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Calls for investigation after Trump tax returns expose “audit” lie — and years of “negative income”

The House Ways and Means Committee on Tuesday voted to release years of former President Donald Trump’s tax returns and revealed that the IRS did not perform mandatory audits during his first two years in office.

The panel voted to release Trump’s tax returns from his years in office after winning a yearslong court battle to obtain them even though the IRS was required to turn over the information to the committee by law. The committee said it discovered that the IRS failed to carry out mandatory audits of the former president’s taxes until the same day that Ways and Means Chairman Richie Neal, D-Mass., sent a written request in April 2019 for the information. Trump, who defied decades of tradition by refusing to release his tax returns, had repeatedly falsely claimed that he could not release his tax returns himself because he was under audit.

The IRS failed to act even as Trump’s tax forms raised questions about how he used tax deductions to reduce his tax liability, according to a separate report from the Joint Committee on Taxation.

The tax returns themselves are expected to be released publicly in the coming days after certain information is redacted.

“The research that was done as it relates to the mandatory audit program was nonexistent,” Neal told reporters after Tuesday’s hearing.

Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, who sits on the committee, told CNN that the returns showed that there were “tens of millions of dollars in these returns that were claimed without adequate substantiation.”

Former IRS Commissioner Josh Koskinen told The New York Times that “it does seem me to be a legitimate question: If the IRS had the responsibility and wasn’t auditing, what’s the explanation?”

After the IRS finally launched its first audit in 2019, Trump used Freedom of Information Act requests to delay the probe and failed to “provide all the facts needed,” among other delay tactics, according to the committee’s report. The agency only assigned a single agent to the task, which further slowed down the audit.

A Wall Street Journal analysis of the tax data released by the committee showed that Trump and his wife Melania declared “negative income” in four of the six years between 2015 and 2020. The Trumps paid $750 or less in income taxes in three of those years. In all, their total net tax liability over the six years was $1.8 million, including self-employment taxes and household employment taxes.

The tax data showed the Trumps’ income fluctuating wildly, rising to as high as $24 million in 2018 after selling properties and investments before falling to $4.4 million in 2019, the only other year they reported positive income.


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Earlier tax documents obtained by The New York Times showed that Trump paid no income taxes at all in 10 of the previous 15 years before taking office because he reported losing more than he earned.

The new tax data shows that Trump reported $60 million in losses during his presidency.

The Times also previously reported that Trump used so-called land donations as charitable contributions to reduce his tax burden, writing off property taxes on his Westchester County Seven Springs estate by reclassifying it from a personal residence to an investment property. Trump has written off $2.2 million in property taxes as a business expense on the property even though the law only allows individuals to write off up to $10,000 per year.

The committee said Trump also made charitable contributions in cash, which warrants additional investigation.

“We would have inquired as to whether the large cash contributions were supported by required substantiation,” the report said, adding that the IRS is looking into the tax scheme.

Legal experts urged further investigation into the IRS’ failure to audit Trump’s tax returns.

“The IRS dereliction of duty is sadly in line with Secret Service, FBI and DHS subservience to Trump when in office.  Disgraceful,” tweeted former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, who served on special counsel Bob Mueller’s team.

“Investigations need to take place, and that can happen internally at the agency or the Justice Department might decide to step in to figure out what went wrong,” former U.S. Attorney Joyce White Vance told MSNBC. “It’s tough not to see some form of corruption lurking in the wings here, but we do need to find out what precisely those facts are,” she added.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said after the vote on Tuesday that the House will “swiftly” take up Neal’s new legislation requiring the IRS to conduct an audit of the president’s finances.

Trump’s campaign slammed the committee over the release, falsely describing it as a “leak.”

“This unprecedented leak by lameduck Democrats is proof they are playing a political game they are losing,” a campaign spokesperson said in a statement. “If this injustice can happen to President Trump, it can happen to all Americans without cause.”

Republicans on the committee also accused Democrats of weaponizing the tax returns.

“Let me be clear: Our concern is not whether the president should have made his tax returns public, as is traditional, nor about the accuracy of his tax returns,” Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, said Tuesday, according to the Post. “Our concern is that, if taken, this committee action will set a terrible precedent that unleashes a dangerous new political weapon that reaches far beyond the former president.”

Neal defended the release in a press conference.

“This was not about being punitive. This was not about being malicious,” he said, citing the IRS’ failure to perform its responsibility.

“It’s about one office: The presidency,” added Rep. Judy Chu, D-Calif., who sits on the committee. “It’s about making sure there are checks and balances for the presidency.”

Trump’s tax returns, meanwhile, have quickly become cable news fodder.

“It proves that Hillary Clinton was right all along. Nancy Pelosi was right all along; Chuck Schumer was right all along. The Democrats were right all along. Reporting from the New York Times was right all along; Washington Post, too, was 100 percent correct all along. Donald Trump was not under audit. Donald Trump was lying,” MSNBC host Mike Brzezinski said Wednesday.

“He was desperate to hide the truth from Americans,” she continued. “That truth, that far from being a shrewd businessman, he was, in fact, the biggest loser out of the 300 million Americans who filed their taxes with the IRS. The man lost more money than any other American, at a time when he was writing ‘The Art of the Deal.'”

Are we too primitive for aliens to bother with us? Some scientists think so

Since the dawn of the Space Age, when it became apparent that traveling to other planets was technologically possible, humans have looked up and wondered if there were other intelligent species out there. 

Yet in all of human history, we haven’t found any inarguable evidence for the existence of alien civilizations — and not for lack of trying, nor for lack of solar systems to check out. Indeed, we know there are so many trillions of stars in the universe, many of which are circled by inhabitable planets. So where are all the aliens?

This conundrum is called the Fermi paradox. Named for the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Enrico Fermi, it essentially boils down to math. There’s plenty of opportunity out in space for advanced civilizations to emerge — so why don’t we see them? Or, if they are out there, why haven’t they contacted us?

It could be that Earth appears boring, or that we just aren’t very smart compared to everyone else out there. Now, a new paper published on the arXiv preprint server, which is awaiting peer-review, argues just that: perhaps Earth hasn’t given off enough signs of intelligent life, and aliens may be totally uninterested in contacting us. This research could have some intriguing implications for SETI, the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence.

The paper’s author, Amri Wandel is an astrophysics professor at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem who has previously published research on what makes certain planets suitable for life to develop. There are many of these extraterrestrial worlds, which are called exoplanets, but so far, humans haven’t found any hard evidence that life exists anywhere but planet Earth.

In the paper, Wandel explains that this could be due to having a weak “technosignature” — meaning an indicator that life not only exists on a planet, but that it’s technologically advanced. It can include everything from artificial light to pollution to radio waves that spill out into the cosmos.

For example, earlier this year, scientists discovered an exoplanet that seems a lot like Earth, nestled around a star about 105 lightyears away. Dubbed LP 890-9c, it’s slightly larger than our home world, but it seems to have liquid water, which most astrobiologists agree is necessary for life to exist.


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That’s it, however. There is no evidence LP 890-9c has life, let alone intelligent creatures that build spaceships or send radio signals into space. The universe is likely filled with trillions of planets like this. And it would be difficult for a planet like Earth to stand out; therefore, aliens might not think we’re interesting enough to contact, let alone visit.

“Presuming biological life is common, Earth’s biosignature would not be outstanding,” Wandel writes. “In other words, to extraterrestrial civilizations would not consider Earth as special, since there are probably many biotic planets closer to them.”

That brings up another major issue: the unfathomable distances between our solar system and others. Even if we were to look attractive enough for aliens to send a message, or vice versa, it could take dozens, if not hundreds, of lightyears to reach us. In contrast, any substantial technosignature emanating from our planet, such as radio or television waves, has only been ongoing for a short while.

Even if life on other planets evolves the ability to send information through radio waves, they might kill themselves off via nuclear weapons or climate change, or go extinct due to galactic hazards.

“The first short-wave radio transmissions that could penetrate the ionosphere and leak to space were broadcasted in the 30’s, less than 100 years ago,” Wandel writes. “Therefore, the maximal distance of a civilization that could detect Earth’s radiosphere and eventually send back a message that would reach Earth at present is approximately 50 [lightyears].”

That is a very narrow window of time in which extraterrestrials would need to notice us. So to any off-world civilizations that have peeked in our direction, we might just look like another dumb, wet rock that might have life, but no one worth talking to.

Additionally, we’d need to have been able to detect and receive any messages that might be sent to us. For these circumstances to line up, Wandel estimates we’d have needed to be using advanced telecommunication infrastructure for “a few hundred to a few thousand years.” Too bad the Ancient Romans were too busy crucifying people instead of building radios — we could be talking to E.T. by now.

There have been many attempts to explain the Fermi paradox. One main theory is that advanced, intelligent civilizations tend to have a short shelf life. Even if life on other planets evolves the ability to send information through radio waves, they might kill themselves off via nuclear weapons or climate change, or go extinct due to galactic hazards like gamma rays and black holes.

Another explanation, posited by paleontologist Peter D. Ward and astrobiologist Donald E. Brownlee, is that Earth truly is special. So special in fact, that we’re essentially alone out here in our wing of the universe. In their 2000 book, “Rare Earth: Why Complex Life Is Uncommon in the Universe,” Ward and Brownlee argue that “complex life—animals and higher plants—is likely to be far more rare than is commonly assumed.”

“I used to be very sanguine, believing that microbial life would be almost everywhere. And I’m less and less sure about that,” Ward said in an unpublished portion of a recent interview with Salon. “I would bet my life that we’re not the only intelligent species in the cosmos. The numbers are too great. How could we be? But boy, it might be just here and there, and so far apart, you can never communicate.”

So maybe the problem isn’t that humans aren’t advanced enough to be worth talking to, but that we’re just statistically unlikely to exist in close proximity to anyone who would notice our specialness. We’ll never know unless we keep looking.

Proud Boys leader may be on trial — but his thugs are still on the street causing trouble

After five Oath Keepers were convicted last month of crimes related to the Jan. 6 insurrection, the leaders of the Proud Boys should be sweating. Jury selection began this week in the trial of Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio and four of his top lieutenants on various charges, including seditious conspiracy, quite similar to those that Oath Keepers head Stewart Rhodes and his followers faced. The evidence seems similar too, as CNN reports: It’s largely based on “the defendants’ own words in texts and social media posts, as well as recorded planning meetings and videos from the riot.” Even their defense strategies are the same. Just as the Oath Keepers tried to spin their extensive conspiracy leading up to the Capitol assault as little more than fantasy roleplay, Tarrio and other Proud Boys are arguing they had no pre-existing plans to storm the Capitol, and that any messages suggesting otherwise were just kidding around. 

Every jury is different, and it’s wise not to make assumptions about how any criminal trial will go. But it’s worth noting that the jury in the Oath Keepers trial spent very little time deliberating before coming back with guilty verdicts on seditious conspiracy for Rhodes and his right hand man, Kelly Meggs, as well as convictions on various other charges for all five defendants. The “just kidding” defense is harder to pull off when the event you seemed to be planning — in this case, the Capitol insurrection — happened in broad daylight and on live TV, with extensive documentary evidence that your followers did exactly what you told them to do. 

But while things don’t look so hot for Tarrio and the other indicted leaders, the Proud Boys as an organization aren’t going away. Arguably they’ve only grown stronger in the nearly two years since the insurrection, in terms of recruiting new members, attracting attention, and amassing political power. 


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“Their leadership might be sitting behind bars, but the Proud Boys are still mobilizing at a rapid pace across the country,” Andy Campbell, HuffPost reporter and author of “We Are Proud Boys: How a Right-Wing Street Gang Ushered in a New Era of American Extremism,” told Salon. “They’re out there to fight for GOP grievances, and today, that grievance is the LGBTQ community.”

In the Proud Boys’ first few years, after the group was formed by right-wing shock jock and Vice co-founder Gavin McInnes in 2016, they focused mainly on a Trump-inspired message of “Western chauvinism,” which claimed not to advocate racism or white supremacy but certainly had a great deal in common with those things. In the post-Jan. 6 era, however, the group has evolved a bit away from being full-on Trumpist shock troops and toward being a Christian nationalist organization devoted to amplifying the culture war and making it more confrontational, and even violent.

Since the beginning of last summer, “the biggest focus for the Proud Boys … has been anti-LGBTQ activism, a hard pivot from its actions in the first half of the year,” Tess Owen, the Vice reporter who covers right-wing radicals, explained in a recent analysis. “Proud Boys in at least 11 different states showed up to venues such as libraries and restaurants to intimidate drag shows.”

According to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED), “Far-right militias and militant social movements like the Proud Boys and Patriot Front have increased their engagement in anti-LGBT+ demonstrations by over three times this year.”

As Owen explains, this is very much by design: After Jan. 6, partly at Tarrio’s urging, “the group switched tactics. Local chapters burrowed into their communities, and forged alliances with other right-wing activists around whatever the culture war issue du jour was.”

The Proud Boys love to talk smack about movements like antifa and Black Lives Matter, but it also seems they’ve learned quite a bit about the tactical effectiveness of “leaderless organizing” from their political opponents. Leftist activists, including those groups and others, created the model for diffuse, highly local organizations that rely on social media to build coalitions and set goals. But groups on the right, especially the Proud Boys, have adopted them and excelled at them. That crowd-sourced model of activism does create chaos at times, as leftists will attest. Proud Boys cycled through many focal points, including anti-abortion activism, before settling on anti-LGBTQ organizing. But there’s no doubt that these tactics have created a pathway for the group to survive and even thrive, even as a number of leaders face potential prison sentences.


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One result of all this is that the group’s original identity as a secular dudes’ drinking club is giving way to a more overtly Christian nationalist bent. No doubt the hyper-masculine braggadacio that always defined the Proud Boys still plays a central role, and has even gotten worse in many ways. ACLED points out that Proud Boys are now more likely to show up armed at protests, or provoke physical confrontations, than they were last year. But layered on top of the tough-guy cosplay is a religious right agenda, and more overt Jesus talk than they previously employed. 

The Proud Boys love to hate antifa and Black Lives Matter, but they’ve definitely learned a lot about “leaderless organizing” from their left-wing opponents.

As Campbell told Salon, the shift in organizing strategies doesn’t mean the Proud Boys have no leaders. But instead of taking direct orders from people with official titles, he said, “you can expect to see this band of extremists anywhere Trump or Tucker Carlson point their finger.” That’s what experts in political violence call “stochastic terrorism,” when movement generals use media and other forms of public communication to make their wishes known without explicitly issuing orders. This allows the top dogs to direct violence while evading legal culpability for doing so. 

In any case, the Proud Boys may not be as leaderless as all that. McInnes claimed to leave the group in 2018, but as Daily Beast reporter Will Sommer noted in October, while covering a Proud Boys convention in Las Vegas, McInnes still seems to hold considerable influence “over the secretive quasi-paramilitary group.” Sommer recorded McInnes issuing edicts about who was expelled from the group and who could remain; Cassie Miller of the Southern Poverty Law Center told the Washington Post in October that he “remains intimately involved in their internal matters.”

On a recent episode of the podcast “Posting Through It,” Anthea Butler, a religious studies professor and author of “White Evangelical Racism: The Politics of Morality in America,” drew a distinction between federal law enforcement responses to extremist groups now and in the recent past. 

“In the ’90s,” she notes, the neo-Nazi group Stormfront was broken up after “the FBI, ATF, everybody came after them” and there was broad consensus, including among law enforcement, that “white identity movements were really terrible.” But both before and after Jan. 6, she said, there hasn’t been anywhere near the same focus on disrupting far-right groups, even as some of their ringleaders have been arrested. 

“I think we live in dangerous times,” she concluded. “And I’m really not sure the feds or the Justice Department really grasps how bad this is right now.” 

It’s true that the diffuse nature of Proud Boys organizing makes it much more difficult for law enforcement to break up radical organizations than it was in the ’90s. As Butler points out, and as evidence in the trial will likely show social media and other online communications have made it easier for extremists to find each other without a formal organization, and even without ever being in the same room. But as the attacks on drag shows and other LGBTQ spaces and events demonstrate, the danger posed by hate groups has not diminished. Putting the Proud Boy commanders on trial for their role in the Capitol insurrection is an important first step. But if we really intend to defeat 21st-century fascism, law enforcement must become much more nimble and creative to deal with the way these groups organize in the social media age. 

How Sam Bankman-Fried’s dark-money political donations fueled his massive fraud

FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried was recently indicted for violating campaign finance laws following his recent arrest in the Bahamas for wire fraud, securities fraud and money laundering. He was also charged with defrauding equity investors by the Securities and Exchange Commission, with SEC Chair Gary Gensler saying in a statement, “Sam Bankman-Fried built a house of cards on a foundation of deception while telling investors that it was one of the safest buildings in crypto.”

The campaign finance scandal being exposed is enormous, and the unabashed influence peddling that Bankman-Fried and his executives engaged in as they attempted to influence policy over the cryptocurrency industry is both embarrassing and hugely problematic for the many politicians that received the money. But so far, little attention has been paid to the systemic flaws that enabled the unbridled pay-for-play scheme that we’ve seen unfold in recent weeks.

The FTX scandal shows that it’s finally time to reckon with the disastrous Supreme Court ruling Citizens United v. FEC, which allowed unlimited political giving by corporations and wealthy individuals as “free speech” and paved the way for unlimited “dark money” in our politics.

While prosecutors allege that Bankman-Fried’s political contributions were illegal, businesses and billionaires have legally been giving in secret for years in order to hide their more distasteful and self-interested attempts at political influence. The Citizens United decision gave corporations and billionaires free rein to spend unlimited secret money to influence policy and our elections. In the 2020 election cycle alone, more than $1 billion in undisclosed funds was spent at the federal level. This secret giving has proven disastrous for democracy: For example, secret money front groups spent millions of dollars to hold and promote the rally outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, which turned into an attempted insurrection that aimed to overturn the 2020 election.

In Bankman-Fried’s case, he played in politics to bolster a false claim of safety for investors. He wanted to insulate his company by ensuring that government regulation was light, and spent money liberally in a blatant effort to exert influence. Since the collapse of FTX, he has admitted that he purposely used secret money channels for gifts to Republicans and made the others public.

Bankman-Fried stated that “all my Republican donations were dark,” meaning those political donations were not publicly disclosed. This interesting admission of “dark” Republican donations serves to illustrate the large and dangerous threat that undisclosed campaign money poses to our elections and politics. 

Secret political spending also allows mega-donors like Bankman-Fried to influence lawmakers to favor their corporate interests and priorities in Washington while avoiding accountability. In Bankman-Fried’s case, FTX donated to a slew of Republican super PACs just before the 2022 election. Without Bankman-Fried’s recent admission to the press, there would be no way to know about the money he spent in secret to back Republicans. 


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Undisclosed political donations not only keep shareholders and consumers in the dark about how companies are influencing our elections, they also block progress on the big issues that matter to all of us, from gun safety to our environment to public health.

Beyond the clear moral imperative that we take action to stop the flow of secret money into our politics, it’s straight up bad for business. Research conducted by Freedom House and the World Bank demonstrates that stable, transparent governments are the ideal environment to establish private businesses and help ensure fair regulations, while oppressive regimes typically impose more barriers that limit the power of the free market.

Moreover, polling shows that across party lines people prefer to work at and buy from companies that promote democracy, act transparently and fight for our freedom to vote. When corporations stand up to strengthen democracy, every single American has a better chance of gaining equal access to the ballot box, no matter their background.

While both major political parties receive political money in secret, Democrats have tried to pass legislation that would bring this secret political spending into the light. They have been met with Republican obstruction at every turn, including in September when Senate Republicans wouldn’t even allow debate on the DISCLOSE Act, which would help curtail secret money.

In the new Republican Congress the chance of passing disclosure legislation is low, and so the Biden administration must take action. The White House should do what it can to move the needle on transparency by requiring large government contractors to disclose their political spending. This will impact a large number of Fortune 100 companies who play in politics and help put a dent in the corrupt secret spending culture that Sam Bankman-Fried embodies.

Researchers just figured out how to filter indestructible “forever chemical” pollutants

The term “forever chemicals” is as ominous as it sounds: the nickname for a diverse group of consumer and industrial chemicals known as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances [PFAS], these artificial substances lurk in the human bloodstream for decades, and are so unavoidable in modern industrial civilizations that they usually surface in the body in utero. The “forever” appellation is a reference to their resistance to breaking down: PFAS very rarely biodegrade, meaning almost all of the PFAS that have ever been produced still exist.

There are more than 4,700 PFAS in existence — Teflon, the substance used in non-stick pans, is perhaps the best-known of the bunch — and they can be found in a wide range of products: Non-stick cookware, receipt paper, food packaging, stain-resistant coating on fabrics like carpets, water-resistant fabrics like umbrellas, dental floss, cleaning products and even water bottles. Because PFAS are so widely used, it is currently impossible for humans to avoid contact with them. They are notorious for being impossible to get rid of, and are linked to health conditions from hypertension and liver disease to lowered sperm count. Despite these red flags studies repeatedly show that PFAS continue to contaminate public and private water supplies

This technique could protect humans from PFAS-related illnesses by providing “a promising platform to treat PFAS-contaminated drinking water.”

Yet there is potential good news: as it turns out, even substances with “forever” in their name might not literally last forever. A new study in the scientific publication Journal of Hazardous Materials Letters reveals a possible way to break down PFAS in water by using hydrogen and ultraviolet light. As the study’s authors conclude, this technique could protect humans from PFAS-related illnesses by providing “a promising platform to treat PFAS-contaminated drinking water sources and brine concentrates.”

Researchers at the University of California – Riverside developed this method by finding water contaminated with PFAS and then adding extra hydrogen (water, after all, already contains hydrogen atoms). This polarizes the water molecules and makes them more reactive so that, when they are exposed to ultraviolet light, chemical reactions occur to break down specific types of PFAS known as PFOA and PFOS without any dangerous byproducts. Even better, the advanced process does so by anywhere from 10% to 95% compared to other forms of ultraviolet light. The new method also defluorinates up to 94% of the molecules.

“It discovered the most efficient photochemical process so far to destruct PFAS while not introducing undesirable byproducts,” Haizhou Liu, the corresponding author of the study, told Salon by email. “It also uses a different UV wavelength from traditional technologies.”


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Liz Costello, MPH — a PhD student at the University of Southern California who has studied PFAS but was not involved in the latest study — told Salon that she is “excited” about the results.

“They focused on just two PFAS, PFOA and PFOS, so I would be interested to see how this method works for some of the other common PFAS or for the replacement chemicals,” Costello told Salon by email. She added that “it’s also hard to tell how easily this method might be implemented in the real world, or how cost effective it might be compared to others.”

Costello also pointed out that this is not the first recent case of scientific research to suggest that the “forever chemicals” may not actually need to last forever.

“There was a recent paper in Science that described a very efficient way [to] break down PFAS. I’m sure there are others in the pipeline as well, since this is such an important environmental and human health concern.”

“There was a recent paper in Science that described a very efficient way [to] break down PFAS,” Costello observed, referring to a study which found certain types of PFAS can be broken down with the solvent dimethyl sulfoxide when mixed with a cleaning reagent. “I’m sure there are others in the pipeline as well, since this is such an important environmental and human health concern.”

Because there are so many different types of PFAS, it is unlikely that a single method of eliminating them will work for every version. That said, any progress in eliminating chemicals like PFOS and PFOA is bound to be helpful if it can be mass produced. That, naturally, is the next step.

“We are working towards commercialization and scaling up this technology,” Liu wrote to Salon.

As for destroying the other types of PFAS chemicals, it is going to take time for scientists to develop the necessary technology to accomplish that.

“In terms of PFAS destruction, we still need research into the ways we might implement this technology at places like water treatment facilities,” Costello observed. “We also will need to make sure any new methods to remove and destroy PFAS are sustainable and work well on all PFAS chemicals.”

It will also be important for scientists to come up with ways of eliminating combinations of PFAS, and not just PFAS in isolation. After all, most people who are exposed to dangerously high levels of PFAS are encountering a number of PFAS at once, not individually. Dr. Sandra Søgaard Tøttenborg of the University of Copenhagen made this observation when discussing her study earlier this year linking pregnant women’s PFAS exposure to poor semen quality among their assigned male offspring.

“Earlier studies of PFAS exposure later in pregnancy have focused on single substances, which is an unrealistic scenario considering that chemicals are embedded into virtually every aspect of our modern lives,” Tøttenborg explained. “The study [on semen quality] showed a statistically significant association between exposure to a mixture of PFAS in early pregnancy and lower sperm concentration and total sperm count and higher proportion of non-progressive and immotile sperm.”

The “death penalty” of child welfare: In six months or less, some parents lose their kids forever

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. — In the months after a West Virginia court permanently took away their right to parent their daughters this past April, Jackie Snodgrass and her husband were left in a quiet house. The kids’ rooms remained untouched. The same dolls and stuffed animals were arranged on their younger daughter’s bed. The same clothes in the closets, becoming outgrown. The same photos on the walls, outdated.

The court had denied a final visit — despite the children continually saying they missed their mother — so the parents never got to say goodbye to them in person. Snodgrass worried about them constantly, especially her older daughter, who has diabetes. An app pinged her intermittently with updates on her child’s blood sugar. Occasionally, it would dip too low or spike too high.

“What if something happens to her?” Snodgrass said. “And if it does, I’m not going to be allowed to be there.”

Once considered a last resort reserved for parents who abandon their children, the involuntary and permanent termination of parental rights now hangs over every mother and father accused of any form of abuse or neglect — including allegations of nonviolent behavior like drug use or truancy, the two central parenting issues in the Snodgrasses’ case. Known in the legal world as the “death penalty” of child welfare, it can happen in a matter of months.

No state terminates parental rights more frequently or faster than West Virginia, according to a ProPublica and NBC News analysis. One in 50 children here experienced the severing of their relationships with both of their parents from 2015 to 2019, the last full year of federal child welfare data available before the pandemic. For most of them, it occurred within 11 months of being removed from their home for the first time.

In the Snodgrasses’ case, it took only five months.

Nationally, the parents of about 327,000 children lost their rights from 2015 to 2019, the analysis found. In one-fifth of those cases, it happened in less than a year.

Over the past 25 years, courts and child protective services agencies have increasingly turned to this ultimate consequence, partly in response to Clinton-era federal policies that support faster adoptions. According to a recent study, the risk that a child will experience the loss of their legal relationship with their parents roughly doubled from 2000 to 2016. One in 100 U.S. children — disproportionately Black and Native American — experience termination through the child welfare system before they turn 18, the study found.

Most of those families became entangled in the system because of allegations of neglect, a broad category closely linked to poverty and substance use. Just 15% of children whose parents’ rights were severed around the country from 2015 to 2019 had been removed from their homes because of concerns about physical or sexual abuse, according to the ProPublica and NBC News analysis. (The reasons ultimately cited for the terminations themselves weren’t provided in the data.)

“None of us believes banishing a child from a family of origin is a perfectly fine result,” said Marty Guggenheim, a retired New York University law professor and child welfare expert who has argued termination cases before the Supreme Court. “But that’s where we are today. We are off of our moral compass.”

The hurry to end families can be traced to the 1997 Adoption and Safe Families Act, passed with bipartisan support in Congress and signed by President Bill Clinton.

In a tough-on-crime era, the new law was supposed to keep fragile, abused children from languishing for too long in foster care. It created a rigid timeline — a ticking clock — for every child who entered state custody after having been removed from home because of an allegation of child maltreatment. After 15 months, barring specific exemptions, state and local agencies were required to file for termination of the birth parents’ rights or face losing federal funding. And states that increased adoptions were rewarded with bonuses for every additional child they placed.

Despite the law’s goal of getting more kids adopted, tens of thousands of such children have remained in foster care for months or years after being cut off from their parents. They are known as “legal orphans,” with no birth families anymore but no adoptive ones, either.

And research shows that many children who experience termination of their parents’ rights will suffer what is known as ambiguous loss, similar to grieving after a death but without the closure of knowing a loved one is gone forever.

To understand the impact of the child welfare system’s most extreme outcome, ProPublica and NBC News surveyed hundreds of families who experienced termination of parental rights and interviewed dozens of parents, children, caretakers, caseworkers and attorneys. Those we spoke to described a confusing legal system that at times seemed stacked against birth families trying to reunite and inured to the pain of long-term family separation.

“There was all this lost time when me and my dad had wanted to talk to each other but were being prevented by the state government,” said Reed Ridens, a graduate student in Albuquerque, New Mexico, who spent years in foster care as a legal orphan. “There was a lot of damage and a lot of repair that needed to be done between us, and a lot that had been taken away.”

Some of the 1997 law’s original supporters — and even some top child welfare officials — now warn that the timeline Congress prescribed is too rigid and that some states may have taken the reforms too far.

Maureen Flatley, a child welfare consultant who helped craft the law, said she now believes it urgently needs to be revamped, including the prescribed timeline for terminating parental rights. “We can’t pretend anymore that adoption is just some magic panacea,” she said in an interview.

The federal government also has voiced concerns about focusing too narrowly on termination time frames. In the final days of the Trump administration, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Administration for Children and Families issued a memo warning states against rushing to end rights.

Jerry Milner, a top official at the agency under President Donald Trump, said the Clinton-era law should be overhauled or repealed. Its timeline was the product of political negotiation, he said, not scientific research on how long parents should be given for recovery or redemption before they lose their rights to their children. “But it’s hanging over parents’ heads like a death sentence,” he said.

Yet the Biden administration has continued to defend the law. The statute allows states to make exceptions to the timeline if they believe termination would not be “in the best interest of the child” or if the state has failed to provide adequate reunification services, an ACF spokesperson said in response to written questions. Decisions are to be made on a case-by-case basis, the agency added.

And recent attempts by Congress to revise the timeline have failed to gain much traction.

Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, D-Fla., believes it’s imperative for lawmakers to try once more: She plans to introduce a child welfare bill in the next Congress to allow states to extend the timeline for termination to 24 months, among other changes.

“The harsh timeline doesn’t allow people to be rehabilitated or give them a chance to be reunited with their children,” she said.

Five Months to End a Family

Jackie Snodgrass and her husband, Wes, attracted the attention of West Virginia’s Department of Health and Human Resources in February 2021 because their girls had missed too many days of school. It was a problem that the family and the child protective services agency had tussled over for years, according to court documents Snodgrass provided to ProPublica and NBC News, but it came to a head when their absences piled up amid virtual schooling during the pandemic. Both parents were placed under court-ordered supervision.

The family moved from their tiny town of 1,400 to Wes Snodgrass’ mother’s home in the capital city, Charleston, to be closer to school for the girls, whose attendance was improving. They started a tree-trimming business and were making ends meet.

By October 2021, Jackie Snodgrass was busy planning her older daughter’s dream 16th birthday party — with pink decorations and a DJ, like on MTV.

“I like their birthdays better than Christmas, because it’s just their day,” she said of her children.

But the stress of the move and the truancy case had taken a toll. Snodgrass’ husband said he had used methamphetamine during that time, and in November, on an impulse, she tried it too. When the court overseeing their case started mandating drug screens, both parents failed.

The child welfare agency’s response was immediate: Like many states, West Virginia considers failed drug tests to be proof that a child is in danger, which can lead to the child’s removal. Snodgrass said a caseworker told her and her husband over the phone that they had to immediately pack up and leave the children with her husband’s mother.

After just five months and a few hearings, as the Snodgrasses struggled to comply with court orders, the judge ruled that they were unfit to raise their girls ever again.

They haven’t seen them in person for over a year.

Jackie Snodgrass’ parents now have custody of the children and plan to adopt them. Her mother said the girls have taken the separation hard, acting out and asking why they can’t see their mom and dad. Visiting is prohibited even though they live 5 miles apart.

In West Virginia, which has been ravaged by drug epidemics in recent decades, children are more likely to enter foster care than anywhere else in the country. Substance use was the most common reason cited for removing children from their homes in the state’s parental rights termination cases, according to the ProPublica and NBC News analysis.

Nearly every state acts more quickly when drugs are involved than when children are removed based on concerns about physical or sexual abuse. But West Virginia is particularly aggressive, giving parents the least amount of time to recover: More than a fifth of the state’s terminations involving parental drug use occurred less than six months after the children were first removed, the news organizations found.

In response to ProPublica and NBC News’ findings, state Del. Danielle Walker, a Democrat, expressed outrage at West Virginia’s haste in terminating parental rights and said the Legislature needed to conduct an intensive study to look at termination and related issues.

“There is no advocacy for the biological parents in this state. There’s none,” said Walker, who said her office would research the subject and compare West Virginia’s child welfare practices to those in other states. “Since when is six months enough to have proper recovery — any kind of recovery?”

Family attorneys and advocates say this posture toward addiction and recreational drug use punishes many parents whose children may not be in danger. Parents who are committed to seeking help to get their children back can be penalized if they relapse, even though drug treatment experts have long said such setbacks are a normal part of recovery.

“It’s a race against the clock for these families to oftentimes deal with a generational trauma,” said Jim McKay, director of Prevent Child Abuse West Virginia, an advocacy group. “We should be partnering with families and working alongside them rather than having it be a prisoner of an arbitrary date on the calendar.”

Ray Kendall, a former caseworker for the state’s Department of Health and Human Resources, said the agency’s “astronomical” workload caused many of his colleagues to become jaded toward substance use cases. West Virginia had 1 caseworker for every 167 children it investigated in 2019. That was among the nation’s highest caseloads, leaving less time for workers to help parents access services that can prevent termination.

“I don’t think six months is enough time to truly become completely sober and able to be in control of your life and take care of your kids, so it is a bit unrealistic,” said Kendall, who left the agency in 2019 in part because of frustrations that he couldn’t do more for families.

West Virginia has also been rewarded by the federal government for acting quickly to end families, having received $24 million in incentive payments under the 1997 law for increasing the number of adoptions it finalizes. (The program expanded in 2014 to include payments for guardianships, in which responsibility for children is transferred to other adults without completely severing parental rights.) Adjusted for child population, West Virginia has brought in 65% more in these incentives than the next highest state, Alaska.

The state’s Department of Health and Human Resources declined to make officials available for interviews. In response to written questions, the department didn’t dispute ProPublica and NBC News’ findings about the frequency and speed of termination in the state; it denied that the state’s statutes and policies fail to provide parents enough time for reunification.

Courts have the discretion “to make individualized decisions based upon the actions of the parents and the best interest of the child,” said Jessica Holstein, a spokesperson for the agency, who added that parents can also appeal the decisions.

Holstein said the agency has tried to reduce caseloads by adding staff members, increasing salaries and using temporary “crisis teams” to backfill vacancies.

“The culture at DHHR supports family connections,” she said, noting that the department prioritizes foster care placements with relatives when possible, as happened in the Snodgrasses’ case.

Cindy Largent-Hill, director of the juvenile division of the West Virginia Administrative Office of the Courts, said the state’s termination schedule is meant to prevent cases from dragging on too long.

“They may look a bit unfair because three months doesn’t sound like a long time, or six months, or 12 months,” said Largent-Hill, who works with the state’s circuit court judges. But, she said, “you don’t want cases to languish in court for three, four or five years.”

Snodgrass said she still is shocked by how quickly her case devolved. After the judge’s decision, whenever she felt a glimmer of hope, she would reread the order: “Any and all parental, guardianship, and custodial rights of the respondent parents … are hereby permanently and forever TERMINATED.”

“There’s, like, anger or something behind it,” Snodgrass said. “It seemed way too fast, but it also feels like years since I’ve seen my kids.”

The Push for Permanency

For most of U.S. history, it was rare for courts to permanently cut parents’ legal ties to their children without consent, according to a forthcoming paper by Chris Gottlieb, director of the New York University School of Law Family Defense Clinic. Typically, child welfare cases would end in termination only when states could prove that parents had abandoned their kids or as part of voluntary adoptions.

After states began requiring teachers, doctors and other professionals to report suspected child abuse or neglect in the 1970s, the number of kids entering foster care rose dramatically. In many cases, children stayed for years in out-of-home placements.

By the 1990s, a substantial body of research showed that such long foster care stays could harm child development. At the same time, increased access to birth control and abortion had led to a sharp decline in the number of children available for prospective adoptive parents, according to Gottlieb’s research.

The 1997 federal law was meant to address both trends. Its prominent supporters pointed to high-profile cases in which children were brutally beaten or killed after having been returned to their parents from foster care. Many argued that it was far more important to move children quickly into permanent homes than to spend an indeterminate amount of time trying to “fix” birth families. That ultimately would make more kids available for adoption.

Adoptions out of foster care increased from 31,000 in 1997 to 66,200 by 2019, according to federal data, while the foster care population has declined.

All states now have statutes that meet the federal law’s timeline requiring them to pursue termination if a child has spent 15 of the previous 22 months in the foster system, according to a ProPublica and NBC News survey of all 50 states and Washington, D.C. The law allows states to move slower if a child is placed with relatives but also faster under certain circumstances, such as if a parent has committed a serious criminal offense.

More than 30 states have even tighter timelines, the news organizations found — in some cases when young children are involved, under the rationale that they are in greatest need of immediately stable homes where they can start bonding with permanent families.

In Texas — the only state other than West Virginia with a median time to termination of less than a year — most counties put the penalty on the table the moment children are temporarily removed from a home, in order to place “parents on notice from the beginning of the case,” according to the state child welfare agency’s policy handbook.

Not every state moves so quickly: ProPublica and NBC News’ analysis found 16 states where the median time to termination is more than two years. Those longer cases, in some instances, can signal systems aren’t working as they should, reflecting bureaucratic dysfunction or what some child welfare officials describe as a pattern of giving parents “too many chances” that ultimately doesn’t help reduce termination rates, according to a 2021 report on state child welfare practices by the federal Department of Health and Human Services.

Still, longer timelines can also reflect a stronger focus on family reunification and a willingness to devote greater resources to meet that goal, child welfare experts say. New York and Illinois, for example, offer more robust social services, and they are also places with influential parent advocacy groups, said Christopher Wildeman, a child welfare expert and sociology professor at Duke University. (Wildeman is the director of the National Data Archive on Child Abuse and Neglect, which provided the data used in the ProPublica and NBC News analysis.)

In the wake of the opioid crisis, which has led to more kids being in foster care, Congress has tried to increase support for parents involved in the child welfare system. In 2018, it passed the Family First Prevention Services Act, approved with bipartisan support and signed by Trump. The law allows states to put federal funding previously restricted for foster care expenses toward mental health services, substance use treatment and parenting classes to help keep families together.

The Administration for Children and Families “is committed to focusing on prevention and early intervention so that families who come into contact with child welfare systems do not find themselves in the position of facing a termination of parental rights,” a spokesperson said.

But the legislation has strict requirements for which programs it will fund, and states have been slow to implement it. Eleven states are still waiting for their plans to be approved by the federal government, according to recent agency data, and six haven’t submitted plans at all. And some child welfare advocates have criticized the law’s focus on narrow initiatives like parenting classes, which they say fail to address poverty and the other root causes of neglect that prompt most child welfare cases.

“If I don’t have a house and I’m struggling, how are some parent education classes going to help?” said Christine James-Brown, the president and CEO of the Child Welfare League of America, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group.

West Virginia has drawn on the new federal funding but has spent only $125,000 since the summer of 2021, according to agency officials. The state is also trying to expand “family treatment courts,” designed to promote reunification rather than termination.

West Virginia’s senators, Joe Manchin, a Democrat, and Shelley Moore Capito, a Republican, told ProPublica and NBC News that they are committed to keeping families together when possible. Capito added that the news organizations’ findings are “concerning” and that her staff would look into those issues.

But when they were asked whether the state has adequate resources for family reunification — or whether the federal timeline for termination should be altered — neither senator responded directly.

Test Clean or Else

Some family advocates doubt that any new funding would have a significant impact on termination rates without a fundamental change in attitudes among local agencies and courts toward parents accused of child maltreatment, especially those struggling with substance use.

Judges have ultimate authority in such cases, but there is limited scrutiny of what happens in their courtrooms. In many states, including West Virginia, the public isn’t allowed to observe child welfare proceedings, and documents are typically kept under seal. Some judges order parents not to speak about their cases to anyone who isn’t involved, and if they disobey, it can be held against them.

What’s more, West Virginia judges often require parents to admit in court that they have a drug problem before they grant them an “improvement period,” said Joshua Edwards, a public defender in the state. If they refuse and the state proves to a judge that they used drugs, it becomes highly unlikely they will get their kids back, he said.

Jackie Snodgrass admitted in court to using drugs and neglecting her children’s education; she acknowledged in an interview that she regretted that her instances of meth use had put her family in jeopardy. But she never thought the mistake could lead to the end of her relationship with her daughters. After all, Snodgrass said, she had never hurt the girls, and according to court documents, they wanted to go home.

But the outcome hinged on whether the Snodgrasses complied with the services they were offered, including parenting classes and drug tests. And the government had little patience for mistakes or disagreements.

Snodgrass said she was required to call daily before 10 a.m. to find out whether she needed to be drug-screened. Once, around Thanksgiving, she said, she called a few minutes late, and the test was considered a failure.

From the start, Snodgrass and her husband were prohibited from seeing their daughters, even for supervised visits, because they couldn’t test clean consistently. She was testing positive for marijuana at the time, but she said she soon became so hopeless about the prospect of losing the girls forever that she used methamphetamine again to cope.

Snodgrass said she saw the phrase “termination of parental rights” in court papers for the first time early this year. Soon after, she said, a caseworker told her she would have to enter a long-term inpatient drug treatment program, probably for at least 45 days.

The family’s tree-trimming business didn’t have many clients yet, and Snodgrass, who was working as an assistant at a nursing home, was the primary earner. She said she feared they wouldn’t be able to pay their rent if she took an extended leave from work, and she told the caseworker that she was open to outpatient treatment, instead.

Her reluctance to enter an inpatient program proved critical, according to case documents. West Virginia is among 22 states with statutes saying that parents’ failure to comply with court-ordered rehabilitation or drug treatment plans, regardless of any evidence of harm to children, can itself be grounds for permanent termination of parental rights, according to a ProPublica and NBC News analysis of state laws.

Near the end of the case, Snodgrass said, her lawyer suggested that she divorce her husband because she was testing clean more often than he was. But the two were childhood sweethearts, and despite his drug use, he was a good father and her best friend, she said.

Still, she told the judge, “If I need to leave my husband, I’m willing to do that to bring my kids home.”

Her husband said in an interview that he was shocked to hear this in court but that he understood the position she was being put in. “I felt real low,” Wes Snodgrass said. “I felt like I didn’t have a family no more.”

It didn’t matter. In their case file, DHHR listed five general criteria for determining whether to recommend termination of parental rights to the court, including how long a child has been in foster care, whether a case involves serious abuse or abandonment by the parents or whether their rights have been severed before.

The couple met just one of the criteria: The agency concluded that there was “no reasonable likelihood” that the neglect allegations against them could be “substantially corrected in the near future,” citing their failure to comply with the court’s requirements within the previous five months.

Still denied any visits with the girls, they had no chance to hug them goodbye.

Rethinking the “Death Penalty” of Child Welfare

Fueled in part by the 2020 demonstrations for racial justice nationwide, family rights activists have made a renewed push to change the child welfare system — including the repeal of the Clinton law.

At the start of the new Congress, Cherfilus-McCormick, the representative from Florida, plans to introduce a bill to allow states to extend the timeline for termination and exempt parents who are actively participating in classes, treatment or other services; it would also encourage states to place more foster children with relatives instead of strangers. The bill was originally introduced last year by Rep. Karen Bass, D-Calif., but it failed to move forward, and Bass recently was sworn in as the new mayor of Los Angeles.

Cherfilus-McCormick and other Democratic lawmakers say they plan to make the issue a priority next year.

But that could be challenging given the changing balance of power in the House. Republicans, who will take the majority in January, have yet to co-sponsor any of the recent proposals to alter the federal timeline for termination.

Meanwhile, there has been growing support for alternative custody arrangements that don’t require termination of birth parents’ rights. In 2008, Congress passed a law allowing states to access federal funds to support guardianship by family members, and 40 states and the District of Columbia now have such programs.

And about half of states have laws that would allow parental rights to be reinstated or restored, although that is still rare and is often limited to cases in which the children lack permanent homes.

Support for such reforms varies widely among states, and the changes have yet to have a major impact on national adoption or reunification rates.

Washington, D.C.’s nonvoting delegate in the House of Representatives, Democrat Eleanor Holmes Norton, said the outsize impact of termination on low-income and Black families makes it especially urgent for Congress to fix the mistakes it made in the 1997 law. “It’s indefensible to have such short timelines,” said Norton, a longtime member of the Congressional Foster Care Caucus.

“The most important relationship in a family is the relationship between parents and children,” she said. “We should do everything we can to preserve that.”

Lost Time

Jackie Snodgrass said the gravity of what was happening in court didn’t hit her until the judge finally said the words: He was terminating her parental rights.

“My heart just fell to my knees,” she said. “It felt like I had just died. Like everything had been taken out of me.”

Snodgrass and her husband say they’ve been clean for several months, and they recently have had a new reason to hope. Her parents said state adoption officials told them that they will most likely be allowed to let the Snodgrasses see their children again, once the adoption is finalized.

But for now, they still aren’t supposed to have contact with their girls or even ask how they are doing. Since being separated, the older daughter has reached out to Snodgrass and they’ve talked by phone and instant messaging. Snodgrass is worried her daughters won’t think she cares about them if she keeps missing major life events like birthdays.

Still, she is more fortunate than many parents whose rights are terminated. When foster children are adopted by strangers, they can be cut off completely from their biological parents. Another mother in West Virginia who spoke with ProPublica and NBC News said she scours social media for photos of her daughters and stares at their adoptive home in a nearby town on Google Street View.

Snodgrass said that even if she is allowed back in her children’s lives, it still scares her that she has no control over their relationship, including any legal rights to make decisions about their medical treatment.

In between phone calls they’re not supposed to have, Snodgrass continues to get updates from her daughter’s blood sugar app. She said it provides a small comfort.

Records reveal medical response further delayed care for Uvalde shooting victims

Warning note

This story includes graphic descriptions of injuries sustained in an elementary school shooting and graphic language. Graphic videos reviewed by reporters are not included.

This article is co-published with ProPublica, a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power, and with The Washington Post. Sign up for newsletters from ProPublica and The Post.

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UVALDE — Bullets had pierced Eva Mireles’ chest as she tried to shield students from a gunman’s semiautomatic rifle. But the fourth grade teacher at Robb Elementary was still conscious when police carried her out of classroom 112 and through a hallway crowded with dead and dying victims.

“You’re fine. You’re fine,” said her husband, Uvalde school district police officer Ruben Ruiz, who had been frantically trying to rescue her since the attack began. Mireles looked at him but could not speak. She’d been losing blood for more than an hour.

Officers placed Mireles on the sidewalk just beyond one of the school’s exits and started treating her wounds. A medic later told investigators he did not see any ambulances, though video footage showed two parked just past the corner of the building, about 100 feet away.

The chaotic scene exemplified the flawed medical response — captured in video footage, investigative documents, interviews and radio traffic — that experts said undermined the chances of survival for some victims of the May 24 massacre. Two teachers and 19 students died.

Law enforcement’s well-documented failure to confront the shooter who terrorized the school for 77 minutes was the most serious problem in getting victims timely care, experts said. But previously unreleased records obtained by ProPublica, The Texas Tribune and The Washington Post for the first time show that communication lapses and muddled lines of authority among medical responders further hampered treatment.

 

Three victims who emerged from the school with a pulse later died. In the case of two of those victims, critical resources were not available when medics expected they would be, delaying hospital treatment for Mireles, 44, and student Xavier Lopez, 10, records show.

Another student, Jacklyn “Jackie” Cazares, 9, likely survived for more than an hour after being shot and was promptly placed in an ambulance after medics finally gained access to her classroom. She died in transport.

The disjointed medical response frustrated medics while delaying efforts to get ambulances, air transport and other emergency services to victims. Medical helicopters with critical supplies of blood tried to land at the school, but an unidentified fire department official told them to wait at an airport 3 miles away. Dozens of parked police vehicles blocked the paths of ambulances trying to reach victims.

Multiple cameras worn by officers and one on the dashboard of a police car showed just two ambulances positioned outside the school when the shooter was killed. That was not nearly enough for the 10 or more gunshot victims then still alive, though additional ambulances began arriving 10 minutes later. Six students, including one who was seriously wounded, were taken to a hospital in a school bus with no trained medics on board, according to Texas EMS records.


Dozens of officers from federal, state and local agencies, as well as school buses, parked in the street leading to the school.

Credit: Helicopter footage gathered by the Texas Rangers and obtained by The Texas Tribune, The Washington Post and ProPublica. Graphics by Imogen Piper/The Washington Post

Having trouble viewing? Watch this video on texastribune.org.

​​Two ambulances were at the scene when police killed the gunman. But additional EMS responders struggled to get there.

Uvalde EMS radio traffic (12:58 p.m.) “10-4 we are [inaudible] at Grove Street and Grove Street is blocked off by law enforcement.”

One minute later, six students, including one who was seriously wounded, were taken to a hospital in a school bus with no trained medics on board.

Credit: Helicopter footage gathered by the Texas Rangers and obtained by The Texas Tribune, The Washington Post and ProPublica. Graphics by Imogen Piper/The Washington Post

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Some law enforcement cars were left locked and could not quickly be moved, forcing medics to frantically try various routes to the school, crisscrossing through residents’ yards.

Thirty-three minutes after police killed the gunman, an ambulance struggled to access the school via South Grove Street.

Credit: Texas state trooper body-camera footage obtained by The Texas Tribune, The Washington Post and ProPublica. Graphics by Imogen Piper/The Washington Post

Having trouble viewing? Watch this video on texastribune.org.


Although helicopters were available, none were used to carry victims directly from the school. At least four patients who survived were flown by helicopter to a more fully equipped trauma center in San Antonio after first being driven by ambulance to a nearby hospital or airport.

In public statements made since May, law enforcement officials have defended their officers’ actions as reasonable under difficult circumstances. Federal, state and local agencies that responded to the shooting have not directly addressed the medical response, nor did they answer detailed questions from the news organizations that worked jointly on this investigation.

Eric Epley, executive director of the Southwest Texas Regional Advisory Council, a nonprofit that helps coordinate trauma care in Southwest Texas during mass-casualty events, said medics encountered challenges, including a faulty radio system.

“These scenes are inherently confusing, challenging, and chaotic,” Epley said in an email. He later added, “We remain steadfast that the decisions by the on-scene medical leadership were sound and appropriate.”

The Texas Rangers, an arm of the state Department of Public Safety, are investigating what went wrong in Uvalde, including whether any victims might have survived if they had received prompt medical care. The local district attorney has said she will use that investigation to determine whether to charge anyone with a crime, including law enforcement officers.

Mireles, an avid hiker and CrossFit enthusiast who was fiercely proud of her college-graduate daughter, was shot within the first minutes of the attack, according to interviews students gave to investigators and a DPS analysis of gunfire obtained by the news organizations.

It’s difficult to know whether Mireles or anyone else who died that day might have survived their wounds, in part because local officials have refused to release autopsy reports. But footage shows that Mireles was conscious and responsive when she was pulled from the classroom, an indicator that she probably had survivable wounds, according to medical experts.

“Had medics gotten to her quickly, there’s a good chance she would’ve survived,” said Babak Sarani, director of critical care at George Washington University Hospital.

The flawed coordination among police and medical crews echoes missteps during other mass shootings, despite the development of recommended practices after the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School. In several of those cases, the communication problems resulted in delays in getting medical care for victims.

Medics on helicopters and in ambulances who responded to the Uvalde shooting told investigators they were confused about who was in charge, where they should be stationed and how many victims to expect. Some of them pleaded to be allowed closer to the scene. In the absence of clear guidance, experts said medics did the best they could while trying to save lives.

“They were told, essentially, to go to the airport and wait,” according to an interview the Texas Rangers conducted with Julie Lewis, the regional manager for AirLIFE, an air medical transport service that sent three helicopters from the greater San Antonio area. “They couldn’t figure out who was in command.”

Pleading for help

The morning of May 24 was warm and sunny in Uvalde, the seat of a rural county of about 25,000 residents near the Texas border with Mexico. It was one of the last days of class, and teachers had planned a festive, celebratory day.

Mireles left her home wearing a flowery blouse and pair of black pants, feeling happy, her daughter said.

“My dad had just told her how beautiful she looked,” Adalynn Ruiz, 23, recalled in a text message to a reporter.

About two dozen fourth graders were in Rooms 111 and 112, adjoining classrooms, that day. They included Jackie, who relished cherry limeades with extra cherries, and Xavier, who loved art class and couldn’t wait to start middle school.

They’d just finished a student awards ceremony and settled into watching the Disney movie “Lilo & Stitch” when a teenage gunman dressed in black scaled the school’s fence and fired shots at 11:32 a.m.

Hearing the gunfire, Mireles quickly called her husband.

“There’s somebody shooting at the school,” she said, Ruben Ruiz recalled in an interview with investigators.

“We’re coming up,” he told her as he drove to the school with a state police officer, who later described the comment to investigators. “We’ll be there.”

The gunman got there first, entering Mireles’ classroom and firing his AR-15-style rifle. Officers rushed into the school minutes later and approached her classroom, but they retreated after the gunman fired through the door, grazing two of them.

Ruiz, who declined to comment for this report but spoke with state investigators, ran into the hallway at 11:36 a.m., according to video footage. But none of the officers tried to enter the classrooms, where the gunman continued to fire sporadically.

Desperate to reach his wife, Ruiz told the other officers what he knew.

Credit: Uvalde police footage obtained by The Texas Tribune, The Washington Post and ProPublica

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“He’s in my wife’s classroom,” he said, according to the footage. He later recalled to investigators that it felt “like my soul had left my body.”

About twenty minutes later, his wife called again.

At 11:56 a.m., he shouted, “She says she’s shot!”

That information was a key indication that officers were dealing with an active shooter, not a barricaded subject as school district police Chief Pete Arredondo incorrectly assumed, according to a legislative report on the shooting. But Ruiz’s comment did not change how law enforcement officers, following Arredondo’s lead, responded to the attack.

The school district’s active-shooter protocol designated the chief as the incident commander. Arredondo has repeatedly defended his role in the delay, telling Texas lawmakers investigating the massacre that he did not consider himself to be in charge. The Uvalde school board fired Arredondo in August, amid sharp public criticism of the police response to the shooting.

Trapped inside her classroom, Mireles tied a plastic bag around her arm to help slow the blood loss, one of her students told investigators. Another child in Room 112 told investigators that Mireles tried to protect him. The boy was hit in the back of his shoulder but survived.

At least two students used Mireles’ phone to call 911, begging officers to send help.

Officers confiscated Ruiz’s gun and forced him to wait outside the school, where he told “anybody that would get next to me” that his wife was in danger, according to his law enforcement interview. He tried to get back in, but fellow officers stopped him. They later told investigators they had seized his gun for his own safety.

Inside Rooms 111 and 112, students anxiously tried to get officers’ attention. They knew that for Mireles, there was little time to spare.

One girl later recalled to investigators that Mireles “was telling us she was going to die.”

“We as a nation are not ready” 

More than two decades after the Columbine school shooting shocked the nation, key failures continue to repeat themselves.

After that shooting, officers across the country received training on what they should do first when a mass shooting is reported: Subdue the shooter and stop the killing. Next, trainers tell first responders, they must “stop the dying.”

Over time, that insistence on prompt, effective medical care became an established mantra, as did the idea that all first responders — police, fire and EMS — should work under a joint command overseeing and coordinating the response. An overall incident commander is supposed to coordinate with the head paramedic or lead fire department supervisor to organize the medical response, experts said.

“If you don’t have a system, the whole response goes awry,” said Bob Harrison, a former police chief and a homeland security researcher at the Rand Corp., a think tank based in California.

A Justice Department review of the response to the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, Florida, that killed 49 people found that the police and fire departments’ decision to operate separate command posts for hours led to a lack of coordination.

A review by local authorities of the 2012 Aurora, Colorado, movie theater shooting that killed 12 people discovered that the delayed establishment of a unified command led to communication problems between police and fire responders, slowing medical care for victims.

“We as a nation are not ready,” said Sarani, the director of critical care at George Washington University Hospital. “The air assets and the ground assets do not talk to each other very well. The fire, the police do not talk to each other very well.”

Experts said that the Uvalde shooting response appeared to lack both an overall incident commander and someone clearly in charge of coordinating the emergency medical response.

The rural community’s emergency medical services are contracted out to private companies. On that day in May, Stephen Stephens, the director of Uvalde EMS, was in charge of organizing helicopters and ambulances responding to Robb Elementary, he later told investigators.

“My job was to manage assets,” he said, noting that Juan Martinez, his deputy, instructed medics arriving at the scene.

After police breached the classrooms where the shooter had been holed up, Stephens said he handed command over to the fire chief of neighboring Medina County. The Medina fire chief declined to comment to the news organizations.

It’s unclear what information Stephens had about how many victims first responders should expect to find. Multiple medics expressed confusion over who was in charge of the medical response and where to go.

“There was no EMS command and control,” said Julio Perez, a medic for AirLIFE, who told investigators he was pleading to help. “Nobody could tell me anything.”

His account was backed up by Lewis, the manager for the air transport service, who said several of her medics were upset. “They feel like the resources weren’t used as they should have been.”

The school district declined to release its active-shooter response plans or protocols and did not answer questions posed by ProPublica, the Tribune and The Post. Separately, the state has fought the release of the active-shooter plans it requires school districts to submit, with the backing of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, whose office determines whether government information is open to the public. The news organizations also have sued state and city officials for some records related to the shooting and its response.

The city of Uvalde did not respond to detailed questions about the communication between police and medics or about its training for mass shootings, citing ongoing litigation. But a spokesperson said in an email that the city’s police department has not conducted any formal training with Uvalde EMS, a nonprofit that provides emergency medical services for the city and county.

A document from a March active shooter training conducted by the school district, later published by San Antonio television station KSAT, provides only general guidance on how police and EMS should work together.

The plan states that EMS, fire and law enforcement need to know “the exact location of the injured, as well as the number and types of injuries to expect upon their arrival.” It does not detail a process for communicating that information.

Stephens, Martinez and representatives for Uvalde EMS did not respond to requests for comment, including queries sent by certified letter. Five other private ambulance companies seen responding to the shooting also did not answer written questions or phone calls seeking comment.

Confusion and delays

Martinez told investigators that he directed other medics to park their ambulances nearby until they knew whether it was safe to move closer. Experts said it’s not unusual to keep ambulances at a short distance from crime scenes with active shooters.

He soon identified a pressing obstacle: As dozens of officers descended on the scene, they left their vehicles blocking the roads that ambulances needed to get to the school.

Martinez instructed the county’s two dispatchers to ask law enforcement to create a clear path.

“We were anticipating essentially just grabbing whatever patients we had and running out,” he later told investigators.

While outside, Martinez and a second medic treated a Uvalde police lieutenant who had been grazed in the head when the gunman shot through the classroom door. Then they waited, with no clear sense of the horror unfolding inside the school.

“We didn’t know the numbers of patients, number of injuries, number of fatalities,” Martinez recalled in interviews with investigators. “Nobody was relaying that.”

Other emergency crews were also struggling to get crucial information and figure out where to go.

The crew of an AirLIFE helicopter grounded in Uvalde for maintenance heard the unfolding chaos on the radio and offered to help. The crew later told investigators that the emergency responders they talked to had rejected their assistance repeatedly. They did not provide the names of those responders.

“Nobody knew what was really going on,” said Perez, one of the helicopter medics. He said the officials told his crew to “stand by, stay there — don’t come.”

With no one clearly in charge of the police or medical responses, an elite Border Patrol tactical team that began arriving at the school at 12:10 p.m. assumed both roles, according to a July report by a state House committee tasked with investigating the response.

A Border Patrol agent instructed officers to have “gauze ready to go” for victims from Rooms 111 and 112. Credit: Uvalde police footage obtained by The Texas Tribune, The Washington Post and ProPublica

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The team, which typically handles dangerous situations involving migrants at the border, devised a plan to breach the adjoining classrooms while its medics set up a triage station.

Law enforcement officers responding to the Robb Elementary shooting established a medical triage station in a school hallway. Credit: Texas state trooper body-camera footage obtained by The Texas Tribune, The Washington Post and ProPublica

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At 12:50 p.m., a Border Patrol-led unit that included local police breached the classrooms. The gunman sprung from a closet and fired. They shot back, killing him.

The team gave the all-clear.

Officers who had packed the hallway now filled the classrooms. Ruiz ran back into the school, looking for his wife. Children lay on the floor, many near or on top of each other, most of them dead.

“I can still feel the heart”

Officers quickly began taking victims to a triage area inside the school, carrying some by their limbs. With so many law enforcement officers and first responders at the scene, there was little space to move. Some children were placed in a line on each side of the hallway.

One local medic later complained to investigators that the response was so chaotic that emergency crews were stepping on victims.

Several medics expressed frustration to investigators that law enforcement officers brought them students who could not be saved.

“You’re doing this wrong,” Martinez, the Uvalde EMS deputy supervisor, recalled yelling to police after being handed a child with a significant head injury. “There’s nothing I can do for this patient.”

Within minutes, medics determined that several critically wounded patients with pulses needed to be urgently taken to a hospital where surgeons could provide advanced care.

A girl matching the description of Jackie — wearing the same red shirt and black shorts she’d had on earlier in the day — was placed in one of the two ambulances at the school. The 9-year-old, described by her family as a “firecracker” for being so full of life, died on the way to the hospital.

Andrew Aviles, a regional trainer for the Border Patrol’s medic team, began treating a young boy, doing everything he could to revive him.

“I can still feel the heart,” Aviles yelled, as he later recounted to investigators in an interview punctuated with sobs. “I need a fucking plane. I need a helicopter down. I need to get a kid inside there!”

The boy needed to be taken to San Antonio’s University Hospital, the nearest Level 1 trauma center, which is equipped to handle the most serious cases. It was about 45 minutes away by helicopter, 90 minutes in an ambulance.

The child seen in the police body-camera footage fits the description of Xavier. A law enforcement document listing what students were wearing indicates that Xavier had on a black shirt, blue jeans and black-and-white shoes. That is similar to the clothing worn by the boy Aviles was treating, the officer video shows.

Aviles had heard that the wounded were being airlifted from a field on the west side of the school, so he and other medics put the boy on a stretcher and began rushing him out to the dusty patch of grass at 12:56 p.m.

There was no helicopter.

Although at least five medical helicopters responded to the shooting, not one picked up anyone from Rooms 111 and 112 at the school, according to a review of flight data, satellite imagery and photographs, as well as interviews with air crew members by Texas Rangers.

Epley, the executive director of the regional coordinating agency for trauma care, said it was not safe to have medical helicopters at a scene with an active shooter. But Uvalde police could be heard on radio transmissions asking where medical helicopters were 10 minutes after the gunman was killed. It took 15 minutes more for the first to land near the school.

Spokespeople for the ambulance helicopter companies, Air Methods, which includes AirLIFE, and Air Evac Lifeteam, both of which responded to the shooting, said they rely on local medics to decide who should be airlifted. They declined to respond to detailed questions.

Each passing second dimmed the odds for the boy who appeared to be Xavier.

Dread set in when Aviles felt softness on the back of the child’s head, indicating a significant injury. The wounds were consistent with those detailed in the autopsy report shared with Xavier’s family, which revealed that the boy had been shot five times.

“I was like, ‘Guys, he’s …,'” Aviles said, pausing for a moment to take a breath as he spoke with investigators. “That took the wind out of my sails.”

First responders waited 11 minutes for a helicopter but decided to drive to San Antonio when it didn’t arrive. At that point, the boy had already gone into cardiac arrest. Overwhelmed medics enlisted state Trooper Matthew Neese to help with CPR in the ambulance.

Once a gunshot victim’s heart stops beating, the likelihood of survival diminishes sharply, experts said. A patient in that condition should immediately be brought to an operating room, where a surgeon can attempt to stop internal bleeding.

State records show that Neese did not have an EMT or paramedic license in Texas, but he performed CPR on Xavier for more than 30 minutes while a medic tried to treat the boy’s wounds. The ambulance diverted to Medina Regional Hospital in Hondo, about 40 miles from Uvalde, where doctors declared the child dead shortly after 2 p.m., according to his family.

A helicopter arrived near Robb Elementary at 1:15 p.m., eight minutes after the ambulance departed.

Hospital officials did not respond to a request for comment and neither did Neese. The trooper later attended Xavier’s funeral, according to the boy’s family.

Reached on his cellphone, Aviles declined to comment, referring questions to his supervisors at U.S. Customs and Border Protection. In a statement, a CBP spokesperson said the agency is investigating the role of its officers in the response and could not comment while that was ongoing.

Xavier’s mother, Felicha Martinez, said an awful premonition hit her as she stood outside the school waiting for news. Her body went limp and she collapsed. His father, Abel Lopez, searched for any sign of his son, peering between the buses blocking the view of the school.

They have since learned bits and pieces about what happened to their son but are left with questions, including why Xavier wasn’t taken to a hospital by helicopter.

“If the cops had done their job, the medics might’ve had a chance,” Lopez said.

Martinez added: “I’m so full of anger. I don’t know how to put into words how much I am hurting.”

“Don’t give up”

On the day of the shooting, emergency responders frantically tried to keep Mireles alive on the sidewalk outside Robb Elementary. She was deteriorating quickly. Within minutes, her heart had stopped and first responders began to administer CPR.

More ambulances arrived at the school, but it wasn’t until 16 minutes after the breach that medics put her inside one.


Eva Mireles was carried out of her classroom, Room 112, and through the school hallway by four police officers, her husband following behind.

A Border Patrol medic said in an interview with investigators: “I asked the guys, ‘Hey let’s not work on her here.’ But we look to the right and there’s no ambulances. So we had to work on her there.”

But there were two ambulances parked about 100 feet away.

Credit: Graphics by Imogen Piper/The Washington Post

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Medics laid Mireles on the ground and performed chest compressions.

She lay on the ground for more than 10 minutes, during which six ambulances arrived and two left. It’s unclear why Mireles was not immediately put into one of these ambulances.

Credit: Graphics by Imogen Piper/The Washington Post

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Ultimately, medics moved Mireles off the ground and into an ambulance.

Credit: Graphics by Imogen Piper/The Washington Post

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“Come on, ma’am, don’t give up,” a voice can be heard saying in a state trooper’s body-camera footage.

By then, the teacher’s chances of survival had sunk.

In the ambulance, medics began a blood transfusion and used an automatic compression device to try to get the teacher’s heart pumping again. They gave her fluids and intubated her.

But they did not take her to a hospital, a decision some experts described as a mistake and others said could indicate that medics thought Mireles had no chance of survival.

First responders continued CPR in the ambulance for about 40 minutes before the chief medic for Uvalde EMS declared her dead.

The ambulance that Mireles was inside never left the school curb.

Zach Despart, Alejandro Serrano and Uriel J. García are reporters for The Texas Tribune. Lomi Kriel is a reporter for ProPublica and the Tribune. Arelis R. Hernández is a national reporter based in Texas for The Washington Post. Joyce Sohyun Lee, Sarah Cahlan and Imogen Piper are reporters for The Post’s Visual Forensics team.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2022/12/20/uvalde-medical-response/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

He defended the NYPD in court. Then they arrested him

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By the time Karl Ashanti neared his office in the New York City Law Department’s headquarters in March 2018, the police were shutting down Park Place. Ice had fallen from the buildings above, so an officer had cordoned off the area. Ashanti flashed his work ID and the cop let him through. Then, about two-thirds of the way down the block, he ran into a second officer. “Turn around now,” John Shapiro barked. “I said now.

Ashanti stiffened. The two men were about the same size, each around 6 feet tall and 240 pounds. Shapiro was in his blue New York Police Department uniform. Ashanti, a city lawyer, wasn’t due in court that day and had dressed casually in dark slacks, a button-down, an overcoat and a winter hat. The two had never met before, but there was something about Shapiro’s brusque demeanor that Ashanti recognized.

For 11 years, Ashanti had defended NYPD officers against lawsuits alleging civil-rights violations in federal court. He was a senior litigator in a little-known Law Department unit that exclusively handles such cases, the Special Federal Litigation Division, known simply as Special Fed. As a Black man who’d grown up in Jamaica, Queens, Ashanti thought he brought valuable perspective to the work. He’d seen how Black people, and Black men in particular, could, through no fault of their own, be targeted by prejudiced men in uniform. Still, Ashanti took pride in his legal skills and had come to embrace the combative approach that Special Fed typically took in fighting claims of police abuse, even in the face of compelling evidence that police behavior violated the constitutional rights of the people they had sworn to protect.

On Park Place, Ashanti told Shapiro, who is white, that he was trying to get to his office. Shapiro insisted he go back the way he came. Ashanti moved between two parked cars to cross the street and Shapiro hustled to cut off his path, repeating his order. The two men faced each other in the middle of the road. Shapiro tapped Ashanti on his shoulder. Ashanti backpedaled and asked to speak to a supervisor. Shapiro took out his handcuffs. Within 90 seconds of their first encounter, the officer arrested the attorney.

Shapiro claimed in criminal filings that Ashanti resisted arrest and shoved him twice, so forcefully that Shapiro had to step back to catch his balance. The New York Post splashed the allegations in its pages, calling Ashanti a “livid lawyer.” It wasn’t true. Security-camera footage showed no shoving during the incident. As it unfolded, nine other people freely walked up and down Park Place. Court records revealed it wasn’t the first time Shapiro had been accused of abusing his power. By the time he detained Ashanti, the officer had already been named in three false-arrest lawsuits. (Two were settled, and one was dismissed.) Ashanti’s own unit had handled those cases.

Within days of the incident, the Law Department gave Ashanti an ultimatum: resign or be fired. After more than a decade defending the police, Ashanti was finding out what it was like on the other side of the law.

 

On Oct. 29, 1984, when Ashanti was 11 years old, police officers in Morris Heights entered Eleanor Bumpurs’ apartment and killed her with a shotgun. Bumpurs was 66 and mentally ill. Her family had instructed her not to let strangers into her home, and when the police showed up to assist in her eviction that day, she lunged at them with a kitchen knife. Her death inflamed the city. In Ashanti’s neighborhood — a predominantly Black community of working-class Caribbean immigrants and city employees — the shooting entered a canon of police killings that, over decades, have shaped attitudes on race and the police. Ashanti remembers that this was about the time when his mother first gave him the Talk. “It’s not like she didn’t have respect for authority,” Ashanti says. “It was not that I should dislike the police. It was more like, ‘There are some police officers who will abuse their power, and unless you capitulate, things might escalate.’ She was like, ‘I want my son alive.’ She said that more than once to me.”

Not long after, three Black men whose car had broken down in Howard Beach were chased by a pack of white teenagers with tire irons and baseball bats. One of the men fleeing the mob was struck by a car and killed. Another was savagely beaten. For Ashanti, the takeaway was clear: Don’t ever ride your bike into Howard Beach. “It’s the ironic thing about growing up in New York City, which is such a quote, unquote liberal city,” he says. “You have these incidents of not just police but private racial violence.” Police racism was real, he thought, but cops didn’t have a monopoly on prejudice; it was simply everywhere.

In sixth grade, Ashanti did well on an exam given by Prep for Prep, a nonprofit group that sends promising students of color to elite, mostly white private schools. He attended Buckley, the tony all-boys academy on the Upper East Side, where he was a few years ahead of Donald Trump Jr., then high school at St. Paul’s, the exclusive New Hampshire boarding school.

One Friday during sophomore year, it was his turn to choose a film for movie night. Students normally picked comedies, but Ashanti went with “Colors,” the 1988 drama about Los Angeles cops patrolling gangland beats. One of the older boys “rolled his eyes about the selection and shit,” Ashanti says. “And then maybe like one or two other people joined in. A What the fuck is this? kind of thing. Just, like, a complete rejection of anything that had to do with the ghetto, with Black and Latino culture.” With him. “I just remember looking at them like: You fucking privileged assholes. Everything has to be your way all the fucking time.

On several occasions, upperclassmen barged into his room in the middle of the night and pelted him with water balloons. He thought they were sending a message: “Here’s this motherfucker who won’t fall in line.” At 23, he legally changed his last name to Ashanti, shedding the birth name, Francis, that his enslaved African ancestors had been “branded” with. “I’m sure one of their goals was for one of their descendants to one day be free of that name,” he says. “I know that’s what it would be for me.”

Ashanti is impeccably credentialed — he went on to Stanford, where he was president of his all-Black fraternity, and then Georgetown Law — but when he returned to New York and entered the workforce, his trajectory slackened. At a succession of run-of-the-mill firms, Ashanti took cases involving businesses suing businesses, personal injury and insurance. The work could be challenging, but it didn’t satisfy his civic or lawyerly ambitions. A landlord and tenant arguing the terms of a 20-year lease? Boring. Cattle-call appearances in state courts before overworked judges? Uninspiring.

One morning on his way to the office, Ashanti says, an officer pulled him over for “erratic driving” and falsely cited him for having lapsed insurance. He was held for 12 hours. Another time, while applying to a new firm, his interviews seemed to be going well until he met with an elderly white partner. Ashanti later testified that the man said “something more malicious than ‘You’re articulate for a Negro.'” (The firm settled an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaint. Ashanti said he received an apology that implied the partner was “like the grandpa you don’t want to bring out to the party.”)

Nine years passed in the lower tiers of corporate law. Ashanti wanted autonomy, and he wanted to conduct trials — maybe even change lanes to civil-rights law. From an early age, he’d been inspired by Thurgood Marshall. But he didn’t have a civil-rights background, and the longer he spent doing corporate law, the less possible switching tracks felt. He started talking with a recruiter, and when an opportunity arose at Special Fed, Ashanti listened with great interest.

The cases would be in the federal courts, where the smartest jurists operate, and he’d be handling them soup to nuts, appearing before judges and juries. And the subject matter was appealingly complex. The main statute governing Special Fed’s work, Section 1983, traces its roots to a Reconstruction-era bill known as the Ku Klux Klan Act that lets individuals sue local government officials for violations of their civil rights. It’s an extremely technical platform to litigate, with a century and a half of accumulated case law. “That’s the heart of our legal system: the relationship between government and individuals,” Ashanti says.

He would have preferred to do civil-rights work on behalf of plaintiffs, but the firms that handled such cases weren’t offering him a job. Plus, for a native New Yorker, joining the Law Department had a special attraction. “Representing the City of New York did fill me with a sense of pride,” he says.

The idea that he’d be arguing the side of the police just wasn’t much of a factor in his decision to join the division, he says. “I didn’t feel any kind of way about representing police officers and correctional officers because I always knew — I always knew — it was all about the work and the cases,” he says. “It’s always a case-by-case situation.”

 

Special Fed was created in 1998 by the administration of Rudy Giuliani to deal with a surge in lawsuits against police officers, jail guards and prosecutors. Its dozens of attorneys investigate citizens’ allegations of beatings, false arrests and other civil-rights abuses and decide whether to mount a defense or settle. Generally, they fight.

Many Special Fed veterans say the unit prizes winning at all costs, even when there is merit to a plaintiff’s case. Victory can still be had in making the process as difficult as possible for citizens — getting suits thrown out, abandoned or negotiated down to the smallest possible payout. The lawyers tend to see themselves as guardians of the public fisc, pitted against those who would drain the coffers: criminals looking for a payday, greedy lawyers, bleeding-heart juries. They litigate aggressively, sometimes drawing rebukes from judges for violating court rules, blowing deadlines and pressing the boundaries of professional conduct. Earlier this year, a judge dressed down a senior Special Fed lawyer for failing to obey court orders. “If I order something and you can’t do it, you can’t just blow it off,” the judge said. One plaintiff’s attorney told the New York Daily News, “They get away with things that no other litigant would ever get away with.” (A spokesman for the Law Department says, “We take our ethical responsibilities very seriously and have zero tolerance for misconduct that undermines our mission.”)

Sometimes even a victory at trial isn’t enough for Special Fed. In 2020, after defeating a Bronx man in an excessive-force case, the division sought sanctions against him and his legal team for bringing the suit in the first place. A federal judge wrote scathingly that the effort to penalize the plaintiff was “wildly inappropriate” because the man had had a reasonable case. More troubling, the judge wrote, was the chilling message that the episode sent to the law firms that do pro bono work for low-income people “with facially valid claims against powerful defendants.”

Ashanti believed he could be a more nuanced operator at Special Fed. Shortly before he started, in November 2006, plainclothes officers shot 50 bullets at a car driven by a Black 23-year-old named Sean Bell in the early hours of his wedding day. It was the city’s most incendiary police killing in years, and Ashanti felt it personally — Bell was from his neighborhood. “Sean Bell was me,” he says. He decided that at his new job, the Bell case would serve as his moral barometer. The family would inevitably file a civil suit against the police; would Special Fed settle it judiciously, or would the unit reflexively fight to minimize the payout? “That was the biggest question to me: Are we going to defend the indefensible?” Ashanti says.

He showed up to his first day of work in March 2007. The third floor of the New York City Law Department was like a relic of the drab municipal offices of the 1970s, with paralegals and claims specialists sitting in cubicles in the middle of the floor and attorneys occupying small windowless offices. Conference rooms had removable walls so they could double in size when teams of litigators fielded especially big cases. Armed NYPD officers — liaisons between Special Fed and its police clients — walked the halls.

Ashanti handled about 40 lawsuits a year, and he found that few fit his Sean Bell binary. Most presented as murky, with imperfect evidence and plaintiffs who might have been breaking the law, introducing questions of credibility and sympathy with juries. One of his first assignments involved a class-action suit alleging that Rikers Island jailers were unconstitutionally strip-searching female inmates and conducting nonconsensual gynecological exams. Ashanti was one of eight or so lawyers on the Special Fed team. Questions about constitutional violations and public accountability receded as the day-to-day work ground on with arguments over records, process and liability. (The suit was settled years later for $33 million.)

Like most in his profession, Ashanti believed in some core tenets about representation: Attorneys are not their clients, and our adversarial system demands that each side have zealous counsel. But at Special Fed, almost from the start, he struggled to moderate that zeal. In a performance review, a superior noted that “Karl’s passion for an issue many times comes across as temper and this detracts from his professional demeanor.” Another report in 2011 chided Ashanti for getting into two “public confrontations,” one with a colleague and another with opposing counsel. At the same time, his bosses — all but a few of whom were white — were thrilled with the results he was getting. They praised him for settling cases for even less money than they had authorized.

The lawyers who stood across the courtroom from Ashanti knew all about zealous advocacy, and they saw his behavior as needlessly hostile. Several felt he embodied what was wrong with Special Fed — a relentless sparring that obscured what was really at stake in the cases: civil rights and public accountability. Rose Weber, a longtime civil-rights lawyer who had worked at Special Fed in its early days, was especially disturbed by Ashanti’s tactics in a 2010 excessive-force case. Her client claimed to have been slammed to the ground by a plainclothes officer, rupturing discs in his back. In a motion, Ashanti wrote dismissively that the alleged abuse was “of minor importance.” The judge called the argument “as groundless as it is troubling.” Weber, who would go on to lose the case, spoke to other plaintiffs’ attorneys about Ashanti and collected a handful of confrontational anecdotes in a folder on her computer. Compared to that of other Special Fed lawyers, she says, Ashanti’s approach “wasn’t even beyond the realm. It was a realm of its own.”

Another frequent opponent, Robert Quackenbush, had a more civil relationship with Ashanti. In a case with video evidence showing that police had lied in sworn testimony, he got into a dispute with Ashanti about compensation for his client, who had been punched and pepper-sprayed. Quackenbush cited two precedents that he believed supported his reasoning. Ashanti wrote, “I’ve read those cases and disagree but if we agreed about everything we wouldn’t be adversaries. Be well.”

“The most charitable assessment is that he was extremely combative,” Quackenbush says. “People wanted to attribute his litigation style to his soul or something. I don’t personally do that. He was a Black man working for the City of New York on police cases at a time judges were finding the police were discriminating against Black people. That had to have been an impossible job and an impossible situation.”

Ashanti was one of just a handful of Black lawyers within Special Fed. He said in a 2020 deposition that he detected a racial dimension to the way he was perceived by some opposing counsel. “If I push back on any issue, they’re like: ‘You don’t have to get so worked up. You don’t have to get so upset.’ And I’m like, ‘What are you talking about?'” he said. “There’s no use of the N-word, but it was the underlying idea of an overly-aggressive-Black-man kind of thing.”

On a separate occasion, Ashanti took the testimony of a witness at an opposing attorney’s home office. It grew so contentious the other lawyer, Carmen Giordano, called 911. Giordano told a judge in the case that Ashanti “refused to stop yelling in a startling and menacing manner” and wouldn’t leave when asked. Ashanti denied that; he told the judge he had had a “momentary lapse in professionalism” that didn’t merit a “call for a police presence to put me back ‘in my place.'” He added that the idea that he was “threatening” was “predicated on an expectation of violence due to racist notions about Black men having an inherent propensity to commit violence, rather than the actual behavior of the individual.” His supervisor took his side.

Within Special Fed, Ashanti talked with Black colleagues about the difficulties of advancement. “It was kind of harder to build a career as a Black attorney than as a white attorney,” he said in the 2020 deposition. But he also put that observation in context: “It’s not specific to the Law Department,” he said. “It’s just society. The Law Department is a microcosm of society.”

When it came to his own cases, Ashanti says, he never felt angst. He could reconcile using his legal skills in defense of the police while at the same time recognizing that Black people were at greater risk of police maltreatment. Besides, the job provided him with a stable, middle-class life. He got married, and he and his wife, Jovanna, moved to Staten Island, where they would go on to raise two sons and be active in their church as born-again Christians.

Ashanti compartmentalized. “Professionals do professional shit,” he says. “Excuse my language. But, like, if you’re a basketball player, you fucking play basketball. You do what you do, and I am a lawyer, so I lawyered up. I did my work.”

 

Whom exactly does the city lawyer represent? The straightforward answer is the city, of course. But the issue gets more complicated if you consider whether New York is its citizens or its employees. When residents file lawsuits against the police, the text of the municipal charter turns into something of a paradox. It requires the Law Department to represent “the city and every agency thereof” but also says it should “maintain, defend and establish” the interests of “the people thereof.” Is it acting in anyone’s best interest to get a civil case against a police officer thrown out if it enables the officer to cross the line again?

For years, Special Fed took the narrow view — that its lawyers represented the police and that its chief obligation was to minimize payouts over officers’ misconduct. That was especially true at the end of the Bloomberg administration, which clamped down by designating more cases “No Pay” and forcing the Special Fed lawyers who fielded them to go to trial.

In 2014, however, Bill de Blasio was sworn in as mayor after campaigning on police reform, and it looked as though his administration would answer the question of representation in a dramatically more expansive way. De Blasio’s pick to lead the Law Department was Zachary Carter, an esteemed Black lawyer who had served as a U.S. attorney and federal judge. Carter began telling city lawyers that they represented, in some fashion, the names on both sides of the v. in a lawsuit’s title. And he unveiled a new doctrine, “Justice in Our Work,” that he hoped would change the culture inside the agency.

Curiously, Carter wanted the defense lawyers to act more like prosecutors — but only in the sense that they should exercise a degree of forbearance. Defense lawyers must argue every point in service of their clients, but the Supreme Court has held that prosecutors have an ethical obligation to deliver not just convictions but justice. They are meant to drop cases and withdraw charges when it seems like “the right thing” to do. In New York, that is the title of the District Attorneys Association’s ethics handbook, which opens by telling members there is a higher civic duty that goes beyond defeating the opposition. “Unlike other lawyers,” it reads, “the client we represent is the public, whose interests are not necessarily served by winning every case.”

“Justice in Our Work” was a radical approach to city lawyering. It challenged Special Fed’s standard playbook: seeking dismissal, fighting disclosure, putting the screws to plaintiffs during depositions. In a memo to senior staff, Carter said he was not asking city attorneys to “turn a blind eye to clearly established law or fail to aggressively litigate when faced with sympathetic opposing parties.” Instead, he argued, they should use those analyses as starting points before settling on an outcome that would advance the “nebulous question” of what it means to act in the city’s best interest. “Failing to identify the just option among alternative legal positions is a failure to counsel the City in a way that allows it to fulfill one of its most fundamental obligations: to govern in a just manner,” he wrote.

For a while, the new doctrine had a big impact. In January 2014, the administration ended the city’s efforts to defend its stop-and-frisk program. Later that year, Carter directed Special Fed to settle its highest-profile civil-rights case — brought by five Black and Hispanic men wrongly convicted of raping and beating a woman in Central Park in 1989 — for $41 million. But “Justice in Our Work” was not to last.

That December, two police officers were assassinated while sitting in their patrol car, destroying what little remained of de Blasio’s relationship with the NYPD and its unions. Then Special Fed settled a case involving a Brooklyn man who was shot by police after he brandished a machete. The man had a weak claim, but city lawyers agreed to pay $5,000 to erase the chance that it could be heard by a sympathetic jury. The Post put it on the front page under the headline “Ax & You Shall Receive.” Then-Commissioner Bill Bratton condemned the settlement, saying it was “outrageous” that the agency “is continuing to not support the men and women in this department.” The blowback was so hot that even de Blasio chimed in to say the payment was “wrong.”

In a memo to union leaders, one of the mayor’s top aides clarified the administration’s police litigation policy, writing that the Law Department would “enhance the representation of police officers” sued while on the job. The NYPD created a new legal team to augment the Law Department. And Carter appointed a new head of Special Fed, Patricia Miller, who championed the “No Pay” approach. She is still in charge. This past March, during an interview on John Catsimatidis’ talk-radio show, a host asked Miller how hard it was to combat the media’s demonization of “the men and women in blue.” She responded: “I think you hit on a good point. We provide a voice for police officers.”

Joel Berger, a civil-rights lawyer who served as a Law Department executive during the administration of David Dinkins, says there is a “buddy-buddy relationship between the NYPD and the Law Department that would’ve been unheard of in my day.” From the perspective of the civil-rights bar, Special Fed has for years put the interests of the police above those of its primary client: the city and the people who live there.

 

A few years after Ashanti joined Special Fed, the city resolved a lawsuit brought by Sean Bell’s fiancée and others for $7 million. Ashanti thought it showed that his employer had a limit — that it would pay up in egregious cases — and that the settlement represented something like justice. “The cop isn’t going to sit down in a room and apologize to you,” he says. “In our civil system, it is money.”

How much Special Fed agrees to pay plaintiffs is decided by a process known as “seeking authority.” In memos, lawyers present their bosses with the facts of their cases, including confidential details like internal NYPD disciplinary records, and request an amount they think will put the matter to rest. Ashanti says he came up with figures by weighing several factors: a fiscal responsibility to protect the Treasury, how likely he was to win and precedents, adding more money when “the actions of the police were egregious or there was more of an injustice.”

In general, Ashanti considered himself a force for good within a flawed system — an arbiter of civil-side justice, denying awards to those who would wrongly accuse good cops of bad deeds while working behind closed doors to get deserving clients justly compensated. But if that was true, it was well disguised from the New Yorkers who alleged their civil rights had been violated.

In 2015, Ashanti was assigned a lawsuit against four officers accused of false arrest, excessive force and other offenses. A 21-year-old man named Allen Brown had been a passenger in a car driven by a friend of a friend when police in an unmarked vehicle attempted to pull them over. To Brown’s shock, the driver sped off, then left the car and fled by foot. Brown, who is Black, panicked. He ran, too, hiding in the basement stairwell of a nearby house. A resident called 911. Brown later testified that even though he emerged with his hands raised, the cops beat him up, kicking him in the face multiple times while he was handcuffed.

The officers denied this, but it wasn’t the first time they had been accused of misconduct. Ashanti’s unit had represented each of the officers in at least one prior case. One had already been named in three. Collectively, the cases cost taxpayers $158,000.

Ashanti fought Brown vigorously. In the courtroom one day, he seemed to suggest that because Brown ran, he brought whatever happened upon himself. “Any force that was used was the product of the fact that not only did he flee from the vehicle but then trespassed on someone else’s property,” Ashanti said.

Taken aback, Judge Ramon Reyes Jr. told Ashanti he thought he’d just “made a misstatement.”

“Which is?” Ashanti asked.

“That the force used was related to the fact that he was trespassing,” Reyes said. Ashanti started to talk, but the judge cut him off: “You can’t use force. Period.”

Ashanti said he hadn’t meant to imply that. They went back and forth, and Reyes got exasperated. “Lower your voice,” he told Ashanti. “You think because you raise your voice, your arguments are more persuasive. They’re not.”

Ashanti offered Brown $20,000 to settle. But Brown’s lawyers soon discovered that Ashanti hadn’t provided them with a key Internal Affairs report. A judge sanctioned the city for the failure. Ashanti protested that an “inadvertent clerical error” was to blame, but another judge upheld the penalty. The case, which Brown once offered to resolve for $200,000, eventually settled for $325,000.

Brown is now 29. He says the purpose of his lawsuit was mostly to get some accountability for what had happened to him. He still feels particular resentment toward Ashanti, whose full-throated lawyering had made Brown seem like a liar. “It was the undermining — and the sort of sweeping under the rug — of what had happened to me,” Brown says. “I just feel it was very unfair.” He adds, “I don’t know if this is even the job to be empathetic, but he definitely lacked any sort of empathy or any level of understanding.”

When told how Brown feels, Ashanti is unmoved. “How can I put this?” he says. “Civil rights can be violated and that person can still be a knucklehead, you know what I’m saying?” He claims that back at Special Fed, he had tried to advocate for Brown. “He wasn’t there, wasn’t privy to the conversations where I was trying to get authority for the case because I thought his civil rights were violated.” Ashanti says. “Mature people know these things, right? I’m not going to say, ‘Yeah, you’re right — these cops really fucked him up badly. How much do you want, Allen?’ Like, come on. Come the fuck on — excuse my language. Like, that’s not how things are done.”

Ashanti sees the Brown case as an instance of his furthering the cause of justice, not the opposite. “It’s why you need people like me in those positions,” he says. “That’s what a fucking idiot like him is too stupid to see. You need someone like me in those positions versus a white guy who doesn’t give a fuck about you. Any intelligent person can see that, who’s actually mature enough to understand that two things can be true that are seemingly — seemingly — contradictory.”

Not everyone at Special Fed could handle the dissonance. At the same time that he was working the Brown case, Ashanti was asked to mentor a new hire named David Ferrari, who was 25 and fresh out of law school. Like Ashanti eight years earlier, he was immediately assigned complex litigation. Unlike Ashanti, he revolted.

Ferrari was besieged with cases, many of which were frivolous on their face. But he also found that in many of his assignments, officers accused of brutality or other civil-rights violations refused to tell him clearly what had happened. Interviewing cops in his third-floor office, he’d try and fail to get them to go beyond blanket statements like “I was forced to administer a blow.” Ferrari would tell his bosses that it was impossible for him to determine if the plaintiffs’ cases had merit. Ferrari recalls, “The response was: ‘What are you talking about? He told you everything you need to know to make the case.'”

Ferrari turned to Ashanti. Ferrari remembers him saying: “I hear you. I empathize. We’re all very stressed. We just have to keep our head down and keep pushing.” The job ate at Ferrari so much that his health suffered. “Doing the job well was different than doing the right thing,” he says. “Certainly, nobody encouraged me to do something unethical. The culture, the atmosphere, the need to not settle these cases lends itself to a toxic environment.” Ferrari quit after about two years, making sure the office knew he had nothing else lined up. “When I left, I had at least six different attorneys come to my office,” he says. “‘How did you escape this place? How do I get out of here?’ That’s when I felt really vindicated.”

Ferrari says that when he heard about Ashanti’s arrest on Park Place in March 2018, he felt nothing but sympathy. “The job was not easy on him either,” he says. “My intuition was that as overworked as I was, I know he was more overworked. I knew that whatever cases that had the gray area we were struggling with, those were chosen for me because a first-year could handle it. His were a lot more complex.”

Allen Brown’s reaction to Ashanti’s arrest is less generous. Ashanti, he says, is “getting a taste of his own medicine.”

 

After his altercation with Officer Shapiro on the icy street, Ashanti spent 14 hours in custody. The experience was surreal. “The main component of my job was defending police officers in similar situations who are sometimes guilty of falsely arresting people. And this was one of them,” he says. “That irony hit me immediately.”

His bosses suspended him while they investigated. Ashanti soon learned the breadth of Shapiro’s allegations — that not only had he supposedly shoved the officer but he’d also gone on a tirade, claiming that he’d be “contacting the media” and could no longer “work for this police department or this city anymore.” Ashanti denied saying those things. But then the Post published its “livid lawyer” article.

Ashanti’s superiors did not see his arrest as an isolated incident. A year earlier, he had been brought before top management for violating city rules. Ashanti had represented his wife in small-claims court in a dispute with her former employer, a nonprofit wholly owned by a city agency — a clear conflict of interest. (He was later fined $8,500.) To the Law Department, Ashanti’s use of his city ID to enter a roped-off block was further proof that he felt the rules didn’t apply to him.

With his job in the balance, Ashanti got on the phone with Muriel Goode-Trufant, the agency’s managing attorney. “I knew it was a done deal,” he later testified, “but I expressed my disappointment in her as a Black woman to basically take the racist actions of this police officer that led to my false arrest and then to compound the problem, in order to appease the NYPD, by making me, in essence, a sacrificial lamb. I don’t think I used that term, sacrificial lamb, but that was it in sum and substance. So she was putting the interest of appearances, or the relationship between the Law Department and the NYPD, over what’s right and what’s just.” It was the same argument that Ashanti’s opponents had been leveling against Special Fed for years.

The conversation didn’t help. Within a week of his arrest, Ashanti was told he could resign or be fired. “Despite our frustrations with Karl, it did not mean that we disliked him, so we gave him the opportunity to make the choice,” Goode-Trufant said in a deposition.

Over the next few months, prosecutors withdrew all the charges against Ashanti except for one count of harassment, which is punishable by up to 15 days in jail. That August, wearing a light-blue dress shirt and blue tie with white dots, Ashanti walked into a Manhattan courtroom for a bench trial. He sat at a table as his lawyer walked Shapiro through a crucial 12 seconds of surveillance footage, which doesn’t show any obvious shoves or step-backs.

The judge issued her decision: not guilty. “You know how we always complain we’re under surveillance everywhere?” says Ashanti’s wife, Jovanna. “Thank God for that. That’s what saved Karl.”

After his acquittal, Ashanti turned to reputation repair, hiring a company to scrub his Google results and enlisting members of his church to lobby the Post until the paper removed the story about his arrest from its website. He got a job at a firm representing plaintiffs in civil-rights litigation, advocating for them against the city. He was finally realizing his original ambitions of using the law to help others. “It just took a long, long time — a long, circuitous route to get here,” he says.

Ashanti also sued the city and Shapiro for damages. (The officer has since drawn yet another lawsuit, his fifth in less than a decade. A Canal Street vendor claims that Shapiro yanked her arm so forcefully while arresting her that he broke her shoulder bone, an injury that required a plate and screws to repair. The city denies that claim and is defending him in state court.) Shapiro declined to comment. In a statement, a police spokesperson also declined to comment and denied, generally, that the police have “undue influence on the Special Fed and its work,” saying any claim that it does “is outrageous and inaccurate.”

Ashanti v. The City of New York is ongoing. The city says it’s treating the case as it would any other. “While we work to vigorously protect the interests of the city in every case, we are always mindful that opposing parties are also citizens who should be treated with respect and whose claims should be evaluated fairly,” a spokesman says. “We have upheld all of these values in defending against the meritless case brought by Mr. Ashanti.”

As the case drags on, Ashanti sometimes sounds a bit like Brown. He complains that the city lawyer assigned to his lawsuit is treating it like a “No Pay” case and “fighting tooth and nail against me.” There is a deep sense of outrage, even hurt, in his voice. And yet when I asked him recently about the parallel to Brown, and whether his experience has made him rethink his own hardball tactics at Special Fed, he was unequivocal. “I did my job the right way,” he says.

Over a decade at Special Fed, Ashanti defended the police and jail guards in more than 300 cases accusing them of violating New Yorkers’ constitutional rights. “I didn’t become a Law Department counsel because I was afraid of how people would view me or I was afraid my liberal card would get snatched away, or my Black card,” he says. “I know who I am. I know what I’ve been through. I know what I believe.”

Dolphins are beaching themselves. The culprit could be Alzheimer’s disease

Cetaceans, the class of marine mammals including whales, porpoises and dolphins, are some of the smartest creatures on earth. Bottlenose dolphins, for example, have slightly bigger brains than humans (1600 grams versus 1300 grams), as well as developed highly complex language abilities. Some dolphins have even developed the use of tools, considered a marker of animal intelligence.

But sometimes dolphins do some pretty unintelligent stuff, at least from a human perspective. Specifically, some dolphins will beach themselves, getting stranded on sand in a way that often results in death. Entire pods of dolphins may end up doing this at once.

Occasionally they do this in pursuit of food, a behavior known as “strand feeding,” while other times it’s because of pollution or industrialization. In other instances, it could be due to a “sick-leader syndrome,” in which dolphins unwittingly follow an older, confused and feeble-minded dolphin to their death.

A new study in the European Journal of Neuroscience suggests that some of this stranding behavior could be due to dolphins developing Alzheimer’s disease, a progressive brain disorder that erodes the capacity for memory, often manifesting as dementia. By analyzing the brains of 22 dolphins, researchers at the universities of St Andrews and Edinburgh, the University of Glasgow and the Moredun Research Institute in Scotland, present some of the most detailed evidence yet of this disease occurring in dolphins. The notion that Alzheimer’s could affect animals outside of humans poses profound implications for neurology research into the disease.

Notably, the study notes that this isn’t definitive proof that dolphins can get Alzheimer’s, although previous research has also pointed to the possibility. Scientists won’t know for sure unless they are able to test these animals for cognitive deficits. Moreover, this beaching behavior could have resulted from some other factor, including sonar from navy ships.

“These are significant findings that show, for the first time, that the brain pathology in stranded odontocetes [another word for toothed whales and dolphins] is similar to the brains of humans affected by clinical Alzheimer’s disease,” lead researcher, Dr. Mark Dagleish from the University of Glasgow, said in a statement. “While it is tempting at this stage to speculate that the presence of these brain lesions in odontocetes indicates that they may also suffer with the cognitive deficits associated with human Alzheimer’s disease, more research must be done to better understand what is happening to these animals.”

When Dagleish and his colleagues dissected the brains of 22 dolphins that had died and washed up on the shores of Scotland, they found three that had the same proteins and brain scarring that occurs in human Alzheimer’s patients.

Alzheimer’s is a frankly terrifying disease, the exact cause of which is not fully understood. The condition is characterized by overall mental decline, difficulty thinking, concentrating and understanding things, disorientation, forgetfulness, confusion and inability to create new memories. It affects 6 million Americans, sometimes leading to death, yet experts still aren’t sure what causes it or how to best treat it.

A prevailing theory has to do with the buildup of proteins in the brain call beta-amyloids, which play an essential role in the growth and repair of neurons. When too many of these proteins accumulate in the brain, they can clump together, forming amyloid plaques that disrupt communication between neurons. Think of it as the hard plaque that grows on teeth, but instead gunking up the brain.

Though this is the dominant theory of what causes Alzheimer’s, medical science hasn’t been able to develop any drugs that work against amyloid plaques, suggesting that some other mechanism might be at play.

Nonetheless, when Dagleish and his colleagues dissected the brains of 22 dolphins that had died and washed up on the shores of Scotland, they found three that had the same proteins and brain scarring that occurs in human Alzheimer’s patients.

The three dolphin species were the common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncates), white­beaked dolphin (Lagenorhynchus albirostris) and a long-finned pilot whale (Globicephala melas) — which, despite its name, is a species of dolphin. Each of these specimens were older, as evidenced by worn or missing teeth, while the younger dolphins from the sample had no signs of Alzheimer’s.

In the three with amyloid plaques, they also found another hallmark of Alzheimer’s called tau tangles. Tau proteins play an important role in stabilizing neurons, but with age, they can start to clod together, forming tangles that are neurotoxic and can jam themselves into the entire intracellular space of a neuron. This makes communication between neurons very difficult, creating cognitive impairment.

Finding both tau tangles and amyloid plaques in dolphins are strong indicators that these marine mammals can develop Alzheimer’s. But it’s not definitively proven yet. Human and dolphin brains are quite different and there could be other explanations for why these proteins were present in the deceased cetaceans.

Nonetheless, this research has interesting implications for the future of Alzheimer’s research, as well as protecting marine animals. Part of the reason we don’t fully understand Alzheimer’s is because we don’t have very good animal models on which to do experiments, at least not anything close enough to humans. While certain animals may exhibit similar brain damage, it may not translate into the same exact cognitive deficits.

Don’t worry, humans aren’t going to start testing this in living dolphins, as that would most likely be considered unethical. However, since dolphins are much closer to humans in intelligence than rodents, additional research in more dolphins and other marine mammals such as baleen whales, would be helpful for understanding how Alzheimer’s manifests.

The researchers also suggested studying the lives of captive dolphins, such as those at Sea World, which have detailed known life-histories that “might provide greater understanding of the pathogenesis, risk factors and underlying mechanisms of [Alzheimer’s disease],” the authors wrote.

“We were fascinated to see brain changes in aged dolphins similar to those in human ageing and Alzheimer’s disease,” Professor Tara Spires-Jones at the University of Edinburgh said in a statement. “Whether these pathological changes contribute to these animals stranding is an interesting and important question for future work.”

“Untraditional” Hanukkah celebrations are often full of traditions for Jews of color

Hanukkah, the Jewish “festival of lights,” commemorates a story of a miracle, when oil meant to last for one day lasted for eight. Today, Jews light the menorah, a candelabra with eight candles — and one “helper” candle, called a shamas — to remember the Hanukkah oil, which kept the Jerusalem temple’s everlasting lamp burning brightly. Each year, the holiday starts with just the shamas and one of the eight candles and ends, on the last night, with the entire menorah lit up.

But because the reason for the light is oil, Jews also celebrate by eating food cooked in oil. In the United States, most people think of those oil-soaked foods as latkes, or potato pancakes, and jelly doughnuts called sufganiyot. For most American Jews, these are indeed important holiday foods, replete with memories — both of their heavy, greasy deliciousness and of the smells that permeate the house for days after a latke fry.

More specifically, though, these treats are Ashkenazi, referring to Jews whose ancestors came from Eastern Europe. Two-thirds of Jews in the U.S. identify as Ashkenazi, which has strongly shaped American Jewish culture. That Eastern European culture, however, is only one of many Jewish cultures around the world.

In recent years, Jews of color and non-Ashkenazi Jews have been bringing attention to new Hanukkah traditions that celebrate the diversity of Judaism in the U.S. My work as a scholar of gender and Jewish studies often looks at how multicultural families navigate and celebrate the many aspects of their identities.

Many different Jewish stories

Jews of color come from many places. Some people were born into communities that have always been Jewish and have never been considered white: For instance, there are Jewish communities in India, Ethiopia and China. Others are people of color adopted into white Jewish families; adult converts to Judaism; or children of interracial, interfaith marriage.

Many Jews of color have strong ties to Ashkenazi Judaism. Increasingly, though, they are publicly celebrating the range of traditions they bring to the table, making space for more diversity in mainstream Jewish life. There’s been more conversation about the Ethiopian Jewish holiday Sigd, for example, and what role it might play in American Jewish life.

One of my favorite examples is a children’s book called “The Queen of the Hanukkah Dosas,” which features a boy and his little sister, named Sadie. Their dad is Ashkenazi and their mom is Indian or Indian American, as is their live-in grandmother, Amma-amma. In their house, Hanukkah means cooking up a plate of dosas, South Indian crepes sometimes wrapped around a savory filling. The narrator is annoyed by Sadie’s tendency to climb on things, but her climbing skills save the day — and the dinner — when the family is locked out of their house and she can climb in and open the door.

What I especially appreciate about this particular book is that the dosas are not the point of the story. This is a story about an annoying little sister who in the end saves the day, and her family just happens to make dosas as a Hanukkah treat. “The Queen of the Hanukkah Dosas” doesn’t mention whether the Indian side of the family is Jewish, but either way, its message for kids is clear: It can be totally normal to be a half-white, Jewish, half-Indian kid who has dosas for Hanukkah.

“Kosher Soul”

In real life, one of the most influential Jews of color adding distinctive Hanukkah foods to the communal table is Michael Twitty. This acclaimed food historian is author of “The Cooking Gene,” about the social and culinary history of African American food, and “Kosher Soul,” which brings together traditions from these two sides of his identity.

Twitty notes on his blog, Afroculinaria, that “traditionally African Jewish communities — the Beta Yisrael of Ethiopia, the Lemba of Southern Africa and groups in West Africa — did not celebrate Hannukah.” That said, in the spirit of celebrating Jewish food from around the world, he shared the Somali dish sambusa, a flaky deep-fried pastry something like a samosa, that can be filled with meat or vegetables. As with dosas, it is not so much that these foods are traditionally associated with Hanukkah but that they could provide Black Jews with a way to celebrate African and Jewish aspects of their heritage with a food fried in oil.

Twitty is known for his skill at a wide range of cuisines, including a wide range of Jewish food; cuisine cooked by African Americans for themselves and, at times, white employers; and African foods. Drawing on all these traditions, Twitty created a riff on more traditional latkes: Louisiana-style latkes, which include the “holy trinity” of Creole and Cajun cuisine — garlic, green onions and celery in this recipe — plus a bit of cayenne pepper.

Plenty of people improvise their latke recipes: My former synagogue, like many others, had latke cook-offs in which people brought all sorts of innovations, including black bean and sweet potato latkes and latkes flavored like samosa fillings. For Twitty, pulling from Creole flavors allows him to marry his Jewish religion and his African American heritage — and to offer a path for other Black Jews to do likewise.

Full table, full selves

In my new book, “The Racism of People Who Love You,” I think a lot about being brown in white spaces and about the innovations that come from blended identities.

I am not from a historically Jewish Indian community, but my own innovation, as a Jew of color, is this. The last Hanukkah before the pandemic, my mom came out to visit me. She is neither Jewish nor Indian but became an excellent Indian cook during many decades of her marriage. I, however, am not an excellent Indian cook, and whenever I am able to spend time with my mom, I want her to make something called aloo puri, which is a chickpea and potato dish served with crispy, puffy fried bread. I have no idea how to make the bread, and it is a “seeing Mommy” treat.

I invited an Indian colleague who was not going home for winter break to join us for dinner. When I happened to mention this dinner to one of my senior Jewish studies colleagues, he commented that he wanted to have my mom cook an Indian dinner for him, and so, with my mom’s permission, I invited him and his husband to join us, as well.

My mom looked at me. “Puri are fried in oil,” she said, and all of a sudden we had a Hanukkah party, with a menorah lighting and fried food. For me, having my senior colleague there and excited to join us was a moment of realizing I could bring my full self to the table.

If I were the type to make holiday wishes, that is, perhaps, what I would wish for: a place where all Jews of color could bring their full selves to all the tables where they sit.

Samira Mehta, Associate Professor of Women and Gender Studies & Jewish Studies, University of Colorado Boulder

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

How “All I Want for Christmas Is You” made Mariah Carey de facto Queen of Christmas, sans trademark

Where other pop music icons would risk the wrath of a public sick of Christmas commercialism creeping into the spooky season, Mariah Carey sailed right in on Halloween.

An Instagram video shows her dressed like a sexy witch riding a stationary bike looking seriously glamorous but mainly severe, a wicked witch dressed to make Dorothy Gale gag.

Shortly she begins to cackle, shaking the black locks of her wig. Suddenly with a smash cut and a sparkly flash, she’s Yuletide Mariah, a vision in red and white astride a life-sized reindeer plushie. With a gleeful toss of her golden mane, the Songbird Supreme belts out in the most exultant alto soprano, “It’s t-i-i-i-i-i-i-me!”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CkZ0shxqtzt/

In the same way we can count on the arrival of Dec. 25, Mariah Carey, Queen of Christmas, is inevitable. She knows this. Unless your family name is Grinch, to millions of people around the planet, she is synonymous with Christmas, thanks to the recording phenomenon that is “All I Want for Christmas Is You.”

The modern, secular Christmas standard is one of the unlikelier pop music success stories of recent times, starting with the fact that its wildest success didn’t begin until a couple of decades after its 1994 release.

Mariah Carey, Queen of Christmas, is inevitable.

Today Carey’s song might as well be the unofficial shopping anthem of the holiday season, since it sonically decks the halls of retail soundtracks across the country, reigning over such modern holiday classics as Paul McCartney’s 1979 classic “Wonderful Christmastime” or The Waitresses’ spaced-out 1982 jingle “Christmas Wrapping” or Run D.M.C.’s 1987 hip-hop banger “Christmas in Hollis.” 

We associate these songs with the type of ’80s-era neon cheer with which Generation X and older Millennials may identify. But Carey’s song, which she co-wrote with pop music producer Walter Afanasieff, hooks into a broad range of ages and backgrounds for reasons many music experts can explain and others might deduce.

Much of its success can be attributed to the concepts that went into its creation, some of them musical and some of them entirely emotional. Each of these ideas taps into something instinctual that affirms Carey’s artistic skills and her innate knowledge of the weight this time of year has in our culture: its story is an extension of Carey’s personal history, one to which millions of people can relate. Hence her relatively recent popularity as a go-to TV holiday special star, her title being CBS’ “Mariah Carey: Merry Christmas to All!”

Mariah Carey: Merry Christmas To All!Mariah Carey: Merry Christmas To All! (James Devaney/CBS)

That two-hour primetime concert special joins an expanding library of small-screen specials related to Carey’s holiday hit, including the 2017 animated special “All I Want for Christmas Is You,” her 2020 one-off for Apple TV+, “Mariah Carey’s Magical Christmas Special” and its 2021 follow-up “Mariah’s Christmas: The Magic Continues.”  The U.S. Trademark Trial and Appeal Board may have denied her exclusive legal rights to the  Queen of Christmas moniker, but she’s devoted to making sure we don’t forget why people assigned the term to her in the first place.

“I have such an emotional connection to Christmas. And it wasn’t about the gifts. It was just about the hopefulness of the holiday season and just feeling, like, in the spirit, and the need for me to express myself and make a song that made me feel happy at the holidays,” she said in an Amazon Music short movie about the single.

You’d have to read between the lines and know something about Carey’s personal history to recognize those harmonizing strains in the song’s appeal.

Carey’s effort to parlay the song’s late-blossoming success into claiming the unofficial Queen of Christmas title acknowledges another aspect of the holiday season that receives less focus, which is the importance some people place on claiming seasonal cheer in their healing process.

Carey’s most ardent fans – her Lambily, she calls them – know many details about her personal history. Others have only recently begun to learn about Carey’s life as she’s begun to open up in interviews and her 2020 memoir “The Meaning of Mariah Carey.” In conversation with Megan Markle on her “Archetypes” podcast, Carey talks about an itinerant childhood where she had to move with her divorced mother multiple times. “So I had nothing. No money, you know, nothing,” she said.

In the “All I Want for Christmas Is You” short, she mentions unhappy Christmases with a highly dysfunctional family, and is careful to clarify that her mother tried to alleviate some of that sorrow, although sometimes all she could do was wrap up some fruit to put under the tree. When she started celebrating Christmas on her terms, she said, she was determined to ensure hers would never be like that.

Mariah Carey: Merry Christmas To All!Mariah Carey: Merry Christmas To All! (James Devaney/CBS)

Between this and knowing that “Merry Christmas” was produced in the early years of her marriage to the famously controlling Tommy Mottola, viewing “All I Want for Christmas Is You” as an expression of yearning, a pointed shout of joy slicing through an extremely grim time in her life, provides the song with added resonance.

This is also present in Apple TV+’s “Mariah Carey’s Magical Christmas Special,” a mid-pandemic spectacular featuring the singer in an assortment of glittering gowns belting out an array of Christmas standards, joined for some by a small galaxy of stars. Presented as a Christmas story told by elves, one of whom is played by  Billy Eichner, Carey’s mission is to restore the Christmas spirit to a world bereft of it.

“All I Want for Christmas Is You” doesn’t make most people want to throw their whole body through a plate glass window to escape it.

Provided you saw it (and you still can; it remains available on the service) you may have missed a significant moment, the opener, where, in her fantasy Manhattan penthouse, Carey and her two children are joined by a little girl she calls Mimi – the singer’s nickname.

Mimi sadly tells Carey that her family doesn’t even have a Christmas tree. The songstress responds by giving the child the ornament she says is her favorite one. That speaks to a small wish many of us have to comfort our younger selves with the knowledge that life will get better. Carey’s success, particularly as it relates to this song, is an extreme and unlikely version of that.

The main wonder of “All I Want for Christmas Is You” is that it became popular at all. In 2021, the Recording Industry Association of America gave it the Diamond Award in recognition of 10 million sales and streaming units in the United States, the first and only holiday song to achieve that status. It took 25 years for the single to reach the No. 1 spot on Billboard’s Hot 100, becoming only the second time in 60 years for a Christmas song to hit the top spot on the main chart. The first was “The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don’t Be Late),” released in 1958 by David Seville and the Chipmunks.

Unlike that tune, “All I Want for Christmas Is You” doesn’t make most people want to throw their whole body through a plate glass window to escape it. At the very least, it’s tolerable.

As the lead single on Carey’s first holiday album “Merry Christmas,” which was also her fourth studio release, “All I Want for Christmas Is You” was viewed as a risk. Then again, so was the entire album. Carey was reluctant to release a holiday album early in her career, especially at a time in the music industry; generally, holiday albums were thought of as projects musicians release when their careers were winding down.

Not only was “Merry Christmas” defying convention in that respect, but it was also promoting a new song in a season dominated by nostalgia. Without any memory to associate with a new song, its chances of hitting with a wider audience are slim.


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Carey’s holiday contribution might have been relegated to the Island of Misfit Songs if not for its rollicking cover by Olivia Olson in 2003’s “Love, Actually,” a Christmas movie whose popularity expanded throughout the aughts, exposing Carey’s tune to millions of folks who might have otherwise passed it by. Just like that movie found its magic in unexpected romances, highlighted by one destined to be unrequited, “All I Want for Christmas Is You” is a love song to someone who the song’s protagonist hasn’t won yet or may never win.

Another explanation for its perpetual seasonal popularity and its late blossoming is even simpler. Like any beloved Christmas movie or holiday tune, “All I Want for Christmas Is You” is a song that doesn’t belong to any decade or era.

In that music doc Carey and several experts, including super-producer and longtime “American Idol” judge Randy Jackson, point out the song’s 1950s and 1960s girl group homages. She explains she was going for her own version of Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound. That creative swing resulted in a pop song that for most people, spurs spontaneous sing-a-longs and head-bopping from the beginning of November through New Year’s Day nearly three decades after it came into the world.

Back then we may not have fully appreciated the glorious rebuke of sorrow in its sweet bounciness, or even the extensive longing in the line about not wishing for snow, knowing that the singer herself always wishes for a holiday blanketed in white. Surely we do now after living through such a dark time and a succession of anxious Decembers. If all people want is to enjoy this song a few dozen times for a few weeks per year that’s because its creator gets how they’re feeling, and wants us to know it’s to put that bleakness to the side for a little while. Indeed, it’s time. 

“Mariah Carey: Merry Christmas to All!” debuts at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 20 on CBS and streams on Paramount+.

“What were they buying?”: Legal experts sound alarm over Kellyanne’s $1M+ deal while at White House

Conservative judicial activist Leonard Leo apparently helped Kellyanne Conway sell her consulting company while she was promoting his list of Supreme Court candidates as a White House senior adviser.

Newly revealed financial documents reviewed by government ethics and finance experts show Leo, through one of his dark-money groups, helped finance a 2017 transaction between Creative Response Concepts Inc., and Conway’s firm The Polling Company worth between $1 million and $5 million, reported Politico.

“We don’t know if she received fair market value for the company, and that’s an important question,” said Melanie Sloan, a former House Judiciary Committee counsel for Democrats and now a senior adviser to the ethics watchdog American Oversight. “It also seems she was having trouble selling it, and that alone is a gift if you’re buying something nobody else wants to buy. If you’re just absorbing the employees, you could just hire them. So, what were they buying?”

The Polling Company had come under scrutiny from a congressional oversight committee over possible “conflicts of interest,” which put Conway under pressure to sell the firm where she was its most valuable asset, as she was lobbying Trump to nominate one of Leo’s preferred judges to the seat held open by Senate Republicans by blocking Barack Obama nominee Merrick Garland.

“It really shows Kellyanne as a vehicle for Leo, the leading role Leo has played and how Trump became his instrument,” said Bruce Freed, president of the nonpartisan Center for Political Accountability.

A spokesman for Leo declined to comment on the report, but conservative legal expert Ed Whelan downplayed any influence Conway might have had over Trump in the nomination process.

“It seems bizarre to think that any possible lobbying by Kellyanne Conway would have added to the force of that commitment or to the influence that Mitch McConnell and Don McGahn had already wielded,” Whelan said.

Judge strips Alex Jones of bankruptcy protections after he tried to dodge $1.5B Sandy Hook judgment

Houston Judge Christopher M. López reportedly ended a stay preventing Sandy Hook families from collecting a $1.5 billion judgment against conspiracy theorist Alex Jones.

In a ruling on Monday, López granted an order to lift a stay that was automatically put in place when Jones filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protections.

The judge set the order “immediately to (i) allow the Sandy Hook Post-Trial Families’ Cases to continue to proceed to entry of final judgment and (ii) once judgments are entered, to allow appeals, if any, to proceed and the Sandy Hook Post-Trial Families to pursue, respond to and participate in any such appeals without further order of the Court.”

News 12’s John Craven reported that the families of Sandy Hook victims agreed to postpone collection of the massive debt for now.

Kari Lake declares victory — after judge rejects most of her lawsuit challenging election loss

An Arizona judge dismissed most of failed Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake’s lawsuit contesting her defeat to Gov.-elect Katie Hobbs, but the election denier framed the ruling as a win for her campaign. 

“Our Election Case is going to trial,” Lake wrote on Twitter. “Katie Hobbs attempt to have our case thrown out FAILED. She will have to take the stand & testify. Buckle up, America. This is far from over.”

Maricopa County Superior Court Judge Peter Thompson dismissed eight of the 10 claims Lake brought in her lawsuit, asking the judge to either declare her the winner or hold a revote in the county, The Associated Press reported

Among one of the many constitutional claims the judge dismissed included Lake’s allegation that Hobbs, in her capacity as secretary of state, engaged in censorship by flagging social media posts with election misinformation for removal by Twitter.

“This case is also about a secret censorship operation set up by the government that would make Orwell blush,” Lake’s attorney said during Monday’s hearing.

While Thompson took no position on the merits of Lake’s two surviving claims, he allowed a trial to move forward on two other counts, which involved printers malfunctioning on Election Day and ballot chain of custody. 

“Plaintiff must show at trial that the [Election Day] printer malfunctions were intentional, and directed to affect the results of the election, and that such actions did actually affect the outcome,” the judge told Lake’s team.

Lake claimed that there were “hundreds of thousands of illegal ballots” in Maricopa County and printers that malfunctioned were not certified and had “vulnerabilities” that made them “susceptible to hacking.” She also claimed the printer failures were because of “intentional action.” 

In a two-day hearing scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday, Lake will have to prove her claims. The judge will also allow her legal team to present evidence that Maricopa County violated its election manual regarding ballot chain of custody. 

The former news anchor has said that more than 300,000 Maricopa County ballots did not have proper chain of custody paperwork, which resulted in her loss. But the county disputes her claim, arguing that Lake does not understand the various forms of paperwork.


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Since the judge called this claim a dispute of fact, rather than law, Lake will be allowed to present her evidence in court.

“If there’s anything rotten in Arizona, it is what this contest represents,” an attorney for Hobbs said at the hearing. “For the past several years, our democracy and its basic guiding principles have been under sustained assault from candidates who just cannot or will not accept the fact that they lost. The judiciary has served as a bulwark against these efforts to undo our democratic system from within.”

Maricopa County has been ripe for legal challenges during recent election cycles. The threats from right-wing commentators and politicians in the last midterms were so extreme that they forced election workers into hiding

Despite no evidence of voter fraud, Lake’s allies pushed falsehoods and accused county officials of “disenfranchising” voters.

Judges dismissed separate election lawsuits filed by a state senator who contested Hobbs’ gubernatorial win, and another filed by former Republican Arizona secretary of state candidate Mark Finchem, who challenged his Democratic rival’s victory.

When Lake, the Trump-backed candidate, lost to Hobbs by about 17,000 votes, she claimed that “thousands of voters, disproportionately Republican, gave up voting due to the long wait times or simply avoided the polls after seeing the chaos reported.”

Arizona law mandates a strict timeline on election-related lawsuits. Judge Thompson ordered a two-day trial to begin before January 2.

Officials worried that Trump would give “illegal order to use military” to steal election: J6 report

During the House’s final Jan. 6 hearing Monday, the committee found that leading up to the insurrection, Department of Defense officials worried that Donald Trump would impose an ‘illegal order’ on U.S. troops to support his plan to incite a riot, HuffPost reports.

“The select committee recognizes that some at the department had genuine concerns, counseling caution, that President Trump might give an illegal order to use the military in support of his efforts to overturn the election,” the committee stated in the 161-page executive summary of the report.

The committee did not find any evidence that the Dept. of Defense supported Trump’s coup attempt in any way. However, the report says “President Trump had authority and responsibility to direct deployment of the National Guard in the District of Columbia, but never gave any order to deploy the National Guard on January 6th or on any other day.”

The report continues, “Nor did he instruct any federal law enforcement agency to assist. Because the authority to deploy the National Guard had been delegated to the Department of Defense, the secretary of defense could, and ultimately did deploy the Guard.”

Trump has blamed Nancy Pelosi for not calling on troops to immediately intervene.

HuffPost reports that the executive summary of the report also includes an explanation of the committee’s “recommendations of criminal prosecution against Trump and several of his allies on charges that include making false statements, obstructing an official proceeding and seditious conspiracy.”

The committee wrote, “The underlying and fundamental feature of that planning was the effort to get one man, Vice President Mike Pence, to assert and then exercise unprecedented and lawless powers to unilaterally alter the actual election outcome on Jan. 6.”

From cheesy brie bites to gooey jalapeño poppers, “Savory Baking” has a place at your holiday table

I first became familiar with Erin Jeanne McDowell — and her smart, warm form of culinary instruction — when I found my efforts to make a decent homemade pie crust were thwarted yet again. This was several years ago and I had attempted several popular recipes for all-butter pie crusts only to have the results lacking in some way. 

That’s when I stumbled across a video from Food52, where McDowell hosts the series “Bake it Up a Notch,” simply called “How To Make The Best Pie Crust with Erin McDowell.” As soon as she popped into frame (literally, from beneath the kitchen island) I knew I liked her style; she walked viewers through her recipe, step-by-step, emphasizing why it worked. The next day, I purchased her cookbook, “The Book on Pie: Everything You Need to Know to Bake Perfect Pies” and that was that. 

I was transformed from someone who couldn’t make a decent pie crust to save her life to becoming the person entrusted with making pies for holiday meals. So when it was announced that McDowell was publishing a new book on savory baking, I knew that my home cooking was due for another transformation. 

And sure enough, “Savory Baking: Recipes for Breakfast, Dinner, and Everything in Between” has already helped me rethink the possibilities of pastry, pie and bread dough for both savory weeknight meals and holiday entertaining. It’s especially appealing for folks (like me) who don’t necessarily consider themselves star bakers. 

“If you understand what’s going on behind a recipe, and you understand a little bit of what’s making it work, you suddenly can become a lot more flexible and a lot more creative,” McDowell told me during our “Salon Talks” episode. “That’s something that I’m always really trying to share with people. That’s what I love about savory baking, is it’s a lot easier to do that than it is to just completely wing a pie out of nowhere.” 

McDowell spoke with me about the differences between sweet and savory creations, how to weave baking into holiday entertaining — and how she developed the recipe for a very impressive-looking Italian “bundwitch.” Watch it here, or read our conversation below.

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

Readers might know as the pie queen. It was your recipe for pie dough that made me confident enough to try in my own kitchen.

Oh, that’s amazing. Thank you so much. I mean, honestly, one of the things that I think is so funny — Don’t get me wrong, 14 year old me loves being called the queen of anything, that is really an exciting thing for me — but at the same time, my whole thing with pie is really that I want more people to make it, and I feel like so many people are scared of it. So, the biggest compliment someone can give me is that I’ve made them confident enough to make pie. Because really, I just want there to be as much pie in the world as possible. I want there to be 100 pie queens, a million pie queens and kings, all.

There’s a line in your book about savory baking that I was hoping you could expand on. You write, “It combines the pleasure and precision of pastry with the freedom and flexibility of cooking.” What do you mean by that?

For me, the precision of baking really is almost a comfort. I know the people who like to bake share this also. It can be really stressful for people who don’t enjoy that precision part. But for me, what I love about a baking recipe is if it’s well written and everything, you should be able to follow it and you should end up with a result that is similar to what the goal was. That isn’t entirely true for me with cooking. I feel like cooking is such an adventure, where it’s not always about following a recipe, it’s about following your taste buds on all of these things.

Savory baking is this imperfect intersection of the two, where I can still enjoy some of the rules of baking and some of the science behind it. But also there is this freedom and flexibility, and ability to make it your own, and add a pinch of this and a little bit of that, the way you do in cooking. And I find both immensely pleasurable.

For me, where they meet is also a really fun place creatively for bakers. That’s something that I’m always trying to do, is remind people that even though, yes, we need to follow these baking rules, yes, the goal would be to follow the recipe with some precision. If you understand what’s going on behind a recipe, and you understand a little bit of what’s making it work, you suddenly can become a lot more flexible and a lot more creative. That’s what I love about savory baking, is it’s a lot easier to do that than it is to just completely wing a pie out of nowhere. That’s possible too, but it’s kind of its own thing. To be able to tweak some of these savory flavors, that’s a lot more doable.

“Savory baking isn’t just quiche and pizza, which are wonderful, but there’s more to it than that.”

What did the recipe research and development look like for this book, and how did you whittle that down the recipes?

The process of making a book for me is truly — I mean, it’s part of why I do it — I love making books. It is so much fun and such a creative expression from beginning to end. I find the early parts of it very stressful because it’s solitary. The further you get along into the process, the more you’re working with other people. People are testing the recipes, and people are photographing them and tasting them. Then you bring in the editors and then there’s all of these other exciting collaborative parts of it.

The early part, it’s just me sitting in a room deciding what should be in a book. I find that process so incredibly exciting, and also incredibly stressful. Because I really want my books to be well rounded and have a really effortless assortment. Of course, it’s not effortless at all. It’s very well thought out. But, I want there to be an assortment of seasonality and an assortment of difficulty levels. I want there to be some projects for sure, but I also want there to be things that you can make really easy on a weeknight.

There’s lots of questions that I ask myself. Sometimes I start with this board of loose concepts. For example, in this book, I knew that I wanted to really highlight different forms of savory pancakes and crepes, and some things that maybe people don’t inherently think of as savory. So at first, I don’t even have a specific flavor written down. It’s just like, I know there needs to be a crepe in here, and what will that crepe be? And then eventually as it gets filled out, the pieces tend to fit themselves together.

Seasonality and ingredients is something that really guides me a lot. It’s always difficult, this book came out in the fall, and I feel like it even has a fall look to it. But obviously I want there to be things that you keep making into winter, and into spring, and into summer. I want there to be some evergreen nature to it. 

That’s also another way that ideas work themselves out, is being like, “Oh man, I need more vegetables,” or, “I need more of this. I need more of that.” And that was another thing that I really thought about with this book. My last book, “The Book On Pie,” was easy to make gluten free, because as long as I had a good gluten-free dough, many of the fillings are naturally gluten free, so I had this kind of naturally inclusive book.

I had to work a little bit harder to make this one inclusive, and while it won’t make absolutely everyone happy, there’s a ton of vegetarian variations and a ton of easy swaps if something isn’t vegetarian. I really wanted it to resemble something that could appeal to a lot of people that are looking for something savory to bake, and also hopefully inspire people to think outside the box, that savory baking isn’t just quiche and pizza, which are wonderful, but there’s more to it than that.

Speaking of outside the box, a recipe that stopped me in my tracks was the Italian Sub Bundt, which I’m already planning to break out when I go home and see family for the holidays because I think everybody’s going to find it so fun. Could you talk about the development of that recipe in particular?

That is a fun one, because my parents actually test a lot of my recipes with me. It’s been a really special thing they started with my first book, “The Fearless Baker,” and a little less testing on “The Book On Pie,” just because pies can be so finicky. They really worked hard on this book with me as well, and they loved that recipe. And I knew if they loved it, that we had something special on our hands.

I really want to be able to think of baking equipment that you already have, that you enjoy using for sweet purposes, and remind you that just because you enjoy making something sweet doesn’t mean that you can’t also bake a savory pie in that pie pan, or some kind of savory cake in that spring form pan. That one really actually started from the concept of, “How do I use this bundt pan?” And one of the things that I love about a bundt pan is that it provides portion markings for you.

For something like a sandwich, and something where a three-foot long sub actually isn’t really that practical of a party food, because you have to cut it all up and everybody get whatever. But in this case, we can build it in sort of a wedged sandwich situation. I think the filling to bread ratio is spot on, and it’s easy to eat. So for me, that was a really fun example also of reimagining something pretty classic, like a party sub, but trying to take it to a new place.

What are some pantry staples that you would recommend folks who are going to make a real run at savory baking should keep around?

One of the best things that you can do is keep a well stocked spice cabinet because that really comes into play in multiple ways. We can flavor doughs that we might normally think of as sweeter, or even just, they might not actually have any sugar in them, but we might equate them with desserts.

Even a pastry dough, a puff pastry dough, obviously there’s so many savory things we can do with that. By just adding some dried spices to it, we can also add a ton of savory flavor, and those are shelf stable. So some of the ones I use the most in this book, smoked Paprika plays a really big role in this book. I love it for adding a little bit of the depth of a smokey flavor, obviously. One of my brother’s ex-girlfriends accused us of putting paprika on everything. My whole family loves paprika. 

“Don’t make something for the first time when you’re having friends and family over. It’s just too stressful.”

I love that it’s an accusation.

She accused us of putting paprika on just about everything. I also come from the Midwest, and I really love the use of onion and garlic powder to boost allium flavor in something. I think a lot of people sometimes can look down their nose at that a little bit, that it’s not fresh. But there’s a time and a place for fresh onions and garlic. There’s also, I feel like, a time for the dried product. In baking, whenever we can add something that’s dry, we don’t even really have to adjust the recipe at all. Whereas when we’re adding something with moisture, it could actually really change things.

A well-stocked spice cabinet is another great place to go. A few others that I really love that I used in this book, like Vadouvan curry [powder], which is a really oniony mild curry. But also I think I used a lot of jerk seasoning, and a lot of spicy things like cayenne. And I also used a lot of flaky salt, and a lot of coarsely ground black pepper. I think black pepper is under-appreciated as a flavor in and of itself. There’s a lot of black pepper finishes in this book. A spice cabinet would be a great place to start. And when you’re looking for one other thing that’ll up the ante: cheese.

There we go. You’re preaching to the choir at this point, but I completely agree. Speaking of beginners, I found this book very accessible across the board. But let’s say that somebody’s coming in, no experience, and they’re looking for a low-stress way to move their way into savory baking. Is there a particular recipe that you would recommend?

I’m so bad also at picking just one recipe because it’s like picking your favorite child. But I actually designed the book intentionally so that the first two chapters are really the easiest places to start. Anything from chapter one or chapter two is really going to be a great place to get your feet wet, even if you’re a total beginner. But I also found that a lot of really seasoned, experienced home bakers were diving into that chapter too. Because as you mentioned, a lot of those recipes are really easy and accessible. They’re weeknight friendly, and they also have a lot of flexibility to them to make them your own.

It’s not only a great introduction into baking, there’s recipes like the cornbread that don’t even need a mixer. You can just mix it right in a bowl. I love to suggest people make buttermilk biscuits because they usually think that they’re way harder to make than they are. If that seems too scary, there’s also my drop biscuits, which are so simple and easy to make.

I have a section on using different flavored butters to baste and add flavor, so add garlic butter or maple butter to something like a corn muffin or a cornbread. There’s so many options, and I feel like that’s a really good place to start. 

What are some of your favorite weeknight recipes or recipes that you make when you’re feeling busy or stressed?

One of the ones that I love to make because it’s so simple but feels like so much effort and love and care has gone into it when I finally put it on the table, is the weeknight focaccia, which actually has the weeknight in the name. It’s called Weeknight Focaccia because it only takes a few minutes to mix it by hand, and then it sits overnight. So the idea is, you can do that on any weeknight, or on a lazy weekend is also great. But it really takes any meal that I’m making into this… “Wow, and I also made homemade bread,” kind of place.

Some of the other ones that I turn to probably the most are the thick chewy noodles for soup, especially this time of year. I’m battling coming off the back end of a flu, and so I have been eating so much soup, and those thick chewy noodles are so easy to make. They remind me of something my mom made for me growing up. And I think people think of making fresh pasta or fresh noodles as being a very time consuming, intimidating thing. But these are so simple, they don’t even have to be totally the same size. Very rustic, very simple.

“If you understand what’s going on behind a recipe … you suddenly can become a lot more flexible and a lot more creative.”

Another one that I think might surprise people at how weeknight friendly it is, is the Lahmacun, which is in chapter four. This also kind of goes by other names. I’ve heard people kind of refer to it as a Turkish pizza, though it’s kind of far from being a pizza. It’s a very, very thin dough and then you take a spread of ground meat that’s been seasoned right on the top. Because it’s so thin, it only takes a few moments to cook. The recipe makes six. Honestly, it comes together like that, but it’s a very impressive, pretty amazing thing to bring to the table.

I finish it with lemon juice, and parsley or other fresh herbs. Then I love to finish it with pickled chilies also, add a little spice to it. So that’s another one that we make all the time. And even I remember one time I said, “Oh, I’ll make Lahmacun for dinner.” And someone was like, “And you’re going to start that now?” And they couldn’t believe when I was pulling them out of the oven not too long after.

We’re in the holiday season, and in addition to the Italian Sub Bundt, I already identified a couple other recipes that I’m planning on making for family. There’s the smoked salmon breakfast buns and the savory monkey bread. What other recipes do you point to in the book as fun to serve up around the holidays?

One of the best chapters to go to is chapter five, which is the Bites chapter. There are so many little handheld appetizery, snacky sorts of things in there. One thing that I like to encourage people to try to do is make your own crackers. And the spicy cheesy crackers are really delicious and very addictive. It can feel kind of intimidating to make something like that. But again, the yield is really huge. So it’s great for making for gifts. And also, you can cut them into fun shapes this time of year. It’s kind of a fun thing to do. You can pair it with a cheese or charcuterie board where you don’t have to necessarily do any cooking for the rest of that. So it’s a nice thing to do.

I’m also really into a lot of the things that are wrapped in puff pastry, like the Brie bites with pepper jelly, which I just did an episode of “Bake It Up a Notch” on that also, so people can check that out. That recipe is available online as well as in the book. The jalapeño pastry poppers, which is like, if a jalapeño popper was wrapped in puff pastry. They’re really so good. There’s just so many things like that in those chapters that also I feel like hopefully will spark ideas for people. There’s mini quiche and lots of mini bite size things that I think are so fun this time of year. And also things that refresh pretty well so that you can make them ahead and not be necessarily wrapping lots of things in puff pastry while your family is hanging out.

More broadly, how do you approach cooking for groups? Any tips for amateur bakers as they’re getting ready to have family and friends over for the holidays?

One of the biggest pieces of advice, and I feel like everybody says this, but don’t make something for the first time when you’re having friends and family over. It’s just too stressful and it takes away the most enjoyable part of it for me. I love to think about things that can be made ahead when I’m having friends and family over. And what’s so great about savory baking is, so many things can be made ahead, because they’re baked. Unless it really needs to be served warm, like maybe the Monkey bread which is so wonderful to serve warm. A lot of things, even the savory pies, I recommend them cooling completely. Most of the breads, I recommend them cooling completely, though who can resist warm bread? I will not be judging you if you just tear into that bread while it’s warm.

I think that there’s definitely a lot of possibility when you simplify things a little bit, like picking a few things that can be made ahead. In my book, I have these instructions of make ahead and storage, how things can be stored, even how they can be refreshed in some cases. Pairing that, in some cases, with things that do take some of the effort off your plate, like a great cheese plate, or maybe buying the dessert from your favorite bakery, so that you’re not having to bend over and do a million different things.

The real difference between professionals and people at home, is that in restaurants, we’re always prepping one, two, even three days ahead. That is where some of that flavor comes from because we might start marinating something two days before we’re actually going to cook it. When you make yourself a list around the holidays like that, it actually sometimes becomes really obvious. Like, “Oh man, I can do all these things three days ahead. Then I only have these five things I have to do two days ahead.” And it just kind of breaks it out in a really nice way.

 

“Lack of full recollection”: Jan. 6 report calls out Ivanka for not being “forthcoming” in probe

The recently released Executive Summary of the January 6 Committee Report directly accuses Ivanka Trump of not coming forward with all the information that she knows about the events from that day.

In the report, the Committee details the interview with Trump, who continuously said she could not recollect many details and information about the day. If the Department of Justice pursues charges, Trump’s memory about the happenings of Jan. 6 are sure to be tested once again.

Although acknowledging that there was not widespread election fraud, Trump did not offer much more in her testimony, as the report stated she was not ‘forthcoming’ with evidence and information. The report specifically accused Trump with “a lack of full recollection of certain issues.”

The report compares and contrasts Trump’s testimony with more insightful testimonies like Pat Cipollone who served as White House counsel.

“Ivanka Trump was not as forthcoming as Cipollone and others about President Trump’s conduct,” according to the report.

“Sinister and evil”: Trump rages on Truth Social after Jan. 6 committee issues criminal referral

Donald Trump previewed his possible defense against insurrection charges if the Department of Justice follows up on a criminal referral by the House select committee.

The Jan. 6 committee recommended prosecution for Trump and some of his top allies for their attempts to overturn his election loss, but the former president insisted — despite testimony from multiple witnesses to the contrary — he truly believed the 2020 election was fraudulent.

“I see where the Unselect Committee, using the Democrats favorite weapon, DISINFORMATION, is trying to make the case that I didn’t really believe I won the Election,” Trump posted on his Truth Social website. “This is a total LIE. I never thought, for even a moment, that the Presidential Election of 2020 was not Rigged & Stolen, and my conviction became even stronger as time went by.”

“Now, with all of the massive evidence that has come to light, including recently with the FBI suppression of Election changing information, I was 100% RIGHT!” he added.

The ex-president has been pushing misleading claims that Twitter suppressed news reports on Hunter Biden’s laptop under pressure from the FBI, which newly revealed internal documents disprove, and insists those reports would have cost Joe Biden millions of votes.

“The so-called Deep State, often referred to by many other names, including ‘Cheaters, ‘Insurrectionists,’ ‘Communists,’ and yes, even our good old ‘RINOS,’ have been working on sinister and evil ‘plots’ for a long time, even well before I came to office,” Trump posted. “They are long seated Swamp Creatures, and are bad news for the USA. Remember very early on when Obama, Biden, Holder, and Comey were SPYING ON MY CAMPAIGN? I wonder if their handpicked Special ‘Prosecutor,’ Jack Smith, knew what was going on?”

Trump’s trading cards are stupid: Ha ha. But who gets the last laugh?

Fascism and right-wing populism are, by definition, a political con job.

Such movements and their leaders manipulate the emotional vulnerabilities of their followers as a way of amassing political power, financial resources and other forms of influence and control.

In the end, those followers are usually left disappointed, used up by the movement and then cast aside. In the worst such examples, both leaders and followers of such fake populist movements suffer literal destruction. Leaders of these fake populist movements almost always have unlimited contempt for their followers and anyone who is so gullible as to trust them.

In the climax of Elia Kazan’s memorable 1957 film “A Face in the Crowd,” Andy Griffith, in his iconic role as “Lonesome” Rhodes, a folksy down-home populist entertainer who combines elements of Father Coughlin, Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and many other right-wing pop-culture figures, unwittingly tells the truth about how he really feels about his followers:

Those morons out there? Shucks, I could take chicken fertilizer and sell it to them as caviar. I could make them eat dog food and think it was steak. Sure, I got ’em like this… You know what the public’s like? A cage of guinea pigs. Good night, you stupid idiots. Good Night, you miserable slobs. They’re a lot of trained seals. I toss them a dead fish and they’ll flap their flippers.

As others have observed, Donald Trump is a more dangerous real-life version of Lonesome Rhodes. (Griffith’s character is deeply cynical and amoral, but not actively malicious.) Indeed, Trump is an almost ideal-typical example of the cult leader and confidence man: He is an apparent narcissist and sociopath, profoundly Machiavellian and with no moral core or fundamental decency.

The confidence man (or woman) is by definition a practical expert in human psychology. In a widely read 2019 interview with psychologist Maria Konnikova at the Harvard Gazette, she explained this:

Every single con, no matter what the con is, has the same backbone. You have to tell a story. Con artists, at the end of the day, are confident storytellers. They’re the best storytellers in the world, the good ones. They tell us the stories that we want to hear, not the stories that are true. But we believe them because it’s what we already think is true and the way that we already see the world.

Not a single human being sees the world objectively. We have all sorts of self-serving biases. Con artists understand what yours are, they’re able to figure that out, and then that’s what they use in order to sell you their con. And because it’s a story,  it gets you emotionally engaged. The moment you’re emotional, you’re no longer logical, you’re no longer rational. And the moment the con artist is able to engage you emotionally, the con artist has won because you’re already roped in, you’re already part of the story and it’s going to be really hard for you, if not impossible, to disengage. So: Storytelling to engage emotion, to create a link, to create rapport. That’s the way all cons, with different variations on that theme, will operate to ultimately sell you your vision of the world that you already believe in.

The reason that cons are successful has nothing to do with intelligence, nothing to do with integrity, nothing to do with anything other than a very basic human tendency to hope and to be optimistic and to think that tomorrow is going to be better than today was. Con artists prey on hope. So it’s great that con artists exist because that means we’re still hoping and we’re still willing to believe. The moment con artists stop existing is the moment humanity dies.

Konnikova’s insights provide an important guide to understanding the dark charisma of Donald Trump and his control over his followers. Those most vulnerable to the con usually have unmet emotional needs: They are lonely and yearn for family and community, they are overly trusting and naive, they are struggling financially or facing mental or physical illness, they are undergoing a crisis of identity and meaning, or they are experiencing some other existential or personal crisis. Other victims of the con artist, of course, are simply greedy and too ready to believe that a simple act of trickery or opportunism will make them wealthy and successful. 

What is Trump’s latest con? Last Thursday, in what he billed as a “major announcement,” the ex-president told his followers that he was selling a series of “limited edition” NFTs, or “digital trading cards,” that can supposedly be sold on cryptocurrency markets. These cards feature poorly-executed cartoon images of Trump in heroic or ultra-masculine garb — as a wrestler or boxer, a fighter pilot, a superhero, an Old West sheriff and various other fantasy depictions. His angle here is twofold: an appeal to greed and the desire by Trump’s followers to gain approval from (and potential access) to their cult leader. Writing at The Young Turks, Matthew Sheffield explains the sourcing and quality of these images, which he suggests “appear to be assembled randomly and automatically by a computer program from a pre-defined collection of backgrounds, costumes, and heads”:

“These cards feature some of the really incredible artwork pertaining to my life and career, it’s been very exciting,” Trump said in the video, also noting that only a limited number of the virtual cards would be released. He also offered several sweepstakes incentives to people who purchased, including a dinner and a chance to speak to him on the Zoom video conference service.

Several of the paper doll-style images used in the cards appear to be barely modified copies of widely available photos seen on clothing retailer and stock photo websites.

One image of the ex-president wearing a formal tuxedo appears to have been constructed from an oversized Trump head superimposed onto a body of a model featured on the website of the clothing retailer Men’s Wearhouse.

Another image depicting Trump as a cowboy sheriff seems to be based almost entirely on a photo of a model wearing duster-style jacket made by Scully Leather that is currently available for sale at Walmart and Amazon.

A third Trump NFT showing an imaginary scene of the ex-president as a fighter pilot standing on a globe appears to be derived from an image offered for sale by the stock photo company Shutterstock. On Twitter, several users discovered that the some of the NFTs were using background images that were freely available.

How did professional pundits and many among the public respond to Trump’s NFT auction and “major announcement”? With the usual mockery and laughter, calling Trump a “joke” and a “loser” and suggesting this latest scam offers further proof that he’s a has-been who is “desperate for attention.” That attitude was widely shared across the political spectrum from former Trump adviser and coup plotter Steve Bannon to President Biden. 


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As I have demonstrated throughout the Age of Trump and beyond, such reactive mockery and defensive contempt may feel good in the moment but ignores the most obvious fact: Trump and his movement remain be an existential threat to American democracy, and Trump still has tens of millions of loyal followers who love to give him money.

On Thursday Trump continued to threaten his critics with censorship or other forms of punishment if he manages to return to power in 2025. In an essay at the Mary Sue, Julia Glassman issues a warning:

Now that we’re all done (or not) laughing over Trump’s collection of NFT trading cards, let’s turn to a second announcement he made on Thursday: a deeply concerning promise to “shatter the left-wing censorship regime and to reclaim the right to free speech for all Americans.”

In a six-minute video posted to Truth Social and shared with The New York Post, Trump engaged in conspiracy theories about a secret group of shadowy figures stifling conservative posts on social media.

“In recent weeks, bombshell reports have confirmed that a sinister group of deep-state bureaucrats, Silicon Valley tyrants, left-wing activists, and depraved corporate news media have been conspiring to manipulate and silence the American people,” Trump said in the video….

While Trump’s trading cards reveal what a clown he is, his second announcement is a sharp reminder that he’s only the visible face of a thriving white nationalism movement in the United States.

Trump’s NFTs reportedly sold immediately, netting his operation almost $4.5 million. Those who continue to mock Trump and his movement have failed to understand, even after seven years of this, that they are not his target audience.

In fact, Donald Trump and the MAGAverse generally thrive on the mockery and disdain of “elites” and those they deem not to be “real Americans” — that only fuels their collective sense that they have been oppressed, disenfranchised and robbed of their true birthright.

It may be indeed be true that Trump’s popularity is on the decline, at least for the moment. But he remains the actual and symbolic leader of the Republican Party, the larger neofascist movement and the global white right. His millions of followers have cumulatively given him hundreds of millions of dollars, and at least some of them are willing to actively participate in or support acts of political violence and terrorism.

Donald Trump knows his public. The secret to his power is his ability to mine their bottomless rage and resentment towards a society they feel has passed them by and rendered them obsolete. Trump himself may be fading, although we cannot take that for granted. But the angry white Americans (and a not-insignificant number of Black and brown people too) eager for a demagogue who gives them permission to be their worst possible selves, and who promises easy solutions to complex problems, are not going away. 

Mockery and liberal schadenfreude toward the “rubes” who bought Trump’s scam trading cards may partly be fueled by wonder and envy at his enduring power over his followers. It will do nothing to address the cultural force of American neofascism, which is certain to outlast Donald Trump and his con games.

“She gladly takes our $$$”: MTG and Lauren Boebert get into “high school drama” over Kevin McCarthy

Far-right Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., exchanged barbs this week over their differences on House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s, R-Calif., speaker bid.

After extracting various concessions, Greene has been one of McCarthy’s biggest defenders against a push from other far-right lawmakers to torpedo his speaker bid or extract even more concessions. Unlike Greene, Boebert has been noncommittal on McCarthy’s ascension unless there is an “accountability mechanism” to easily remove him from the job.

Boebert took a shot at Greene at the Turning Point USA conference in Phoenix on Monday while discussing her differences with the Georgia Republican.

“I’ve been aligned with Marjorie and accused of believing a lot of the things that she believes in,” Boebert said. “I don’t believe in [McCarthy as speaker], just as I don’t believe in Russian space lasers, Jewish space lasers and all of this,” she added, referring to a conspiracy theory shared by Greene linking wildfires to a fictional space laser controlled by the Rothschilds, a wealthy Jewish family at the heart of many antisemitic conspiracy theories.

Greene fired back on Twitter, accusing Boebert of stoking “high school drama.”

“I’ve supported and donated to Lauren Boebert. President Trump has supported and donated to Lauren Boebert. Kevin McCarthy has supported and donated to Lauren Boebert. She just barely came through by 500 votes,” Greene wrote, referring to Boebert’s narrow re-election victory.

“She gladly takes our $$$ but when she’s been asked: Lauren refuses to endorse President Trump, she refuses to support Kevin McCarthy, and she childishly threw me under the bus for a cheap sound bite,” Greene added.

Boebert in the wake of her narrow win declined to endorse former President Donald Trump’s 2024 White House bid last month, saying that while she remains a “huge supporter” she also “loves” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.


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Greene and Boebert have frequently been linked, especially after they teamed up to heckle President Joe Biden during his first State of the Union address.

But their feud has been simmering for months. Politico reported in April that Boebert and Greene “tangled” over the Georgia Republican’s February appearance at an event hosted by white nationalist Nick Fuentes during a House Freedom Caucus meeting in March.

“Their confrontation grew so heated that at least one onlooker feared the Greene-Boebert back-and-forth might escalate beyond the verbal cage match had another board member not stepped in to de-escalate,” the outlet reported at the time.

Other far-right Republicans have also joked about Greene’s conspiracy theory. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., had been allied with Greene before splitting over his opposition to McCarthy’s speaker bid.

“Whatever Kevin has promised Marjorie Taylor Greene, I guarantee you this at the first opportunity, he will zap her faster than you can say Jewish space laser,” Gaetz said during an interview last month.

During an appearance at the Turning Point USA event on Monday, Gaetz again highlighted that they do not “see the same on” McCarthy’s bid.

Greene shared the video on Twitter and pushed back on the criticism.

“The Dems want the corrupt DOJ to prosecute Trump, the special counsel is weaponized, the FBI colluded w/ Twitter to silence Americans & Hunter’s laptop, the border is over run, and McCarthy is ready to take on these issues,” she wrote. “The country won’t wait for the cherry blossoms to bloom.”

Greene in an interview with former Trump lawyer Jenna Ellis denied that she had to make compromises to support McCarthy.

“First of all, let me say I haven’t compromised anything. Nothing has changed about me, and I had no deals I had to make to support Kevin McCarthy,” Greene said. “I’m a realist. And so I make my decision based on what’s actually realistic, not what we wish or fantasize can happen in Congress.”

“Trap-neuter-release” programs for feral cats may do more harm than good, experts say

Ever since cats were first domesticated by human beings, human society has been permeated by feral cats — namely, domesticated cats that do not have owners and avoid human contact. While domesticated cats love humans and enjoy our company, feral cats are defined by how they behave more like wild animals.

In the twentieth century, with the rise of the idea of the welfare state, feral cats were recognized as less of a nuisance and more of a public health menace. As with other invasive species — they kill native wildlife and spread diseases — humans have struggled to find compassionate ways of reducing their population. One popular approach is known as trap-neuter-release (TNR) or catch-and-release, in which feral cats are captured, rendered unable to reproduce, and then sent back out on their way.

This approach has become a mainstay of many policymakers, although non-governmental organizations often perform the “service,” as it were. And though trap-neuter-release programs have become normalized, and might seem like a comparatively harmless way of controlling feral cat populations, experts say the practice is actually quite cruel.

How could that be? After all, the feral cats remain alive and roaming, while the population of future feral cats goes down. Yet by keeping feral cats in environments where they don’t occur naturally, humans are unknowingly preserving an invasive species in the ecosystem — one that effectively kills many other animals in the environment, thus upsetting the balance of nature.

In other words, the practice of catch-and-release fails to “remove an invasive predator from the landscape so they are still able to predate and harass native species and spread diseases and disease vectors for which they were not vaccinated for,” explained Stephen M. Vantassel, owner of Wildlife Control Consultant, LLC and author of “The Practical Guide to the Control of Feral Cats.”

Vantassel said that catch-and-release also creates future problems. “TNR creates cats that will be harder to capture the second time if there is a need to capture them such as revaccination and/or other issues,” he noted. “Trapped cats that have negative experiences are more difficult to capture thereby raising the cost of control.”

“It doesn’t matter whether a cat enjoys human company or not—all cats are domesticated and incapable of surviving on their own for long.”

In an email to Salon, Vantassel also dismissed the notion that the practice is somehow humane.

“They suffer fights, disease, injuries, and earlier death,” Vantassel added, noting that while he does not align with People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals on all issues, he agrees with them on their opposition to feral cats.

Ingrid Newkirk, the president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), concurred in Vantassel’s assessment about TNR programs.


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“Trapping, neutering, and re-abandoning (TNR) cats outdoors leaves them to suffer and die painfully and does not reduce the homeless-cat population,” Newkirk wrote to Salon. “It doesn’t matter whether a cat enjoys human company or not—all cats are domesticated and incapable of surviving on their own for long. They depend on humans for everything—including food, water, veterinary care, shelter, and protection—and suffer badly when they don’t have these necessities.”

There are a number of ways in which feral cats suffer by not having human companions. Their life expectancies are much shorter as they are left vulnerable to diseases, parasites, freezing weather, lack of food, hostility from other animals, being hit by cars and other threats to their survival. Even worse, the popularity of TNR reinforces the mistaken belief among many cat owners that it is okay to abandon their pets because they will do just fine.

“It makes the public believe—wrongly—that cats can survive on the streets and that someone else will take care of them if they’re abandoned on the side of a road or behind a business,” Newkirk explained. Not only is this untrue for the cats, but it is also untrue for the other wildlife in their area.

“Even if they’re fed and sterilized, cats retain their instinct to hunt. They are not native wildlife—they are an invasive species. They terrorize, maim, and kill animals who don’t stand a chance against them.”

“Leaving cats outdoors also spells suffering and death for billions of birds and other vulnerable species,” Newkirk pointed out. “Even if they’re fed and sterilized, cats retain their instinct to hunt. They are not native wildlife—they are an invasive species. They terrorize, maim, and kill animals who don’t stand a chance against them. No one who claims to care about animals can ignore the carnage they’re unleashing on other species by dumping cats outdoors.”

The underlying issue, as Vantassel pointed out, is that policymakers and NGOs involved in trap-neuter-release programs are using an approach that is the worst of both worlds between simply killing feral cats and letting them run rampant.

It makes sense that society would be reluctant to kill feral cats, but there is no reliable evidence that TNR makes any kind of serious dent in the problems caused by their existence. If the public wants to get rid of the feral cat problem, however, they need to be realistic about what will work.

“Trap and kill or trap and adopt,” Vantassel suggested when asked about alternatives to TNR that could work. He added that advocates should suggest legislation “that prohibits the feeding, care, or translocation of cats and empowers wildlife control operators and pest control operators the ability to remove cats captured in the environment.” He noted that in some communities people who feed feral cats are held responsible for them “thus the liability for injuries caused by the cat flow to the feeder. This helps stop this behavior.”

He proposed prohibiting free-range cats or using the resources currently spent on TNR for something more productive.

“Use the time and money to help homeless and disabled veterans,” Vantassel added. “Amazing how people have money for an invasive species but not for suffering people.”

Newkirk pointed out that, while advocates of TNR believe that not killing feral cats automatically makes them more humane, this is simply not the case.

“This magical thinking considers any ‘life’ at all — even if it is short, is full of suffering, and ends miserably — preferable to a painless and dignified end by euthanasia,” Newkirk argued. “Animal shelters, which should be safe havens that work to get animals off the streets, are increasingly complicit in cat abandonment by advising people who find strays (even newborn kittens) to leave them on the streets, rather than bringing them to the shelter.” This is cruel rather than kind, Newkirk argued.

The playful beauty — and overarching sadness — in Pattie Boyd’s life in pictures

Pattie Boyd’s 2007 biography “Wonderful Tonight: George Harrison, Eric Clapton, and Me” was an international bestseller—and deservedly so. The book afforded readers with a deep dive into Boyd’s traumatic childhood, her storied place as a 1960s It Girl, and her marriages to two of rock’s preeminent guitarists. Heck, “Wonderful Tonight” was worth the price of admission alone for her sobering conclusion that “Eric and I were playmates, but George and I were soulmates.”

As it turns out, Boyd’s latest work “Pattie Boyd: My Life in Pictures” (Reel Art Press, out now) was the book that you always wanted. As a central figure among the 1960s-era Youthquake and a reigning member of rock royalty, Boyd’s life and times were documented in thousands of photographs — many of which were originally published in the leading fashion magazines of the day. A lush anthology that celebrates her experiences in vivid Technicolor, “Pattie Boyd: My Life in Pictures” chronicles the model’s unique vantage point during the ’60s zeitgeist.

The publication hits its finest notes as it traces her unlikely rise among London’s hotly competitive modeling set. The images in Boyd’s book deftly explain her success within such a fickle, often cutthroat world. Picture after picture plots Boyd’s ascendance, wide-eyed and playful, as she transformed from working as a shampoo girl at Elizabeth Arden’s salon to assuming her place as the UK’s latest star.


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With her carefree penchant for fun, Boyd epitomized the age. Fashion maven Mary Quant famously opined that 1960s women should endeavor “to look like Pattie Boyd rather than Marlene Dietrich. Their aim is to look childishly young, naïvely unsophisticated, and it takes more sophistication to work out that look than those early would-be sophisticates ever dreamed of.”

As the images progress from fashion shoots into photographs of Boyd with Harrison at the height of Beatlemania, Boyd’s book takes a powerful turn. Landing a Beatle left a lasting imprint upon the model, thrusting her into an even more privileged spotlight, where her carefully concealed sophistication and street smarts served her well during the roller-coaster years associated with her marriages to Harrison and Clapton.

“Pattie Boyd: My Life in Pictures” provides readers with a feast of images, to be sure, but the book takes on a special poignance when it comes to her longstanding association with the Quiet Beatle. Even after her marriage to Clapton, Harrison’s shadow never really exited her life. There’s the image of the makeshift stage where former Beatles Harrison, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr reunited to perform at Pattie and Eric’s wedding. And then there’s the heart-wrenching final photograph of Harrison and Boyd in the year before his untimely death at age 58.

For all of the beauty and radiance that typify the photos in “Pattie Boyd: My Life in Pictures,” there’s an overarching sadness that pervades her story and casts a pall over its manifold images. Whether it pertains to her ill-fated marriages or the passage of time that inescapably impacts us all, Boyd’s book tenderly taps into our own nostalgia about what might have been—not only in Boyd’s life, but our own.

What Germany’s coal miners can teach America about medical debt

PÜTTLINGEN, Germany — Almost every day, Dr. Eckart Rolshoven sees the long shadow of coal mining in his clinic near the big brownstone church that dominates this small town in Germany’s Saarland.

The region’s last-operating coal shaft, just a few miles away, closed a decade ago, ending centuries of mining in the Saarland, a mostly rural state tucked between the Rhine River and the French border. But the mines left a difficult legacy, as they have in coal regions in the United States, including West Virginia.

Many of Rolshoven’s patients battle lung diseases and chronic pain from years of work underground. “We had an industry with a lot of illnesses,” said Rolshoven, a genial primary care physician who at 71 is nearing the end of a long career.

The Saarland’s residents are sicker than elsewhere in Germany. And like West Virginia, the region faces economic hurdles. For decades, German politicians, business leaders, and unions have labored to adjust to the mining industry’s slow demise.

But this is a healthier place than West Virginia in many respects. The region’s residents are less likely to die prematurely, data shows. And on average, they live four years longer than West Virginians.

There is another important difference between this former coal territory and its Appalachian counterpart: West Virginia’s economic struggles have been compounded by medical debt, a burden that affects about 100 million people in the U.S. — in no state more than West Virginia.

In the Saarland, medical debt is practically nonexistent. It’s so rare in Germany that the federal government’s statistical office doesn’t even track it.

The reason isn’t government health care. Germany, like the U.S., has a largely private health care system that relies on private doctors and private insurers. Like Americans, many Germans enroll in a health plan through work, splitting the cost with their employer.

But Germany has long done something the U.S. does not: It strictly limits how much patients have to pay out of their own pockets for a trip to the doctor, the hospital or the pharmacy.

Rolshoven’s patients pay nothing when they see him. That not only bolsters their health, he said. It helps maintain what Rolshoven called social peace. “It’s really important not to have to worry about these problems,” he said.

German health officials, business leaders and economists say the access to affordable health care has also helped the Saarland get back on its feet economically, bolstered by the assurance that workers could get to the doctor.

“Without this, the Saarland would be dead,” said Beatrice Zeiger, managing director of the Arbeitskammer des Saarlandes, a regional labor group. “It’s unthinkable.”

Exploding Out-of-Pocket Costs

In West Virginia, whose wooded valleys and decaying industrial plants could be mistaken for the Saarland’s, access to health coverage has been important as the state weathered the decline of its mines.

A decade ago, state leaders moved to expand the Medicaid insurance program through the Affordable Care Act. And as of last year, just 6% of state residents were uninsured, less than half the rate before the 2010 law.

But growing numbers of West Virginians without government insurance are in private health plans with deductibles that require they pay thousands of dollars out of their own pockets before coverage kicks in.

The typical individual health plan an American gets through work now comes with a more than $1,500 deductible, a particularly big sum in a state like West Virginia where residents often earn less than residents of other states.

That, in turn, is driving medical debt. A quarter of West Virginians with a credit report have medical bills in collections, almost twice the national rate, according to data compiled by the nonprofit Urban Institute. In several counties in the state, the rate is about a third.

And those figures likely understate the problem. Many more people put medical bills on their credit cards, borrow from family or enroll in installment plans with a hospital or other providers to pay off their bills.

“It’s a huge problem here,” said Jessica Ice, executive director of West Virginians for Affordable Health Care. “Folks with medical debt aren’t able to apply for loans to start a business or buy a starter home for their family. It’s really preventing people from climbing up the economic ladder.”

In German health plans, known as sickness funds, there aren’t typically deductibles.

Physician visits are almost always free for patients. Copays for most prescription drugs are capped at 10 euros or less, about $10. And people admitted to the hospital pay only 10 euros a day.

“Access to medical care with minimal costs for patients has been essential,” said Armin Beck, regional director of the Knappschaft Bahn See, of KBS, a health insurance plan whose roots stretch back to the 13th century, when miners set up a mutual aid society to protect one another in case of injuries or accidents. “This has been a foundation of our community,” Beck said.

‘So Glad We Don’t Have to Worry’

Along the Saar River in Germany, rusting steelworks and shuttered coal-fired power plants bear testament to the region’s economic struggles. Many towns like Püttlingen carry on in the shadow of hulking mounds of debris — Berghalde, as they are called — the detritus left behind as coal was separated from the rocky earth hauled up from underground.

Today, new challenges confront the region. Ford, which has operated a car factory here for decades, plans to shutter the plant in a few years and move production to Spain.

But at Rolshoven’s clinic — a small set of offices tucked into a residential neighborhood — few patients can conceive of the burdens that medical bills put on Americans.

Andrea Fecht, 63, who has diabetes and came to see Rolshoven because recent tests revealed a concerning rise in her blood sugar, estimated she pays 120 euros a year, or about $125, to fill all six of her prescriptions, including her daily insulin.

In the U.S., the average price for insulin alone is nine times that in Germany, according to a recent report from Rand Corp., a research group.

Andreas Mang, a former miner who left the industry 20 years ago after a series of accidents, would likely pay even more out-of-pocket for his family’s drugs. Mang’s wife recently underwent a course of chemotherapy that would cost thousands of dollars if not for Germany’s limits on medical bills, Rolshoven said.

“I can’t imagine what it would be like not to have this support,” Mang said.

Christine Wagner said she’s had a glimpse of what Americans face. Wagner’s 18-year-old son, Jonas, has Down syndrome and has required more than 20 surgeries.

In global Facebook groups with other parents who have children with disabilities, Wagner said she’s amazed to see how much fundraising American parents do to pay family medical bills. “I’m so glad we don’t have to worry about that,” she said. “We have enough to do looking after Jonas.”

American Exceptionalism

International surveys underscore the difference Wagner observed between her experiences and those of American families.

In one recent study of health care in 11 high-income countries, the nonprofit Commonwealth Fund found that 44% of Americans had out-of-pocket medical expenses that topped $1,000 in the previous year. Just 16% of Germans reported paying that much. The rates were even lower in France, at 10%, and Great Britain, where only 7% reported similar medical expenses.

U.S. patients were also more than twice as likely as patients in any of the 10 other countries studied to say they had serious problems paying medical bills.

“Many Americans may not understand how affordable health care is for patients in other countries,” said Reginald D. Williams II, who oversees international research at the Commonwealth Fund. “Medical debt is a largely U.S. phenomenon. It just doesn’t happen in other countries.”

Most wealthy countries in Western Europe, East Asia and elsewhere limit patients’ out-of-pocket costs.

In the Netherlands, where patients enroll in private health plans as they do in Germany, insurers typically cover all medical expenses after patients pay a standard deductible of 385 euros, or about $400. Physician visits are fully covered.

In Great Britain, where medical care that is “free at the point of service” has been a foundation of that country’s government-run National Health Service for almost 75 years, there are rarely any doctor or hospital bills. 

When the government asked Britons who’d gone into debt about the causes, just 2% cited paying for medical treatment. A similar share attributed their debt to gambling or another habit.

In the U.S., 41% of adults currently have debt from medical or dental bills, according to a KFF poll.

An Economic Backstop

Germany’s strict limits on medical bills have periodically stoked concerns about patients overusing the health system.

But when health plans tried implementing a copay of 10 euros for physician visits, it was quickly rolled back amid criticism from patients and frustration among doctors, who didn’t like chasing after their patients for bills.

At the hospital in Püttlingen, which is operated by the Knappschaft, Dr. Marion Bolte said asking patients to pay more isn’t worth the risk, even if it might bring in more money.

“It’s better to have 20 unnecessary visits than to have one patient get harmed because they didn’t come to the hospital because they were worried about how much it would cost,” said Bolte, the chief medical officer. “We don’t want patients to worry about money. We want them to worry about getting better.”

Nationally, German patients are less likely than Americans to die from conditions that can be treated with good access to medical care, such as heart attacks, diabetes, pneumonia and some cancers, according to regional data compiled by the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Germans are also less likely than Americans to say they had to wait to see a doctor, surveys show.

Lower-cost health care that protects workers from going into debt has meant fewer concerns for the Saarland’s policymakers, as well. “All that our predecessors had to worry about was creating jobs,” said Oliver Groll, a senior official at IHK Saarland, the regional chamber of commerce. “Health care took care of itself.”

As mining jobs disappeared, the Saarland shifted toward other industries, such as auto manufacturing, which has been a major employer since Ford opened its factory in 1970, sparking the development of a robust auto parts sector. The chamber and other business leaders are now working to lure technology and pharmaceutical jobs to the region.

For Mang, the former miner whose wife had cancer, knowing that medical bills wouldn’t drive him into debt helped give him the peace of mind to switch careers. “I never had to think about how much health care would cost me,” said Mang, who is now a nurse.

Maintaining this system has required that Germany do something else that U.S. policymakers have historically eschewed. Germany, like most wealthy nations, regulates the prices that hospitals, doctors and drugmakers can charge. This regulation occurs through a highly structured system in which insurers negotiate collectively with physician and hospital groups to set prices.

American hospitals and other medical providers for decades have fiercely resisted limits on their prices, spending millions to fight government regulation.

Price regulation can put more financial pressure on providers, who, unlike their American counterparts, can’t just demand higher prices from insurers to bolster their bottom lines.

Mario Schüller, the hospital administrator who runs the Knappschaft hospital in Püttlingen, said hospitals must instead compete to attract patients with better care and better customer service. Those that can’t compete may close, he said.

But Schüller said he wouldn’t want to charge patients more, even if he could.

“If I had to bill patients and then try to collect from them, I’d have to pay for all that,” he said. “We’d need new staff, who would have to get paid. And if we used collections companies, they’d have to be paid, too. It becomes a devil’s bargain.”

About This Project

“Diagnosis: Debt” is a reporting partnership between KHN and NPR exploring the scale, impact, and causes of medical debt in America.

The series draws on the “KFF Health Care Debt Survey,” a poll designed and analyzed by public opinion researchers at KFF in collaboration with KHN journalists and editors. The survey was conducted Feb. 25 through March 20, 2022, online and via telephone, in English and Spanish, among a nationally representative sample of 2,375 U.S. adults, including 1,292 adults with current health care debt and 382 adults who had health care debt in the past five years. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage points for the full sample and 3 percentage points for those with current debt. For results based on subgroups, the margin of sampling error may be higher.

Additional research was conducted by the Urban Institute, which analyzed credit bureau and other demographic data on poverty, race, and health status to explore where medical debt is concentrated in the U.S. and what factors are associated with high debt levels.

The JPMorgan Chase Institute analyzed records from a sampling of Chase credit card holders to look at how customers’ balances may be affected by major medical expenses.

Reporters from KHN and NPR also conducted hundreds of interviews with patients across the country; spoke with physicians, health industry leaders, consumer advocates, debt lawyers, and researchers; and reviewed scores of studies and surveys about medical debt.


KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

Subscribe to KHN’s free Morning Briefing.

Mass shootings reopen the debate over whether crime scene photos prompt change or trauma

McCLELLANVILLE, S.C. — John Lites was one of the first police officers to respond to a 911 call from Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, on June 17, 2015, when a white gunman murdered nine Black people attending a Bible study.

Lites arrived at the scene only minutes after the first emergency call was placed. He held one of the victim’s hands as the man died. Lites then stood guard inside the fellowship hall all night — remaining even through a bomb threat — to prevent people who didn’t need to be there from entering the room.

“I didn’t want anyone else to see it,” Lites said. “I was totally traumatized.”

Crime scenes are inherently disturbing. A few weeks after the mass shooting in Charleston, Lites found himself in the clutches of post-traumatic stress and unable to sleep. The scene inside the church was imprinted on his memory.

“The worst thing you can possibly think of — it’s worse than that,” said Lites, who retired from the police force in 2018. “No one else needs to see that.”

A question that continues to be debated publicly — and is raised in the wake of each new mass shooting — is whether the publication of violent images, including those depicting gunshot wounds or police brutality, might be effective in preventing future carnage.

Advocates for publishing the images argue that if the public were forced to reckon with the gruesomeness of the deaths, people would respond by demanding that lawmakers enact meaningful reform. The advocates cite historical examples of photos that moved people to action or prompted changes in law or public opinion.

After the brutal death of Emmett Till — a teenager from Chicago who in 1955 was tortured and killed in Mississippi by a group of white men — photos of his mangled body appeared in Jet magazine. Scholars credit those images with galvanizing a generation of civil rights activists.

In 1972, a 9-year-old child named Kim Phuc Phan Thi became known as the “Napalm Girl” after an image of her — distressed, naked, and fleeing a bombed village in Vietnam — was published by The Associated Press. The image won a Pulitzer Prize, turned public opinion against the conflict, and arguably became the most famous photograph depicting the atrocities of the Vietnam War.

“We must face this violence head-on,” Phan Thi wrote in a guest essay for The New York Times this year. “The first step is to look at it.”

In June, former Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson wrote a similar piece, arguing that such images “do more than speak a thousand words.”

“Some actually reveal to us what no words can adequately convey,” he wrote.

But there are those, like Lites, who argue that publishing photos of violence runs the risk of retraumatizing survivors, families who lost loved ones, and the public. They say that disseminating graphic photos for mass consumption is disrespectful to the dead and that there is no guarantee pictures from Colorado Springs, Colorado; Uvalde, Texas; Buffalo, New York; Parkland, Florida; Las Vegas; and the hundreds of other sites of mass murders would do anything to prevent future attacks or prompt lawmakers to action.

Moreover, they argue, there is no way to control how the images are used once they are released online. The opponents of publishing them fear the photos could amount to “trauma porn,” a grisly term used to describe a perverse fascination with tragedy or misfortune.

“The way I see it is America doesn’t get to ask me for one more damn thing,” said Nelba Márquez-Greene, a family therapist whose 6-year-old daughter, Ana Grace, was killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, on Dec. 14, 2012.

After the mass shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, in May, Márquez-Greene wrote a guest essay in The New York Times in which she expressed opposition to the demands placed on families to seek the release of crime scene photos.

Márquez-Greene told KHN that calls to release photos of Ana Grace inside the elementary school began on the same day she was murdered. “It’s just so voyeuristic and gross; like, we’re literally empowering the masses to make this demand,” she said.

Concerns about how images might be used are rooted in history, said Mari Crabtree, an associate professor of African American studies at the College of Charleston.

More than 100 years ago, she said, photos of lynchings across the South were shared to advance very different agendas. The images were sometimes co-opted by racists to “celebrate Black death,” she said. But they were also used by civil rights groups — like the nascent NAACP — to raise awareness about the atrocities of the Jim Crow era.

In the early 1900s, the NAACP published and republished violent photos to push federal lawmakers to create anti-lynching legislation, Crabtree said. But it took Congress more than 100 years to pass the Emmett Till Antilynching Act, in March 2022. The amount of time it took to make lynching a federal hate crime casts doubt on the ability of such images to expedite reform, she said.

For her forthcoming book, “My Soul Is a Witness: The Traumatic Afterlife of Lynching,” Crabtree decided against including a depiction of lynching on the cover. “Lynching was about dehumanizing Black people into objects of white wrath,” she said. “I didn’t want it to be reinforcing that.”

She also wanted to avoid inflicting trauma on anyone who came across her book — if, for example, it was placed on a coffee table. Consuming images of Black death in such a casual way can be very disturbing, she said.

Images of violence can also cause mental harm, particularly for people who have post-traumatic stress disorder, said Nicole Sciarrino, a psychologist for the Department of Veterans Affairs and an expert in PTSD. Images, videos, and sounds can be “triggering” and exacerbate symptoms, she said. They can also be catalysts that cause someone to ask for help, she added.

Images alone don’t cause PTSD, psychologists said. But there is debate about whether watching violence unfold online — such as a live feed of a mass shooting on social media — can inflict a post-traumatic stress response, Sciarrino said.

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders excludes exposure to trauma via electronic media, TV, or video games from the criteria for a PTSD diagnosis. But some psychologists think that should change, Sciarrino said. Their perspective emerged after 9/11, when millions of people watched the World Trade Center towers in New York City collapse on live TV. Photographs taken in Lower Manhattan that day continue to be controversial.

Repeated exposure to graphic images online could desensitize people to violence, said Erika Felix, an associate professor of clinical psychology at the University of California-Santa Barbara. Mass shootings are so frequent that humans often employ a coping mechanism that Felix calls “emotional dampening,” a term used to describe the tendency to emotionally tune out.

“Sometimes, scary images do make change,” she said. “Sometimes, these things do change public discourse. I don’t negate that.” But, Felix said, there’s also a risk the photos could do more harm than good: “That’s a fairly big risk in my opinion.”

John Lites retired from police work nearly four years ago, after a hip injury, and then moved with his wife to McClellanville, a rural town on the northern edge of Charleston County.

He takes medication for PTSD but rarely talks about the night of the church shooting.

A few years ago, he attended a training in Columbia, South Carolina, where he met officers from Connecticut, who spoke about their experiences inside Sandy Hook Elementary. Lites recognized himself in their stories. “It helped me move on, which I had not been able to do,” he said.

He is disappointed that the 2015 church shooting wasn’t the country’s final mass casualty event. Lites now views mass shootings in America as a symptom of a much larger mental health crisis.

“We’re not doing anything to solve it,” he said. “What does publishing those photos do to get us there?”


KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

Subscribe to KHN’s free Morning Briefing.