection put people over the age of 50 at an increased risk for herpes. COVID-19 can also trigger an episode of high blood pressure.

“These are comorbid conditions for having other conditions,” Rajnarayanan said. “And in a way, it sets you up for failure for the next season.”


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In the 2010s, leading up to the pandemic, flu hospitalizations varied each year between 12,000 to 710,000 people. Taking a closer look, flu and pneumonia deaths in the winter of 2022-2023 were higher than in winter 2019-2020, right as the coronavirus took off. This year, according to data from early December, the CDC estimates that there have been at least 26,000 hospitalizations, and 1,600 deaths from flu so far this season.

Dr. William Schaffner, a professor of infectious disease at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, told Salon he’s seeing an uptick in influenza, COVID and RSV hospitalizations locally, in addition to common cold viruses swirling around. But it’s hard to say if post-pandemic what we are seeing is more people getting sick. Instead, he theorized, what’s happening is that viruses like the flu and RSV are starting to spread earlier than in pre-pandemic winters, hence the perceived increase in prevalence. 

“What happened last year, and to a degree this year, is that both influenza and RSV started early,” Schaffner said. “And some of them may have to do with coming out of COVID as the viruses have new opportunities to spread.”

When a person catches the flu it can weaken the immune system even further, making it more difficult for the body to fight off other infections or illnesses.

Schaffner said he doesn’t think that when a healthy person gets COVID-19, that automatically “primes” or “impairs” the immune system so that people are more prone to catch another respiratory virus. However, he pointed out that for people with long COVID, they seem to be having a chronic inflammatory response and an altered immune system. This could make them more vulnerable to other respiratory illnesses, he said. 

“But for the average person, those who recover from COVID, there seems to be no alteration in their immune system,” he said. “They still respond to other infections and other vaccines in a normal way — COVID doesn’t seem to predispose you to more viral infections.”

Instead, the issue is that there are “a lot of viruses that are going around simultaneously,” and this could be wreaking havoc on peoples’ immune systems as they’re having to work harder to fight off multiple viruses spreading around the country. 

Dr. T. Ryan Gregory, an evolutionary and genome biologist at the University of Guelph in Canada, told Salon “concurrent infections,” like having the flu and COVID-19, are worse for a person’s immune system than just having one infection.

“A recent COVID infection might provide temporary immunity to the next COVID reinfection,” he added. “But as with many other viruses, it could make people more susceptible to secondary infections for a while.”

Despite the myth that the immune system becomes weak if it’s not exposed to pathogens, suggesting that it’s good for a person’s immune system to be periodically exposed to viruses, experts have said that’s not the case. Immune systems are far more complex. For example, when a person catches the flu it can weaken the immune system even further, making it more difficult for the body to fight off other infections or illnesses.

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“At minimum, adding a third virus [COVID-19] along with flu and RSV increases the chances of a coinfection, which makes things worse,” Gregory said. “It can also increase the severity of infections with other viruses in people who have recently recovered from one of the others.”

The good news is that there are vaccines to protect against all three viruses circulating — COVID-19, influenza, and RSV for those over the age of 60. 

“Our vaccines have been underutilized this season,” Schaffner said. “It is not too late to be vaccinated — but do not delay in order to be protected through December and into the New Year.”

Party line vote gives the go-ahead for impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden

On Wednesday evening, a party line vote of 221-212 officially escalated an impeachment inquiry into President Biden, which even Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., highlights does not mean that an actual impeachment is inevitable.

“We’re not going to prejudge the outcome of this because we can’t,” Johnson told reporters on Tuesday, ramping up to the vote. “It’s not a political calculation. We’re following the law and we are the rule of law team and I’m going to hold to that.”

As CNN points out, "Since former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy launched the inquiry in September, a trio of committees leading the investigation have interviewed various officials from the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service while also obtaining a mountain of documents and new bank records, including from Biden family members." This latest escalation comes after the president's son, Hunter Biden, turned away from Republican investigator’s subpoena for closed-door testimony, saying he's willing to testify publicly as part of his dad's investigation.

In a statement from President Biden made shortly after today's vote was made public, he says, “Instead of doing anything to help make Americans’ lives better, they are focused on attacking me with lies. Instead of doing their job on the urgent work that needs to be done, they are choosing to waste time on this baseless political stunt that even Republicans in Congress admit is not supported by facts.

Republican Rep. Byron Donalds, a member of the House Freedom Caucus, offered a statement of his own on the inquiry, expressing his belief that the evidence of Biden's alleged wrongdoing will be brought to light.

“I think there's a there's plenty of proof there. We're going to tie all this down. So I think it's pretty likely that we are moving towards impeachment, but we don't want to get ahead of ourselves. We want the evidence to speak for itself,” Donalds told CNN’s Manu Raju.


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Then-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy launched the impeachment inquiry into President Biden back in September in an effort to determine in which ways he may or may not have been involved with Hunter's foreign business dealings. As CNN highlights in their coverage of this, The House Oversight panel "released a document last week showing payment from Hunter Biden’s business entity, Owasco PC, to Joe Biden when he was not in office — but they omitted evidence that the president’s son was repaying his father for a car." They are also concerned about two personal checks from the president’s brother, James Biden, which also seem to have simply been loan repayments. None the less, this gave the GOP more than enough to latch on.

“We are very pleased with the vote today. I think that sent a message loud and clear to the White House,” says House Oversight Chair James Comer.

Trump’s Jan. 6 case put on hold during appeals process and Jack Smith isn’t thrilled

On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan signed an order that will effectively pause Donald Trump's election interference case in Washington, D.C, which will cause proceedings to lay dormant until the case's appeals process comes to a conclusion. In opposition to this decision, special counsel Jack Smith is of the belief, per ABC News, that "certain filings could still move forward to keep the case on track for the March 4 trial date," and tapped in the Supreme Court earlier this week, asking for them to intervene and resolve the matter in an expedited fashion.  

In a statement that came with her signed order, Chutkan made it clear that the pause in the case does not also mean that protective orders that have been put in place regarding Trump's actions will also be paused, meaning that his limited gag order and conditions of his release are still very much in place. 

“This is a big win for President Trump and our rule of law, as it derails Deranged Jack Smith’s rush to judgment strategy of interfering in the 2024 Presidential Election in support of Joe Biden’s campaign,” the Trump campaign said in a statement. “They waited almost three years to bring this hoax ‘case’ and are now desperately trying, and failing, to rush it because they know President Trump is dominating the election,” the statement furthers. 

Trump's team's overall goal in this case is to have it dismissed on the basis of what they view as "presidential immunity," claiming that he shouldn't be charged for actions he took within the "outer perimeter" of his official duties as president.

 

 

New evidence shows Trump’s “fake electors” expressed legal reservations to Rudy Giuliani

Top Donald Trump campaign advisors knew in early December 2020 of concerns that criminal charges could arise after submitting certificates falsely claiming the Republican won battleground states like Michigan that he'd actually lost, documents first obtained by The Detroit News show. 

The emails and text messages between campaign officials and volunteers show supporters of Trump's effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election made attempts to quell fears about the potential for prosecution in Pennsylvania and New Mexico. Those supporters, however, declined to act on the concerns in Michigan, Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and Wisconsin, according to records from a lawyer who assisted the former president's campaign. 

A group of Republicans in Pennsylvania — where Joe Biden won in 2020 by 1 percentage point — had hesitations about authorizing certificates claiming to be the state's official presidential electors, the documents show. They expressed legal concerns during a Dec. 12, 2020 conference call with personal Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani and campaign official Mike Roman, according to emails about the conversation.

"The electors are concerned about the partisan AG targeting them," wrote Trump-aligned attorney Kenneth Chesebro, who was also involved in the Dec. 12 call, in an email sent the same day to Matthew Morgan, a lawyer for the Trump campaign.

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To assuage those concerns, Chesebro authored alternative language for the Pennsylvania and New Mexico electoral certificates that stipulated the Republicans in those states weren't official electors but "might later be determined" to be, according to an email.

"Mike, I think the language at the start of the certificate should be changed in all the states," Chesebro wrote in a text message to Roman on Dec. 12, 2020. "Let's look at the language carefully."

"I don't," responded Roman, the Trump campaign's director of Election Day operations.

"I can help with drafting in a couple hours," Chesebro replied.

"F— these guys," Roman messaged back. 

Trump's campaign didn't immediately respond Tuesday to The Detroit News' request for comment.

Chesebro later told investigators in Michigan that the same-day conference call was "very heated," but he wasn't sure why Roman messaged, "F— these guys."

In another message to Roman sent Dec. 12, 2020, Chesebro asked, "Just placate PA?" 

"I do think they're worried about AG a—hole," Chesebro added, possibly referring to Democrat and then-Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro, who is now the state's governor. 

Roman and Chesebro's exchange came just two days before the day Republicans gathered in the battleground states on Dec. 14, 2020 to sign certificates as part an effort to challenge Biden's victory in Congress.

Unlike in New Mexico and Pennsylvania, 16 Republicans in Michigan signed a certificate falsely dubbing them the state's "duly elected and qualified" electors. Trump had lost Michigan to Biden by 3 percentage points, meaning Biden's electors were the true ones. In July, Democratic Attorney General Dana Nessel charged each of the 16 Republicans who signed the certificates with eight felonies connected to forgery.

Chesebro, who created memos used by the Trump campaign to direct their false electors plan, pleaded not guilty to a felony charge of conspiracy to commit filing false documents in a parallel Georgia case in October and has since been cooperating with investigators. 

The News reviewed hundreds of pages of emails and text messages Nessel's office obtained that involved Chesebro. Records show he was interviewed an agent from the Michigan attorney general's office earlier this month.

In one Dec. 11, 2020, email, Chesebro argued that the purpose behind sending Republican electoral votes to Congress was "to provide the opportunity to debate election irregularities in Congress and to keep alive the possibility that the votes could be flipped to Trump." Congress ultimately upheld Biden's win on Jan. 6, 2021, after a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol.

While working with Trump's campaign to organize the Dec. 14, 2020, gatherings, Chesebro began to express his own worries about whether the electoral certificates they signed should specifically claim the Republicans were the "duly elected" electors, or if they should have conditions, such as a future and unlikely court ruling that would reverse a result in any of the battlegrounds. Those concerns came after the Pennsylvania Republicans voiced theirs on Dec. 12, 2020, in the conference call.

In an email to Morgan that day, Chesebro said the Pennsylvania group wanted "assurance that any legal expenses would be covered," adding that Giuliani "was receptive to" the idea.

On Dec. 12, 2020, Chesebro suggested adding conditional language to the Pennsylvania certificates and wrote in an email to Roman that doing so "might be worth suggesting to the electors in other states."

According to records obtained by The News, Roman didn't respond directly to the idea in the email exchanges.

The Trump campaign's plans initially focused on six states, but records show that Boris Epshteyn, an advisor to Trump, asked Chesebro to create a meeting packet for Republicans in New Mexico, a state Biden won by a 10 percent margin. In a Dec. 13, 2020, email Chesebro told Roman he added "qualifying language" to the beginning of the New Mexico certificate similar to what was added to the Pennsylvania certificates, noting that it "might be good to have it added in all states." But Chesebro had already sent out certificates for us in other states, including Michigan, in which a Republican activist in the state was sent a draft on Dec. 10, according to emails. The New Mexico certificates ultimately featured the "might later be determined" condition, whereas the Michigan certificates saw the Republicans falsely described as "the duly and qualified electors."

A day after sending top Trump campaign officials his idea to alter the certificates, Chesebro defended them to James Fitzpatrick, a Trump campaign employee working in Pennsylvania. Prosecutors can't "punish electors for being faithful and backing their candidate through speech acts that expand Congress's options," Chesebro said. "The campaign should indemnify electors against any legal costs. If AG tries this, a (federal) court might well enjoin it," the lawyer wrote in an email.

In a Dec. 6 interview with an agent in Nessel's office, Chesebro said his immediate response to the concerns in Pennsylvania was to change the language, according to a recording of the conversation. 

Chesebro also told Nessel's office that Roman "didn't agree" and said he used the conditional language in the New Mexico documents and recommended using it for all of the states involved. 

"For whatever reason, it wasn't done," Chesebro said during his interview.

In that same interview, Chesebro revealed details about a December 2020 Oval Office meeting and photo-op between a group of Trump-supporting lawyers and the then-president where the attorneys were instructed against getting Trump's hopes up about overturning the election, according to CNN

“There was a conscious effort to deflect him from a sense of any possibility that he could pull out the election,” Chesebro said about the thinking going into the meeting. “…Our marching orders were: Don’t say anything that makes him feel more positive than the beginning of the meeting.’”


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One attorney, Jim Troupis, bluntly told Trump after leading Trump's failed election challenge in Wisconsin that it was over in the state. 

But Chesebro deviated from the plan when the conversation focused on Arizona, telling Trump he could still win — and explained how the "alternate electors" he helped gather in Arizona and six other states gave Trump an opening to continue challenging the election until Congress certified the results on Jan. 6, 2021.

“I ended up explaining that Arizona was still hypothetically possible — because the alternate electors had voted,” Chesebro told investigators in Michigan, later adding that this made it “clear (to Trump) in a way that maybe it hadn’t been before, that we had until January 6 to win.”

Much to former RNC Chairman Reince Priebus apparent dismay, Chesebro's optimism created problems by apparently renewing Trump's hopes to stay in office. Priebus left the meeting "extremely concerned" about the Jan. 6 conversation and later warned Troupis and Chesebro not to disclose to anyone what happened. 

The "photo-op … gone south," as Chesebro called the Dec. 16, 2020, meeting uncovers a previously unknown instance of Trump hearing directly that he lost, which could factor into his federal election subversion trial.

The details, some of which were previously reported by The Washington Post, also underscore how members of Trump's circle furthered his aspirations to remain in power.

Two days later, Chesebro received a terse email from Troupis that said, “Reince was very explicit in his admonition that nothing about our meeting with the President can be shared with anyone. The political cross-currents are deep and fast and neither you or I have any ability to swim through them.”

By then it was too late. The former president ignored Troupis's comments during the meeting and embraced Chesebro's theories. He continued to falsely claim he won in Wisconsin and elsewhere, including on Jan. 6, when he attempted to weaponize the false Republican electors to "disenfranchise millions of voters," according to his federal indictment. 

CNN has previously identified Chesebro as an unindicted co-conspirator in Trump's federal election subversion case. The lawyer's cooperation in Michigan and other states could bolster special counsel Jack Smith's prosecution even though it's unclear if Chesebro intends to directly cooperate with federal prosecutors.

Roman is facing criminal charges as part of a sprawling racketeering investigation into Trump's election subversion efforts in Georgia. A fundraising page for his legal defense says, "Mike, a father of eight and a devout Roman Catholic, is being targeted by the government in an unprecedented effort to criminalize politics."

No staffers of the Trump campaign have been charged in Michigan, but charges are pending against 15 of the 16 Republican electors in the state. Nessel's office reached a cooperation deal with and dropped the charges against one of the Republicans.

“Orange Is the New Sack”: Stephen Colbert mocks Tucker Carlson’s new streaming network programming

Following Tucker Carlson's abrupt departure from Fox News earlier this year, the conservative commentator has been making many attempts to revive his career. Back in May, Carlson announced that he will bring a version of his Fox News show on X. Most recently, Carlson said he is planning to launch his very own streaming service. Called Tucker Carlson Network, the service will cost $9 per month — or $72 for an annual subscription.

The latest news seemed to amuse “The Late Show” host Stephen Colbert, who referred to Carlson as the “former Fox News anchor and Orville Redenbigot.” He slammed Carlson’s streaming service as “an even worse idea” compared to “Tucker on Twitter.” And he poked fun at its $9 a month fee, which Colbert said “seems kind of steep.”

“For zero dollars a month, you can never watch Tucker Carlson again,” Colbert quipped.

Tucker Carlson Network, which promises its subscribers “hours of exclusive content,” will feature interviews with people like Kid Rock, Martin Shkreli, Alex Jones, and RFK Jr. — a group Colbert collectively called “Mount Douchemore.”

Continuing his roast of Carlson, Colbert went out of his way to make a commercial for Carlson’s new network, which the host renamed “Tuckflix.” The best part about Tuckflix, according to Colbert, is that “it has Tucker Carlson in every single show.”

A few notable fake titles include “Skewed Claims” (a parody of “Squid Games”), “Orange Is the New Sack” (which pokes fun at Carlson pushing for testicle tanning to prove one's masculinity) and “Is He Cake?”

“Home Alone,” “Love & Basketball,” “Fame” and more added to National Film Registry in 2023

The Library of Congress announced Wednesday that 25 major films have been selected to be in its National Film Registry for 2023. Every year, the Librarian of Congress chooses films for their “cultural, historic or aesthetic importance to preserve the nation’s film heritage.” The films must be at least 10 years old.

The oldest title on the list is a 1921 Kodak educational film titled “A Movie Trip Through Filmland” about the production of motion picture film stock and the impact of movies. The latest titles were both released in 2013: “12 Years a Slave” and “20 Feet from Stardom.”

Other notable releases include “Love & Basketball” (2000), “Apollo 13” (1995), “The Nightmare Before Christmas” (1993), “Terminator 2: Judgment Day” (1991), “Home Alone” (1990), “Lady and the Tramp” (1955) and “Helen Keller: In Her Story” (1954).

There are currently 875 films in the registry. A few of the films are among the two million moving image collection items held in the Library, while others are preserved by the copyright holders or other film archives.

Here's a complete list of the new films added, arranged in chronological order:

  • "A Movie Trip Through Filmland" (1921)  
  • "Dinner at Eight" (1933)
  • "Bohulano Family Film Collection" (1950s-1970s)
  • "Helen Keller: In Her Story" (1954)
  • "Lady and the Tramp" (1955)
  • "Edge of the City" (1957)
  • "We’re Alive" (1974)
  • "Cruisin' J-Town" (1975)
  • "¡Alambrista!" (1977)
  • "Passing Through" (1977) 
  • "Fame" (1980)
  • "Desperately Seeking Susan" (1985)
  • "The Lighted Field" (1987)
  • "Matewan" (1987)
  • "Home Alone" (1990)
  • "Queen of Diamonds" (1991)
  • "Terminator 2: Judgment Day" (1991)
  • "The Nightmare Before Christmas" (1993)
  • "The Wedding Banquet" (1993)
  • "Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision" (1994)
  • "Apollo 13" (1995)
  • "Bamboozled" (2000)
  • "Love & Basketball" (2000)
  • "12 Years a Slave" (2013)
  • "20 Feet from Stardom" (2013)