U.S. Marine gets 12 years for cross-border drug smuggling
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:15:57 GMT
SAN DIEGO (AP) — A former Marine who for years helped smuggle drugs from Mexico into the United States and even tried to get a song written to glorify his exploits was sentenced Friday to 12 years in federal prison.Roberto Salazar II, 26, of San Diego was sentenced for importing fentanyl and for conspiracy to distribute heroin, methamphetamine, cocaine and fentanyl, according to a statement from the U.S. attorney’s office.Salazar, who pleaded guilty last October, could have faced up to life in prison.He was stationed at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in San Diego. Prosecutors said that before joining the corps and while on active duty, he and couriers he recruited made dozens of smuggling trips across the border.Salazar would obtain cars that were driven to Mexico, where drugs were loaded into the engine compartments. Couriers would then drive them back across the border into the U.S., prosecutors said.The scheme began around 2015, authorities said.By the time of his arrest ...Haaland defends Willow, says US won’t end oil drilling
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:15:57 GMT
BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Interior Secretary Deb Haaland defended her department’s approval of the contentious Willow oil project on Friday, saying that despite President Joe Biden’s campaign promise to end new drilling on federal lands, “We’re not going to turn the faucet off and say we’re not drilling anymore.”Speaking to the annual conference of the Society of Environmental Journalists, Haaland said the Biden administration is “following the science and the law when it comes to everything we do, and that includes gas and oil” leases considered by her agency, which oversees U.S. public lands and waters. Despite Biden’s pledge, “We’re not going to say we’re not going to use gas and oil. That’s not reality,” Haaland said. “So we are doing the best we absolutely can.”Haaland’s comments came after the administration faced sharp criticism from some of its strongest supporters — especially young climate ...Texas man indicted for alleged threat to kill US Rep. Waters
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:15:57 GMT
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A federal grand jury indicted a Houston man Friday for allegedly calling the office of California Democratic U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters several times last year and leaving threatening voice mails, including saying he intended to “cut your throat.”Brian Michael Gaherty, 60, was charged in the indictment with four counts of making threats in interstate communications and four counts of threatening a U.S. official, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles said in a statement.Gaherty was arrested April 13 after prosecutors filed a criminal complaint alleging that he had threatened Waters, other elected officials and a news reporter in Houston.The indictment says Gaherty called the congresswoman’s office four times — twice in August and twice in November — and each time left a threatening message. Prosecutors said that in one, he told the congresswoman he intended to “cut your throat.”The indictment alleged Gaherty “knowingly threatened to assault and kill” Waters ...Tennessee Legislature wraps up; gun reform reconvene likely
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:15:57 GMT
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Tennessee’s Republican-led Legislature finished its annual session on Friday without taking action on a gun-control plan offered by the GOP governor in the wake of a deadly school shooting.House Speaker Cameron Sexton said he expects the governor will reconvene lawmakers for a gun policy-related special session. It’s unclear when or what kind of changes would be considered.“I think we owe it to Tennesseans to actually have conversations with all sides of the public conversation before we ever get to proposed legislation,” Sexton said at a committee meeting Friday.Republican lawmakers instead squared their focus on putting final touches on bills that range from restrictions on Nashville’s local powers, to an expansion of school vouchers, to more laws targeting the transgender community. They did not bring up a vote on Gov. Bill Lee’s “temporary mental health order of protection” proposal, which aims to keep guns away from people who could harm themselves...Tribes seek invitation to Rio Grande water commission
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:15:57 GMT
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A commission that oversees how the Rio Grande is managed and shared among three Western states has adopted a recommendation that could set the stage for more involvement by Native American tribes that depend on the river. The Rio Grande Compact Commission voted unanimously Friday during its annual meeting in Santa Fe to direct its legal and engineering advisers to look into developing protocols for formal discussions with six pueblos that border the river in central New Mexico. Pueblo leaders have been seeking a seat at the table for years, saying their water rights have never been quantified despite an agreement made nearly a century ago between the U.S. Interior Department and an irrigation district to provide for irrigation and flood control for pueblo lands.Isleta Pueblo Gov. Max Zuni told the commission that progress has been made over the last year after the Interior Department established a federal team to assess the feasibility of settling the pueblo...Review finds no misconduct at Missouri trans youth clinic
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:15:57 GMT
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — A Missouri university said Friday that an internal review has found allegations of improper care at a center for young transgender patients were “unsubstantiated,” after a former employee made claims of poor treatment — leading the state’s attorney general to investigate.The former employee in February claimed Washington University Transgender Center is too quick to prescribe puberty blockers and hormones, does not do enough to educate parents and children before providing care, does not track negative side effects, and does not have adequate wraparound services for mental health care.Washington University’s eight-week review found “allegations of substandard care causing adverse outcomes for patients at the Center are unsubstantiated,” according to a summary of the findings. The former staffer’s allegations prompted Republican Attorney General Andrew Bailey, who was appointed in January and is running for election, to launch an investigation into the cent...CBC keeps accounts ‘on pause’ amid review after Twitter axes ‘government-funded’ tag
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:15:57 GMT
The CBC is leaving its Twitter accounts inactive as it evaluates the social media platform’s decision to remove the “government-funded media” tag on its accounts.CBC spokesperson Leon Mar says the public broadcaster is “reviewing this latest development” and will leave its Twitter accounts “on pause” before taking any next steps.Twitter removed the “government-funded media” description on a number of public broadcasters’ accounts, including the CBC, without any explanation on Thursday.The move came after the Global Task Force for public media called on Twitter earlier in the day to correct its description of public broadcasters in Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Korea.Twitter has labelled other news outlets as “government-funded media”The group chaired by CBC president Catherine Tait had said Twitter applied the label without warning to the accounts of CBC/Radio-Canada; the Australian Broadcasting Corpo...Union, feds sign deal to staff military heating plants after shutdowns during strike
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:15:57 GMT
OTTAWA — The federal government reached a deal with striking workers on Friday to keep the central heating plants at military bases running after three were taken off-line.The Union of National Defence Employees is part of the Public Service Alliance of Canada, and its members have been on strike since Wednesday.National president June Winger said the government failed to consider heating and wastewater plant workers as essential during the strike, leading to a shortage of staff.“The employer is obligated to determine what the essential services are to maintain the safety for Canadians, and they failed miserably in this regard,” she said in an interview. “I’m gobsmacked.”Winger said central heating plants at bases in Petawawa, Ont., Winnipeg and Halifax were forced to shut down. There was concern the heating plant at Royal Military College in Kingston, Ont., and the wastewater treatment plant in Winnipeg may also stop running.Winger said the union and e...Boy dies, twin brother in critical after being found unconscious in L.A. pool
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:15:57 GMT
LOS ANGELES (KTLA) — A four-year-old boy died and his twin brother was in critical condition Friday after they were found unresponsive in a backyard pool at their home in Los Angeles' Porter Ranch neighborhood, authorities said.Dispatchers received a call from the home on Des Moines Avenue around 10:30 a.m. and immediately provided CPR “guidance,” according to the Los Angeles Fire Department. Vehicle owner fatally stabs would-be catalytic converter thief in South El Monte: Sheriff’s Department Firefighters and paramedics arrived a short time later and continued life support and transported the twins and their parents to a regional pediatric trauma center."Our paramedics worked feverishly to provide every chance possible for these children," L.A. Fire Capt. Eric Scott said at a news conference Friday afternoon. "Tragically, one of those boys was pronounced dead at the hospital."The twin four-year-olds were found unresponsive in the backyard pool at their Porter Ranch home. April 21...Timberwolves’ playoff crowds building a reputation for being loud
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:15:57 GMT
Kyle Anderson didn’t want to say he was “surprised,” but that is kind of what he inferred. Anderson was a member of the Grizzlies when Memphis visited Target Center for three playoff games during the 2022 Western Conference first round.Those crowds — with their intensity and deafening volumes — made an imprint in the forward’s memory.“Just off experience of playing against Minnesota last year and playing in the Target Center, I knew it was rowdy, and the fans have been great all year,” said Anderson, who is now a key player for the Wolves.Those types of atmospheres are what Anderson said make the playoffs great. He said Denver’s faithful in Games 1 and 2 were “hostile.”“They were talking smack to us. You got to love that stuff,” he said. “If you don’t, the playoffs is going to intimidate you or it won’t be a good place for you. I like playing on the road and doing your thing on another team’s home floor.”A...Latest news
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