Biden rebukes Trump after social media post


Biden rebukes Trump after social media post – CBS News

Watch CBS News


President Biden criticized former President Trump after the presumptive 2024 GOP nominee shared a social media post showing Mr. Biden restrained in the back of a pickup truck. Skyler Henry reports.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Source link

LSU coach Kim Mulkey responds to Washington Post profile saying she hasn’t read it



Kim Mulkey, the legendary Louisiana State University women’s basketball coach, said twice Saturday she hadn’t yet read The Washington Post’s profile on her everlasting athletic career.

“Are you really surprised by the timing of it?” she rhetorically asked a reporter ahead of the Tigers’ Sweet Sixteen appearance against UCLA, which LSU won 78-69, paving their way to the Elite Eight and a possible second straight national title.

The highly anticipated article by reporter Kent Babb was published hours before the game.

“I haven’t read it,” Mulkey said of the article, adding that she doesn’t “know that I will read it” and that it will be left up to her attorneys whether she does.

Mulkey lashed out at the Post at a news conference on March 23.

She said the reporter, whom she did not name, had been trying for two years to get her to sit for an interview for the piece, and then contacted LSU on March 19 “as we were getting ready for the first-round game of this tournament with more than a dozen questions, demanding a response by Thursday, right before we’re scheduled to tip off.”

She called the deadline “ridiculous” and said she “could not possibly meet it.”

“It was just an attempt to prevent me from commenting and an attempt to distract us from this tournament. It ain’t going to work, buddy,” Mulkey continued.

She threatened to “sue the Washington Post if they publish a false story about me.”

“Not many people are in a position to hold these kind of journalists accountable, but I am, and I’ll do it,” Mulkey said during the news conference.

The article, published a week after those comments as LSU cruises through the women’s March Madness bracket, delves into Mulkey’s history as both a basketball player and coach.

It touches on personal stories about her family and upbringing — including her strained relationship with her father and sister — details her legendary career as a player at Louisiana Tech and lays out her history with some of her former players, including Brittney Griner, Kelli Griffin and Emily Neimann, who have questioned whether Mulkey supported their sexuality.

The story paints a picture of a highly skilled player, who won two national championships while at Louisiana Tech and an Olympic gold medal for Team USA in 1984, and a complex and driven coach who has had many highs — including four national titles, three while she led the Baylor Lady Bears.

She has also been mired in controversy, the article lays out, with one former teammate of Mulkey’s saying she wished Mulkey had made more of a statement in support of Griner while she was detained in a Russian prison, save for one comment on a radio show.

Speaking Saturday at a post-game conference following LSU’s win, Mulkey again said she hadn’t read the Post’s article and acted surprised to learn it was published just hours before her team hit the court.

“Imagine that. Must have thought y’all would look at it, right, get some clicks or be a distraction. I haven’t read it and I probably won’t read it. I probably will have my attorneys communicate with me to see if there’s anything there that we need to be concerned about,” Mulkey told reporters.

Asked for comment about the Post article, a representative for LSU pointed NBC News to Mulkey’s postgame conference.

LSU plays the Iowa Hawkeyes on Monday for a spot in the Final Four.





Source link

Tim Burchett faces defamation suit over Chiefs parade shooter post



A Kansas man is suing Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., over social media posts that falsely identified him as an undocumented immigrant and one of the shooters in the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade that turned deadly last month.

The lawsuit, filed by attorneys for Denton Loudermill Jr. in federal court in Kansas City, Kan., alleges that Loudermill sustained damages in excess of $75,000 as a result of a “false representation” of him appearing on the Tennessee Republican’s personal X account.

“At no time was Plaintiff an ‘alien,’ an ‘illegal alien,’ nor a ‘shooter’ and the assertions to the contrary were false and were circulated widely among Defendant’s followers,” the lawsuit states.

Burchett in February posted an image of Loudermill on X, identifying him as “one of the Kansas City Chiefs victory parade shooters” and “an illegal Alien.”

According to the lawsuit, that post was live on Feb. 15 and reposted more than 21,000 times and had 7.2 million views by the morning of Feb. 18. Burchett then removed the post, indicating in a new one that he had misidentified Loudermill as an undocumented immigrant, while still suggesting that Loudermill was “one of the shooters.”

Citing Loudermill’s mental distress and death threats he has received following the posts, the lawsuit seeks a trial by jury and damages for spreading falsehoods under a Kansas privacy law.

A spokesperson for Burchett did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday night.

An attorney for Loudermill declined to comment when asked whether they were seeking a specific dollar amount in damages.

Federal courts require cases seeking damages between people in different states, such as this one, to exceed $75,000. Loudermill is a resident of Olathe, Kan., according to the lawsuit.

According to the lawsuit, Loudermill had attended the Chiefs’ victory parade in Kansas City on Feb. 14 and was photographed by bystanders in handcuffs after he got caught in the fray as police began closing off the area after gunshots were fired. Although he was released and not cited or charged with a crime, the lawsuit states, his image began circulating on social media, eventually landing on Burchett’s page.

Two men identified by prosecutors as Dominic M. Miller of Kansas City and Lyndell Mays of Raytown were charged last month with second-degree murder, armed criminal action, and unlawful use of a weapon in the shooting last month that killed one woman and injured more than 20 others. A third person, Terry J. Young, was charged in connection with the shooting on Friday. No pleas have been entered yet.

Three juveniles as of Thursday afternoon faced charges in family court, according to prosecutors.

Burchett is among the Republicans who have targeted immigration ahead of this year’s election, with former President Donald Trump making claims of a migrant-driven crime wave in the United States that is not backed by evidence.

Burchett represents Tennessee’s 2nd Congressional District, which includes Knoxville. He took office in January 2019 after an eight-year stint as Knox County mayor and working as a state legislator. He is seeking re-election this year after winning in 2022 with 67.9% of the vote.





Source link

Putin to meet with security officials on extra measures post attack


Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday plans to discuss additional measures with his security officials following the terrorist attack near Moscow that left 137 dead, the Interfax agency reported, citing Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

The meeting will also address the question of how victims and their families can be supported, Peskov said.

The Kremlin spokesman refused to comment on the numerous reports about the alleged torture of four detained suspects by Russian security forces.

In response to a journalist who pointed to the men’s clearly visible injuries in the courtroom and to videos of torture, Peskov merely said: “I will leave this question unanswered.”

He did not address the background to the attack on the Crocus City Hall concert hall on Friday, but referred to information from the Russian law enforcement authorities.

The Islamic State terrorist militia has claimed responsibility several times for the attack, a claim Western security authorities and experts consider credible.

Putin and other Russian representatives stated without providing any evidence that Ukraine was allegedly involved in the crime. The Ukrainian leadership has adamantly denied any responsibility for the attack.



Source link

Weary of rebuilding, residents of German valley feel flat post floods


Tim Himmes is gradually rebuilding his parents’ house in Schuld an der Ahr, after the deadly flooding that hit parts of western Germany in the summer of 2021.

“It’s like living on a building site. You never finish,” says Himmes, 23, indicating concrete slabs he is planning to use to pave the path to the house.

Next he will turn his attentions to the barn. He’s also getting ready to lay the electricity cables underground.

He and his family ran a fairground, before the catastrophe. Right now, they focus on repairs, like so many in the region.

Around 9,000 houses were wrecked in the floods, which caused the Ahr River to rise 6 metres. Parts of Belgium and the Netherlands were also badly affected by the high waters.

The Himmes family is still waiting hopefully for a fibre optic connection. “They promised us that a long time ago, about a year after the flood,” he says, laughing.

Much remains to be done, even two and a half years after the disaster, which claimed at least 135 lives in the Ahr valley, to the south of Bonn, and 49 more elsewhere in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

But many are exhausted.

The effects of the devastating floods on people’s mental health are “massive and long-term,” says Sabine Maur, President of the State Chamber of Psychotherapists.

Many residents of the Ahr Valley are burdened “by the long duration of the reconstruction, the ongoing construction sites, the protracted disputes with authorities and insurance companies, the ongoing financial and family worries,” she says.

“Nothing can be done quickly and unbureaucratically here. That was the case three or four weeks after the flood, when nobody was around,” says hotelier and restaurateur Wolfgang Ewerts. “I feel as exhausted as an old cleaning rag. I’ve never been so flat,” says Ewerts, an entrepreneur who has rebuilt his home and business in Insul since the flood. He is still investing.

“The booking situation is good,” he reports with many of the guests asking, “Did you also have flooding here?”

When he hears that, he shows them the screen above the reception area, which runs photos in a continuous loop.

They show how masses of water devastated his inn and beer garden on the river that fateful July when the Ahr burst its banks, sending water gushing through the streets.

Muddy brown waters rose relentlessly through people’s houses. People and their furniture were swept far from their homes. Cars were washed down cobbled roads and flipped into the river.

Bridges were torn away, and the bridge in Insul is still missing, says Ewerts. “But a lot is already back, many ruins are gone and much is more beautiful than before.”

That varies, though and little has changed on the central square on the Ahr in Schuld. The piles of stones and huge wooden cable drums suggest that progress is likely soon though.

Builders are working on new houses or restoring older ones in the village. But there are also buildings filled with silt that were gutted after the flooding but left ever since.

These days, post-traumatic stress disorders have become more rare but the number of people suffering from depressive illnesses and addictions is rising, says psychotherapist Maur.

Some people seek help but often wind up having to wait far too long for a place in therapy, she says. Many also “perhaps initially thought they could cope on their own or were unsure about therapy.”

Gerd Gasper has been back in his completely renovated house in Altenburg since late autumn 2022. Builders are just finishing up the courtyard and everything should be ready in a few weeks.

Other people are also slowly returning to the Altenahr district, but the 82-year-old says what is missing are young people. “And everyone is busy with themselves.”

Houses are still being demolished in the village, so what you see are tiny houses that function as temporary accommodation – and construction cranes.

Gasper is not complaining – he has been pitching in, ever since the disaster. “I lost heart at times,” he concedes. But now he is confident again and is caring for his wife, now wheelchair bound, likely due to the rescue operation involving a helicopter winch the afternoon after the flood.

That day, Gasper was in the attic. After hours spent in distress, the water rising, he found a brightly-coloured Carnival scarf and waved it to a pilot to draw attention to himself and his wife through the window. “The water stopped three steps short of the attic.”

This January’s constant rain on the Ahr and the images of flooding in northern and eastern Germany did not frighten Gasper and hotelier Ewerts, both of whom have lived in the idyllic Ahr Valley for decades.

“The Ahr kept itself in check,” says Gasper. The floods in the north are bad for those affected, but very different, says Ewers. “It comes slowly and goes slowly.”

On the Ahr, that summer, the floods were sudden and came with enormous force.

What upsets Ewerts is that some municipalities are no longer allowed to set up carnival tents on the Ahr as they used to because it is in the flood zone. “If there’s another flood like that here, nobody will be sitting in a tent.”

Himmes says after watching the images of flooding elsewhere in Germany, his family packed up the essentials and fixed trailers to the cars to be ready to flee just in case. “So that we could get away quickly.”

The muddy and smelly masses of water not only flooded the family’s house and yard in the summer of 2021, but also took the fairground’s cars and rides with them. “If that happens again, we’ll all be gone.”

Two and a half years after western Germany was hit by disastrous flash floods, claiming the lives of some 200 people, residents are exhausted. Reconstruction is progressing slowly and many are feeling the long-term effects of having lived through the catastrophe. Boris Roessler/dpa

Two and a half years after western Germany was hit by disastrous flash floods, claiming the lives of some 200 people, residents are exhausted. Reconstruction is progressing slowly and many are feeling the long-term effects of having lived through the catastrophe. Boris Roessler/dpa

Showman Tim Himmes stands in front of his house in the Ahr Valley, which was badly damaged by the flood in 2021. The event has also left deep scars on people's psyches. Boris Roessler/dpa

Showman Tim Himmes stands in front of his house in the Ahr Valley, which was badly damaged by the flood in 2021. The event has also left deep scars on people’s psyches. Boris Roessler/dpa

Restaurateur Wolfgang Ewerts stands in the now renovated dining room of his inn. He often shows people images of the extent of the destruction up and down the region. Boris Roessler/dpa

Restaurateur Wolfgang Ewerts stands in the now renovated dining room of his inn. He often shows people images of the extent of the destruction up and down the region. Boris Roessler/dpa

In 2021, floodwaters swept through the Ahr Valley, killing many. Two and a half years later, many, like Tim Himmes, are weary with the rebuilding process. Boris Roessler/dpa

In 2021, floodwaters swept through the Ahr Valley, killing many. Two and a half years later, many, like Tim Himmes, are weary with the rebuilding process. Boris Roessler/dpa



Source link

Deadline looms for Trump to post $450M+ bond as AG James threatens to seize his assets


IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

  • Home sales up nationwide even as prices rise and mortgage rates remain high

    01:34

  • A modern-day woolly mammoth may be just a few years away, biotech company says

    02:49

  • Mom fights off daughter’s would-be kidnapper down 4 flights of stairs

    01:42

  • Fire breaks out on Carnival cruise and 2 crew members killed aboard Holland America ship

    01:41

  • Death toll climbs as Russia holds day of mourning for terror attack victims

    01:33

  • Now Playing

    Deadline looms for Trump to post $450M+ bond as AG James threatens to seize his assets

    02:03

  • UP NEXT

    Spring snowfall blankets parts of the country

    02:02

  • Homeowners face off against illegal squatters across the country

    02:25

  • National Guard soldier surprised at graduation by special message from deployed son

    03:07

  • Princess Kate’s diagnosis reflects growing number of cancer cases among young people

    02:00

  • Family recalls fatal crash of bus carrying Texas preschool students

    01:51

  • MLB opens investigation into illegal gambling allegations involving Ohtani interpreter

    01:42

  • Severe weather pummels the East Coast on the first weekend of spring

    02:02

  • Death toll rises and new details emerge from Moscow concert hall terror attack

    01:57

  • Princess of Wales announces cancer diagnosis

    03:26

  • Police struggle to regain control of Haiti’s capital

    01:39

  • Public library launches ‘March Meow’ness’

    01:28

  • House passes $1.2 trillion spending bill but Senate must still act

    00:52

  • Body of Missouri college student found in Nashville

    01:27

  • As bond deadline approaches, Trump claims to have $500 million in cash

    01:30

The deadline for former President Donald Trump to post more than $450 million in an appeal bond is Monday. Trump’s lawyers filed a motion telling the court he does not have the funds. New York Attorney General Letitia James said she will ask the court to seize his assets if he does not pay. NBC News’ Vaughn Hillyard reports.



Source link

Trump faces Monday deadline to post $464 million bond or face seizure of assets


Trump faces Monday deadline to post $464 million bond or face seizure of assets – CBS News

Watch CBS News


Former President Donald Trump faces a Monday deadline to post a $464 million bond or face seizure of his assets. New York Attorney General Letitia James could use a marshal or sheriff to begin freezing Trump’s bank accounts and taking Trump’s properties, Robert Costa reports.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Source link

Antarctica’s ‘Penguin Post Office’ is hiring for one of most unique jobs on the planet


If penguin-counting and sorting postcards addressed to penguins at the world’s southernmost post office sounds exciting, Port Lockroy in Antarctica may have the perfect job for you.

The UK Antarctic Heritage Trust, which owns and operates Port Lockroy in Antarctica, is hiring a team of five for its 2024/2025 season, which starts in late October or early November and lasts through March 2025.

“From counting penguins to sorting mail at the world’s southernmost post office, working at Port Lockroy in Antarctica is a job like no other!” the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust said in a post on Instagram.

ANTARCTIC’S EXTREME WEATHER DRAWING MORE CRUISE SHIP EXPEDITIONS

The base camp.

The base camp.

The application deadline just passed for the base leader, shop manager and three general assistants.  Once selected, the team will undergo extensive training in the UK in August and September.

Job duties include sorting some 80,000 postcards sent by cruise ship passengers to the penguins on Antarctica. About 18,000 people cruise to Antarctica in the Southern Hemisphere’s summer months.

You have to be OK with the “stench of guano,” also known as penguin poop.

LOW SEA ICE IN ANTARCTICA CAUSING ‘CATASTROPHIC BREEDING FAILURE’ OF PENGUINS, STUDY FINDS

Penguins outnumber people in Port Lockroy.

Penguins outnumber people in Port Lockroy.

Applicants had to be at least 18 years old, and while there’s no age limit, “applicants must be physically fit.” And all applicants had to be living in and able to legally work in the United Kingdom.

“There is a lot of physical work at Port Lockroy and all team members are expected to contribute equally,” the trust says on its website.

Chores include carrying 5-gallon cans of water, lifting and carrying 33-pound boxes, digging “a LOT of snow every day,” carving out steps in the snow and ice, so visitors can safely land, and unloading boats on slippery rocks.

ANTARCTICA’S ‘DOOMSDAY GLACIER’ IS MELTING AWAY DIFFERENTLY THAN SCIENTISTS FIRST THOUGHT

“While candidates do not need to be athletes, they do need to be strong and resilient to undertake these tasks daily for several months,” the trust says.

Temperatures in the summer months vary between 23 and 50 degrees. Most days will be just a few degrees above freezing, but overcast days and wind chill will make it feel colder.

The work will involve spending many hours outside or inside the base with no insulation or heating. Warm clothing will be provided, but the work will be very physical, so you will want to pack your thermals and other layers to keep warm.

JOURNEY TO THE BOTTOM OF THE EARTH: COUPLE TOURS ANTARCTICA’S FROZEN WILDERNESS

The base leader during the 2023 season.

The base leader during the 2023 season.

The UK Antarctic Heritage Trust’s flagship historic site was established in 1944 and operated as a British research station until it closed and retired in 1962. In 1996, Port Lockroy was restored as a living museum. Since then, it has operated during the Austral summer as a visitor site welcoming those who travel to Antarctica on expedition vessels and yachts.

It’s also worth noting that there is no running water on the island. Water is collected in jerry cans from visiting ships, which will also offer showers every few days.

7 THINGS YOU PROBABLY DIDN’T KNOW ABOUT PENGUINS

Very remote working conditions.

Very remote working conditions.

However, you might expect to go up to two weeks without visitors or a shower when conditions are poor.

There also is no flushing toilet at Port Lockroy. A basic camping toilet will need to be emptied daily.

Living quarters are a purpose-built Nissen hut that keeps with the aesthetics of the other historic buildings on the island. Staff will share one bedroom with access to a living area, a separate boot room and a washroom.

HOW TO WATCH FOX WEATHER

The kitchen in Bransfield House.

The kitchen in Bransfield House.

There is a cooker and heater in the main kitchen and living area, both of which are powered by propane gas.

Cooking duties are shared by using propane gas. Food is shipped from the UK and consists of a wide variety of dried and tinned items, occasionally supplemented by fresh food donated from visiting ships.

Original article source: Antarctica’s ‘Penguin Post Office’ is hiring for one of most unique jobs on the planet





Source link

8/6: The Book Report by Washington Post critic Ron Charles


8/6: The Book Report by Washington Post critic Ron Charles – CBS News

Watch CBS News


The “Sunday Morning” book reviewer offers his picks from this month’s new fiction and nonfiction titles, including the latest novel by Richard Russo, “Somebody’s Fool”; and a new biography of President James Garfield, who was assassinated in 1881.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Source link

The Book Report: Washington Post critic Ron Charles (August 6)


By Washington Post book critic Ron Charles

Here are four titles that might help keep you cool this summer.


somebodys-fool-cover-1500.jpg

Knopf


Pulitzer Prize-winner Richard Russo is back with “Somebody’s Fool” (Knopf), his third, thoroughly charming novel about the folks in North Bath, New York.

But this time, the struggling town is finished – about to be swallowed up by its wealthier neighbors. In these final days, retiring police chief Douglas Raymer has got to solve a mysterious death, and Peter Sullivan has got to figure out if there’s still time to be a good dad. His own father, the famous Sully, may be dead, but he’s still hovering over this whole town, reassuring everybody that it’s never too late for a second chance.

Read an excerpt

“Somebody’s Fool” by Richard Russo (Knopf), in Hardcover, Large Print Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org


my-name-is-iris-cover.jpg

Simon & Schuster


The Mexican-American woman in Brando Skyhorse’s new novel, “My Name is Iris” (Simon & Schuster, a division of Paramount Global), is determined to follow all the rules, fit in and live the American dream.

But soon after buying a house, an enormous wall starts growing out of the ground in her front yard. In this dystopian social satire, Iris realizes that she’ll never be quite white enough for a country obsessed with stigmatizing and excluding immigrants.

Read an excerpt

“My Name Is Iris” by Brando Skyhorse (Avid Reader Press/Simon & Schuster), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org

brandoskyhorse.com


after-the-funeral-cover-knopf.jpg

Knopf


If you’re on vacation, maybe you want a book that’s easy to dip in and out of. One of my favorite British novelists, Tessa Hadley, has just published a collection of short stories called “After the Funeral” (Knopf).

These pieces catch family members in ordinary moments, but the real action always takes place far beneath the surface with observations that Hadley draws with exquisite skill.

Read an excerpt

“After the Funeral and Other Stories” by Tessa Hadley (Knopf), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org


president-garfield-cover-1500.jpg

Simon & Schuster


After fighting in the Civil War as a Union general and serving almost 20 years in the House of Representatives, James Garfield became president of the United States in 1881. But just four months later, he was shot by an assassin, and after lingering for weeks, the president succumbed to his wounds.

In his sweeping new biography, “President Garfield: From Radical to Unifier” (Simon & Schuster, a division of Paramount Global), C.W. Goodyear moves beyond the tragic tale of Garfield’s assassination and illuminates the whole life of this remarkable man and his surprisingly consequential influence on the United States.

Read an excerpt

“President Garfield: From Radical to Unifier” by C.W. Goodyear (Simon & Schuster), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org

cwgoodyearbooks.com


For more suggestions on what to read, contact your librarian or local bookseller. 

That’s it for the Book Report. I’m Ron Charles. Until next time, read on!

     
For more info: 

      
For more reading recommendations, check out these previous Book Report features from Ron Charles: 

     
Produced by Robin Sanders and Roman Feeser.



Source link