Amid Pandemic and Upheaval, New Cyber Risks to the Presidential Election

The experimenting is back, but once again it is not going well. New Jersey is a case in point.

In April, with the virus sweeping the state, officials moved quickly to expand mail-in voting. But they also decided to explore online voting by hiring Democracy Live, whose OmniBallot system was identified by Michigan and M.I.T. researchers as vulnerable to undetected hacking.

New Jersey officials made the online voting available to county clerks for municipal and school board elections last month, but did not publicize it widely for fear of inviting trouble.

“We didn’t want to put out an explanation for potential bad guys to decide that this was something they wanted to exploit,” said Alicia D’Alessandro, spokeswoman for New Jersey’s secretary of state.

The result: Just one voter used the online system. The cost to the state: $89,000, and still no real test of whether it works or not.

New Jersey will not repeat the experiment for its July primary, and has not yet decided what it will do in November, officials said. A lawsuit is attempting to block further online voting in the state, claiming it is susceptible to hackers.

Delaware, also citing the pandemic, recently announced it would make online voting available to voters who were sick or in quarantine. And West Virginia said it would allow online voting by some residents with disabilities, military personnel and overseas residents, as it has since 2018. And in emergency cases, Colorado will allow some voters to submit ballots electronically, it announced last week.

Like New Jersey, Delaware, West Virginia and Colorado have contracted with Democracy Live.

Mr. Halderman of Michigan and Michael A. Specter, a researcher at M.I.T., determined that Democracy Live’s online voting and ballot-marking systems could not withstand concerted hacking attempts, and also presented privacy concerns.

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JK Rowling Spent Her Weekend Pissing Off The Internet With Anti-Trans Tweetstorm

When she could just sit back and count (or better yet donate!) her millions, JK Rowling is back doing her favourite thing on the internet: being transphobic and loud about it. 

While the rest of your timeline was tweeting about the global protests against police brutality and racial injustice, the “Harry Potter” author thought now was the right time to disappoint her legions of fans yet again with an anti-trans tweetstorm. 

On Saturday evening, Rowling expressed her unfounded befuddlement over an opinion article titled, “Creating a More Equal Post-COVID-19 World for People Who Menstruate,” pushing back against the headline for not referring to those who get their periods as just “women.”

“I’m sure there used to be a word for those people. Someone help me out,” she wrote in her initial tweet. “Wumben? Wimpund? Woomud?”

The tweet sparked a wave of backlash from the LGBTQ community and its supporters, who were quick to remind Rowling that transgender people, non-binary people and gender-nonconforming people can also menstruate. 

“Hi! I’m a man! I menstruate! Stop being an asshole,” wrote “Survivor” alum Zeke Smith in response, adding in a separate tweet, “I’m tired of the world pretending my body and experience doesn’t exist, and that I have to take a back seat and be happy about it.”

“These times are hard enough without YOU, a wealthy white woman, tweeting transphobia from your mansion,” model and activist Munroe Bergdorf, who is trans, also tweeted. “Trans people really don’t need your bullshit right now. Do us all a favour and give it a rest. To say that you’re a disappointment is an understatement.”

But Rowling was just getting started, doubling down on her stance in a series of increasingly offensive tweets in which she pushed forth the notion that the very idea of gender identity invalidates her experience as a cisgender woman. 

“If sex isn’t real, there’s no same-sex attraction. If sex isn’t real, the lived reality of women globally is erased. I know and love trans people, but erasing the concept of sex removes the ability of many to meaningfully discuss their lives. It isn’t hate to speak the truth,” she wrote. “The idea that women like me, who’ve been empathetic to trans people for decades, feeling kinship because they’re vulnerable in the same way as women — ie, to male violence – ‘hate’ trans people because they think sex is real and has lived consequences — is a nonsense.”

And so began another round of dragging, as many were quick to remind Rowling that sex and gender identity are two different things.

“The vast consensus of medical and other scientific experts validate trans people and urge affirmation of us,” activist Charlotte Clymer wrote. “Your own country’s medical organizations have said as much. You don’t love trans people, and certainly don’t care about us.”

“This woman is complete scum. Shut the fuck up you transphobic fuck. You don’t know or love any trans people if you won’t even acknowledge their existence,” Benjamin O’Keefe, a former staffer on Elizabeth Warren’s presidential campaign, wrote. “Thanks for ruining the books of my childhood. Just stop talking. We know you’re a TERF. You don’t need to keep doing this,” 

Actor Sarah Paulson retweeted that message on her own account, adding, “Word. Goodnight and shut up @jk_rowling.”

Rowling then pushed back against many labeling her as a TERF (which stands for “trans exclusionary radical feminist”), adding that she respects trans people’s right to live authentically. 

“I’d march with you if you were discriminated against on the basis of being trans. At the same time, my life has been shaped by being female. I do not believe it’s hateful to say so,” she added.

Her use of the conditional “if” drew even more fire, as trans people and Black trans women in particular are discriminated against on the basis of being trans and murdered at disproportionately high rates. 

“It’s not hate if u say that YOU’RE a woman. It’s HARMFUL 2 say TRANSWOMEN are men,” “Drag Race” star Peppermint wrote. “Thus not a hypothetical ’If, but WHEN WE ARE DISCRIMINATED against IS CLEAR if u connect reports of VIOLENCE & removal of transfolk.”

The LGBTQ rights organization GLAAD weighed in, urging people to donate to several nonprofits supporting Black trans people, while disavowing Rowling’s continued alignment with an ideology that “willfully distorts facts about gender identity and people who are trans.”

“In 2020, there is no excuse for targeting trans people,” the organization wrote, calling her comments “cruel and inaccurate” in a different tweet.

Rowling’s Twitter rant comes less than six months the author was criticized for supporting Maya Forstater, a researcher who lost her job over a series of transphobic tweets, which were condemned by a court as “incompatible with human dignity.”



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George Floyd live updates: Minneapolis city council pledges to defund police; editors at major papers step down; NYC lifts curfew

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Hundreds of people held a private memorial in honor of George Floyd in his North Carolina birth town.

Wochit

The Minneapolis City Council took a major step Sunday toward making radical changes in the city’s beleaguered police department, as a super majority publicly expressed support for disbanding the force.

Earlier Sunday, Mayor Bill de Blasio canceled New York’s curfew following a day when cities across the nation saw massive, peaceful demonstrations against racism and police brutality. 

“We are lifting the curfew, effective immediately,” de Blasio tweeted. “Yesterday and last night we saw the very best of our city.”

On Monday, Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer who is charged with the second-degree murder of George Floyd, is scheduled to have his first court appearance. Chauvin has been in jail since his arrest on May 29.

Protests began after the Memorial Day death of Floyd, the African-American man who died after Chauvin knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes. The latest in a series of memorial services for Floyd is Monday in Houston. His remains will be buried there Tuesday.

Some recent developments:

  • The editor of the New York Times’ editorial page resigned under pressure Sunday, a day after The Philadelphia Inquirer’s top editor stepped down. Both were embroiled in controversies related to protest coverage.
  • The U.S. Marine Corps ordered all public displays of the Confederate flag removed from its installations, a ban that extends to bumper stickers, clothing, mugs, posters and more.
  • George Floyd protests reached small cities as the nation struggles with systemic racism.

Minneapolis City Council vows to break up police

A veto-proof majority of the Minneapolis City Council has committed to dismantling the city’s police department, breaking with Mayor Jacob Frey’s desire to make reforms but not break up the embattled police force.

Nine of the council’s 12 current members appeared Sunday on a city park stage behind the words “Defund police’’ and expressed their support for disbanding the department, which has drawn intense criticism since the May 25 killing of George Floyd, an unarmed black man who died in police custody. Four officers have been charged, including one with second-degree murder.

“It is clear that our system of policing is not keeping our communities safe,” council president Lisa Bender said. “Our efforts at incremental reform have failed, period.”

The state of Minnesota launched a civil rights investigation of the department last week, and the first concrete changes came Friday when the city agreed to ban chokeholds and neck restraints. A more complete remaking of the department is likely to unfold in the coming months, although it’s not clear what would replace the police force.

Frey was jeered Saturday outside his home by protesters seeking the department’s defunding when he expressed his opposition, saying, “I do not support the full abolition of the police department.’’

Trump orders National Guard out of Washington, D.C.

President Donald Trump tweeted Sunday that he had ordered the National Guard out Washington, D.C., after mobilizing them in response to protests that at times triggered vandalism, looting and clashes with police. Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser had objected to the deployment. Trump, however, called for a tough response to protests across the nation in order to “dominate the streets,” threatening to call in active-duty troops to quell unrest where local authorities were unable to do so.

Tensions on U.S. streets have eased somewhat in recent days, and protests Saturday were overwhelmingly peaceful. 

“Everything is under perfect control,” Trump tweeted. “They will be going home, but can quickly return, if needed. Far fewer protesters showed up last night than anticipated!” 

Washington, D.C., authorities said the protesting crowds were the biggest to date.

– William Cummings

Top editors at New York Times, Philadelphia Inquirer out amid controversy

The New York Times said editorial page editor James Bennett has resigned, four days after the newspaper printed an op-ed from a U.S. senator calling for military intervention to quell rioters in protests against police brutality. The essay by Arkansas GOP Senator Tom Cotton, with the headline “Send in the Troops,’’ drew vehement criticism by Times staffers and readers, and two days later the newspaper said it should not have been published.

Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger said the publication of the op-ed reflected “a significant breakdown in our editing processes,’’ and that Bennett was not the right person to shepherd needed changes. Jim Dao, who oversaw the op-eds, also stepped down from that position but remained with the paper.

The Times moves come a day after Stan Wischnowski, the top editor of The Philadelphia Inquirer, announced his resignation amid fallout from a controversial headline about the impact of the recent civil unrest. The headline, “Buildings Matter, Too,” appeared over a column in Tuesday’s newspaper exploring the damage and looting that accompanied some of the nationwide protests over police violence. Wischnowski and other editors later apologized for the headline, describing it as “deeply offensive.”

Stars lend voices, financial support to protest movement

Singing celebrities are not standing quietly on the sidelines as the nation rises up to confront inequality and police brutality. Paul McCartney released a statement in support of racial equality. K-pop superstars BTS have donated $1 million to Black Lives Matter, and Michael B. Jordan showed his support for the BLM movement at a recent protest in Los Angeles. Justin Bieber weighed in Saturday in support of the movement, saying he has been “inspired by… (and) benefited from black culture.”

“My style, how I sing, dance, perform, and my fashion have all been influenced by black culture,” Bieber posted on Twitter. “I am committed to using my platform from this day forward to learn, to speak up about racial injustice and systemic oppression, and to identify ways to be a part of much needed change.”

– Kim Willis and Rasha Ali

Barr: Justice system not systematically racist; no need to tap Insurrection Act

Racism remains an issue in the U.S., but the nation’s justice system is not systematically racist, Attorney General William Barr said Sunday. Barr, speaking on “Face the Nation,” said that “instances” of bad cops do not mean the entire “organization is rotten.” He also said he understands the distrust in the African American community.

“I think we have to realize that for most of our history our institutions were explicitly racist,” Barr said. “Since the 1960s we have been in a phase of reforming our institutions and making sure they are in sync with our laws.”

Barr also acknowledged that invoking the Insurrection Act to deploy military troops on American streets was considered. He, President Donald Trump and other administration officials were “on the same page” in determining that military troops would be deployed only “as a last resort and that we didn’t think we would need them.”

NYC drops curfew, prepares to being reopening after COVID lockdown

New York City’s first curfew in more than a half century was lifted a day early Sunday, hours after thousands of protesters across the city peacefully marched and chanted for an end to racial injustice. Mayor Bill de Blasio was under intense pressure to end the nightly curfew, imposed after looting broke out early last week. Chicago, San Francisco and Atlanta are among other cities that have lifted their curfews.

New York’s 8 p.m. curfew had been scheduled to continue until 5 a.m. Monday – also the day the city begins Phase One of its reopening from the coronavirus shutdowns. Construction and other manufacturing-type facilities will be operational for the first time since being shuttered March 22.

“Tomorrow we take the first big step to restart,” de Blasio tweeted. “Keep staying safe. Keep looking out for each other.”

At the same time, de Blasio took issue with police officers not wearing masks while doing crowd control during the protests. “It’s painful to people because it feels like they’re flouting the rules,” de Blasio said, adding that, “It frustrates me to no end.”

Statue of British slave trader toppled, tossed into harbor

The statue of a 17th-century merchant and slave trader in the British city of Bristol was toppled and dumped into a harbor by protesters Sunday as part of anti-racism demonstrations in the United Kingdom.

The BBC reported the statue of Edward Colston had been covered with canvas during the protest stemming from the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. At one point demonstrators removed the covering, then tied ropes around the statue’s head to bring it down. Soon after stomping on the fallen monument, the crowd dragged it to nearby Bristol Harbor and tossed it in.

Colston, whose name is attached to streets and buildings in the city — located about 100 miles west of London — owned ships that sent an estimated 80,000 Africans to the Americas between 1672 and 1689.

Residents of smaller cities and towns join chorus for change

Protests in big cities such as New York, Washington and Los Angeles have grabbed the headlines, but residents of smaller cities are also making their voices heard. The conversations are typically driven by black citizens who say conditions are untenable.

During a peaceful protest in Spartanburg, South Carolina, a white man confronted a crowd of black men about their “Black Lives Matter” sign, telling them, “It should say ‘All Lives Matter!’” The Rev. Joseph Parks was nearby and stepped in, saying, “All of my bones matter. But if my wrist is broken, the only bone that matters at that moment is the one that’s broken.”

– Dustin Wyatt, Spartanburg Herald-Journal 

Member of Naval Academy alumni board member resigns after his slurs are broadcast

A member of the Naval Academy Alumni Association Board of Trustees who lives near Jacksonville, Florida, has resigned after a private conversation that included racial slurs became public.

Scott Bethmann, 63, and his wife, Nancy, were watching the news when they started discussing the Black Lives Matter movement, making racist comments and using slurs in a video that was accidentally streamed on Facebook Live. “Somehow I clicked onto some live event,” Scott Bethmann can be heard saying in the video.

— Emily Bloch, Florida Times-Union

Iowa football assistant placed on leave amid complaints of racism

Iowa football strength and condition coach Chris Doyle has been placed on administrative leave after dozens of social-media posts from black former athletes described a culture of systemic racism within the Hawkeyes’ football program. Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz also announced the creation of an advisory committee to address “a call for a cultural shift.” Doyle has been Iowa’s strength and conditioning coach since Ferentz’s first year of 1999.

Ferentz said he has lifted his team’s longstanding ban on social media at the request of players who want to “participate in the national discussion” concerning injustice, racism and inequality.

– Chad Leistikow, Hawk Central

Fox News sorry for graphic linking deaths of black men to stock prices

Fox News apologized Saturday after showing a graphic depicting the impact of the killings of black men including George Floyd on stock prices. The graph aired on Friday during Fox’s live news coverage and showed positive stock market changes one week after Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination and the police killings of Michael Brown and George Floyd, who were both unarmed when they lost their lives to white officers. 

“The infographic used on FOX News Channel’s Special Report to illustrate market reactions to historic periods of civil unrest should have never aired on television without full context. We apologize for the insensitivity of the image and take this issue seriously,” a Fox News spokesperson said in a statement. 

– Dalvin Brown

Marines ban display of Confederate flag

The Marines have banned display of the Confederate Battle Flag from military installations, saying it is divisive and has “too often been co-opted by violent extremist and racist groups.” The directive orders commanders to ban the flag or its depiction within work places, common-access areas and public areas on their installations. Posters, bumper stickers, clothing and coffee mugs are specifically called out. The directive and a statement released by the Corps make reference to “current events” and specifically mentions a 2017 demonstration in Charlottesville, Virginia, that resulted in the death of a protester.

“Our history as a nation, and events like the violence in Charlottesville in 2017, highlight the divisiveness the use of the Confederate battle flag has had on our society,” the directive says.

Police, protesters square off in Portland

A clash between police in Portland, Oregon, and protesters at the Justice Center overnight resulted in more than 50 arrests. Police Chief Jami Resch said early Sunday that several thousand people marched peacefully, but that a smaller group of protesters attempted to cut through a security fence and threw balloons full of paint and full beverage cans. Two officers were injured by lit fireworks, she said. 

Protests have taken place daily in the city for more than a week, and police have come under scrutiny for their use of force against demonstrators. The advocacy group Don’t Shoot Portland has filed suit against the city, accusing police of “indiscriminate use” of tear gas. The city’s police oversight panel, the Citizen Review Committee, has issued a statement citing “a troubling pattern of police violence against protesters that interferes with public safety and freedom of speech.”

Survey: Americans’ perceptions of police drop significantly in one week

The perception of police among white Americans has dropped by double digits in just one week, as police have targeted peaceful protesters, bystanders and journalists amid nationwide demonstrations focusing on systemic racism facing black Americans. Perceptions also have declined across all racial groups following the death of George Floyd in police custody, according to a new survey from the Democracy Fund + UCLA Nationscape Project.

Among white Americans – a group where President Donald Trump saw broad support in the 2016 election – those who have a very favorable or somewhat favorable impression of police officers totaled 61% in the survey conducted May 28 to June 3. That’s down from 72% the previous week, according to an analysis from Nationscape Insights, Democracy Fund, UCLA and USA TODAY. Among black Americans, only 38% view the police very or somewhat favorably. That number dropped 9 percentage points from the previous week.

“These changes were striking,” said Robert Griffin, research director for the Democracy Fund Voter Study Group. “At a time when so much in American politics feels deadlocked, this is the kind of major event that can reshape how Americans think.” 

– Rebecca Morin

More on protests, George Floyd:

Contributing: The Associated Press

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Black Lives Matter Protesters Tear Down Slave Trader Statue In Bristol And Dump In Harbour

Black Lives Matter protesters in Bristol have torn down the controversial statue of a slave trader and rolled it into the River Avon, as thousands of people marched through the city in protest against police brutality following the death of George Floyd.

The memorial to Edward Colston, who made his fortune in the slave trade in the 1600s, has stood in the city since 1895 but in recent years has been the subject of a number of petitions – the most recent of which has garnered more than 10,000 signatures.

On Sunday demonstrators took matter into their own hands, tying a rope around the head of the statue – which had previously been covered in a black shroud for the march – and pulling it to the ground. 

It was then rolled from the city centre and dumped unceremoniously into Bristol’s harbour – almost exactly at the point where Edward Colston’s ships would have once left for West Africa. 

Avon and Somerset Police superintendent Andy Bennett has since announced that the force has launched an investigation to identify a small group of people “who clearly committed an act of criminal damage”.

Home secretary Priti Patel said the toppling of the statue was “utterly disgraceful”.

Bristol’s history is tightly interwoven with the slave trade, and in the 18th century the city was one of the UK’s largest slave ports. 

The point at which the statue was tipped into the water is directly next to Pero’s Bridge, which was was named in honour of Pero Jones who came to live in Bristol as a slave. 

One of the men who helped roll the statue into the water told HuffPost UK: “It’s what he deserved. I’ve been waiting my whole life for this moment. 

“It’s an amazing feeling, it feels like the end of a chapter. It’s what we all needed.” 

Asked about what this moment meant to him, the man – who asked to remain anonymous – said: “I don’t think racism will ever be dead, but I think what we need in the future is more consequence for bad actions and for more people to stand up and help each other. 

“If we see inequality for any race, any sexuality, any religion, we have to come together.” 

Edward Colston

Colston’s legacy has proved hugely divisive as while his money was derived largely from the slave trade, who used much of it to set up charitable foundations some of which survive to this day.

Born into a prosperous Bristol merchant’s family, Colston was educated in London and joined the Mercers’ Company in 1673, where he traded in woollen textiles and wine, PA Media reports.

He became a member of the London-based Royal African Company – which at the time had the monopoly of Britain’s slave trade – in 1680, and between 1689-1690 took on the role of deputy governor.

Other members of the Colston family also had connections with the company: his brother Thomas supplied beads that were used to buy slaves, and his father William owned shares.

By 1689, the company had transported around 100,000 enslaved Africans in chains to the Americas, who were branded with the firm’s initials RAC on their chests.

Unhygienic and cramped conditions meant many of those enslaved died while being shipped, with their bodies said to be thrown overboard.

Colston donated money to causes in and around Bristol before his death in 1721 – including to the city’s churches, founded almshouses, Queen Elizabeth’s Hospital School, and founding a religious school for boys.

According to Historic England, his involvement in the slave trade was the source of much of the money which he bestowed in the city.

Due to his philanthropy, Colston’s legacy has been honoured by the city he once called home, where streets, memorials and buildings bear his name.

A number of Labour MPs tweeted in solidarity with protesters who pulled down the statue.

Earlier, protestor John McAllister, 71, tore down black bin bags used to hide the statue to denounce it in front of fellow protesters.

He told the PA news agency: “It says ‘erected by the citizens of Bristol, as a memorial to one of the most virtuous and wise sons of this city’.

“The man was a slave trader. He was generous to Bristol but it was off the back of slavery and it’s absolutely despicable. It’s an insult to the people of Bristol.”

Police said 10,000 people had attended the Black Lives Matter demonstration in Bristol and the majority did so “peacefully”.

Many protesters wore masks and gloves, but the sheer number of attendees meant that social distancing was impossible at points.  

Speaking from the plinth upon which Colston’s statues used to stand, one protester told the crowd: “It’s all well and good every two or three years shouting ‘Black Lives Matter’ but how are you actually going to change what’s going on on this earth”

“We have to start by educating ourselves and our children, education is power. Violence will never change anything. We need to teach our little children for the future.”



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Coronavirus live news: global cases near 7 million as Saudi infections pass 100,000




























UK universities have been told to expect a sharp fall in the number of new international students coming next year, including a loss of up to £460m (US$585m) in income from students from east Asia.

A new survey of international students by the British Council has found that nearly 14,000 fewer students from eight countries – including China, Singapore and Malaysia – are likely to come to the UK in 2020/21 in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

The decline of 20% in students from east Asia would amount to a 12% fall in overall international student numbers, causing a £460m loss of income from tuition and living expenses such as accommodation.










Saudi virus cases top 100,000 with new spike ahead of the hajj










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Trump Cheers Tom Cotton After Times Editor’s Exit Over Op-Ed

President Donald Trump on Sunday sounded off on the resignation of the editorial page editor of The New York Times following the publication of an incendiary op ed by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) calling for a military assault against anti-racist protesters.

Trump hailed Cotton’s op-ed, which characterized protests over George Floyd’s death during a brutal arrest as an “orgy of violence” by “insurrectionists.” The president deemed the tirade as “excellent” in a tweet, and slammed the Times, yet again, as “Fake News!!!” Trump added, inexplicably: “TRANSPARENCY!” and noted: “The State of Arkansas is very proud of Tom.”

Editor James Bennett admitted Friday that he had not read Cotton’s piece before it was published last Wednesday. 

The op-ed unleashed a storm of controversy among readers and the Times’ own staff, who charged that Cotton’s inflammatory language fueled hatred and violence, and put Black Americans, including the newspaper’s own reporters, in danger.

Cotton’s op-ed is still available online, but now includes a lengthy editor’s note that the essay “fell short of our standards and should not have been published.” Cotton’s claims that protests were fueled by “cadres of left-wing radicals” and that police “bore the brunt” of any violence had not been substantiated, the Times noted.

Despite Trump’s clear support for Cotton’s position, Attorney General William Barr insisted on “Face The Nation” on CBS Sunday that Trump wasn’t clamoring for military troops to move on protesters, particularly during the violent crackdown last week on peaceful protesters as the president walked to a church for a photo-op. 

The Washington Post reported Saturday, however, that Trump pressed for 10,000 troops to be sent into the capital. According to the Times, the National Guard was ordered by the Pentagon to crack down on protesters, or would send in active-duty units instead.



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Majority of Minneapolis City Council commits to dismantling city’s police department

A majority of the Minneapolis City Council agreed Sunday to dismantle the city’s police department after the in-custody killing of George Floyd, a council member said.

In a tweet, Alondra Cano, who represents the city’s ninth ward, said the department isn’t “reformable.”

“We’re dismantling our police department,” Councilman Jeremiah Ellison said.

Speaking during a community meeting earlier, council President Lisa Bender called the city’s relationship with the department “toxic” and vowed to “recreate systems of public safety that actually keep us safe.”

“Our efforts at incremental reform have failed — period,” she said. “Our commitment is to do what’s necessary to keep every single member of our community safe and to tell the truth that Minneapolis police are not doing that.”

Nine of the city’s 12 council members have agreed to the move, NBC affiliate KARE reported. Cano said the majority is veto-proof.

In a statement to NBC News, Mayor Jacob Frey said he would work “relentlessly” with city’s police chief, Medaria Arradondo, toward “deep, structural reform” and to address “systemic racism in police culture.”

“We’re ready to dig in and enact more community-led public safety strategies on behalf of our city,” he said. “But I do not support abolishing the Minneapolis Police Department.”

A police department spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The announcement comes nearly two weeks after the killing of Floyd, who died when a police officer, Derek Chauvin, pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes. The killing was captured on video by a bystander and sparked massive protests across the United States.

Chauvin has been charged with second-degree murder and other crimes in Floyd’s death. Three other officers have also been charged with aiding and abetting.

Last week, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said the state was launching a civil rights investigation into the police department aimed at rooting out “systemic racism that is generations deep.”

Investigators will probe policies and procedures from the last decade to determine if the department’s practices are systematically discriminatory toward people of color.

The council welcomed the announcement and said the department should be held accountable “for any and all abuses of power.”



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Harvick supports protesters after NASCAR win: ‘Something has to change’ – Sportsnet.ca

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HAMPTON, Ga. — After another dominant performance at one of his favourite tracks, Kevin Harvick relished the past and looked ahead to the future.

He wasn’t entirely focused on what he can do behind the wheel.

Harvick cruised to victory Sunday over Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. in the NASCAR Cup race at Atlanta Motor Speedway, leading the final 55 laps on a day that began with the series acknowledging the social unrest in the country.

Before taking the green flag, the 40 cars stopped in front of the towering, empty grandstands on the front stretch to listen to a message from NASCAR president Steve Phelps and observe a 30-second moment of silence in the wake of George Floyd’s death while in police custody.

Harvick also joined other drivers in making a video that promised to push for much-needed changes in the fractured nation.

“Something has to change. When you look at what happened in Minneapolis, it’s just disgraceful to everyone,” he said. “It’s just unbelievable to sit and watch these things happen. It’s really confusing. It makes you confused and mad. Now we know what we need to do and where to start.”

Harvick won for the second time since NASCAR returned from the shutdown caused by the coronavirus pandemic, adding to his emotional victory at Darlington in the first race back.

Harvick came into the day having led 1,138 laps on the 1.54-mile Atlanta trioval, far more than any other driver in the 40-car field.

This one was more of the same. Harvick was out front for 151 laps — more than twice as many as anyone else — and claimed his a third victory in Atlanta, where he got first Cup triumph in 2001 and another win two years ago.

“For me, this place is pretty special,” said Harvick, who beat Busch by more than 3 1/2 seconds, with Truex nearly 5 seconds behind. “It brings back a lot of memories.”

On a reverse victory lap, Harvick held three fingers outside his car, a tribute to the late Dale Earnhardt. Harvick was the driver who replaced Earnhardt after the seven-time champion was killed in a crash at Daytona in 2001.

Three weeks later, Harvick took the checkered flag in Atlanta.

“To celebrate the life of Dale Earnhardt and everything he meant to our sport, is obviously pretty special to me,” Harvick said.

He now has 51 wins — breaking a tie with Ned Jarrett and Junior Johnson for the 12th spot on the career list.

“You just shake your head and say, `Man, I can’t believe this is happening,”’ Harvick said. “It’s pretty crazy when you think about. I’ve been very lucky to drive cars for a living.”

Seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson, in what may have been his final Atlanta appearance, was given the honour of delivering the “start your engines” command to his fellow drivers. The speedway also renamed a grandstand in honour of Johnson, who is retiring as a full-time competitor at the end of the year.

A five-time winner on the 1.54-mile trioval, Johnson had another strong run in Atlanta. But his seventh-place showing extended a winless that stretches back more than three years.

NASCAR returned to Atlanta to make up a race that was initially scheduled for March 15. It became the first race to be postponed as U.S. sports largely shut down to deal with a pandemic that has now claimed more than 110,000 American lives.

This time, it was the spot where NASCAR waded into the debate over the injustices endured by African Americans — a striking move for a sport that once embraced Confederate symbols and still struggles to overcome its perception as a conservative bastion reserved largely for whites.

Bubba Wallace, the only African American in the Cup series, donned a black T-shirt with the words “I Can’t Breathe” and “Black Lives Matter” while standing on pit road before the race.

Wallace finished 21st and appeared to faint after climbing from his car on a blistering day when temperatures climbed into the mid-80s. He said he was OK and did a portion of a television interview, but then was wasn’t able to speak.

Wallace was taken by ambulance to the infield care centre, where to was sitting up as he was taken inside on a stretcher. He was treated and released a short time later, though no additional details were provided on what caused his problem.

Maybe it was the heat.

Maybe it was just the emotion of becoming the sport’s most outspoken voice since Floyd died while in the custody of Minneapolis police.

Phelps spoke to the drivers over their radio sets before they took the green flag.

“Our country is in pain and people are justifiably angry, demanding to be heard,” Phelps said. “The black community and all people of colour have suffered in our country, and it has taken far too long for us to hear their demands for change. Our sport must do better. Our country must do better.”

All 40 crews stood on the wall in front of their pit boxes. One of Wallace’s crew member held up the T-shirt, which the driver removed before climbing into his car.

Floyd’s death has sparked massive protests in all 50 states and around the world demanding an end to law enforcement brutality against people of colour.

Harvick said he’s ready to join the cause.

“There’s things we can do to try to help our communities, help the conversation,” he said. “We need to change.”



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New York Mayor Bill De Blasio Unveils Proposed Police Reforms Amid Nationwide Protests

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio on Sunday announced a proposal to cut the New York Police Department’s budget and shift the money to programs to help “communities of color,” part of a program to address calls for police reform.

De Blasio announced the reforms as protests against police brutality continued in New York and around the world.

“These will be the first of many steps my administration will take over the next 18 months to rebuild a fairer city that profoundly addresses injustice and disparity,” de Blasio said in a statement.

Over the last two weeks, every borough in New York City saw protests against police violence sparked by the death of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man who died pleading for his life under the knee of a now-indicted Minneapolis police officer. Several instances of police violence have been documented at recent New York City protests. 

De Blasio also lifted an 8 p.m. curfew that he and Gov. Andrew Cuomo instituted last Monday to stop reported looters. Local legislators at the time criticized the curfew,  and it has since been used as an excuse for a number of police assaults on protesters. 

De Blasio’s proposed reforms were intended to satisfy activists demanding racial equality and a demilitarized, defunded police force.

Among the proposals: Shift an as-yet-to-be-determined amount of money from the NYPD’s budget to “youth and social services in communities of color.” The mayor said the amount will be determined with the City Council as part of the budget process. 

De Blasio also said he would back throwing out a provision in New York law known as 50-A,” which deems officers’ personnel records “confidential and not subject to inspection or review.” The mayor’s action on Sunday followed years of reported wavering over whether to rescind the measure. 

De Blasio also said the NYPD will no longer be tasked with enforcing codes for vendors, adding that a civilian agency will take over that responsibility with hopes of “reducing interactions between uniform officers and New Yorkers, particularly immigrant communities and communities of color.”

In recent years, justice reform activists have called for the abolishment of police forces and a turn to community-based policing approaches.

De Blasio also announced the hiring of so-called community ambassadors to provide advice to senior law enforcement officials. 

De Blasio has come under fire for his handling of the protests and his cold responses to the police violence that has erupted at protests. That has undermined his occasional attempts to be seen as a reformer. 

On May 31, for example, the mayor defended officers who drove their cars into crowds of people, saying the incident could have been avoided “if those protesters had just gotten out of the way.”



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Vic Police reviewing foot-on-neck arrest

A Victorian police officer is under investigation for using his boot to pin down an accused suspect, reminiscent of George Floyd’s arrest.

Vision aired by Seven News shows an officer putting his foot onto the neck of a 42-year-old man as he lay on his front while being arrested inside an Abbotsford venue on Saturday.

Professional Standards Command have been notified and are investigating as per protocol when a person is injured during an arrest.

The group of five officers responded to reports of the Heidelberg man behaving erratically about 3pm.

It was believed he had been making threats to passers-by and damaging property while armed with a hockey stick, police said on Monday.

The man then allegedly locked himself inside the Johnston Street business.

Officers used capsicum spray during the arrest and the man was treated at the scene for minor injuries.

He appeared in court on Sunday, charged with various offences including theft, riotous behaviour and resist arrest.

The incident comes after Mr Floyd, an unarmed black man, died in May after a white police officer kneeled on his neck for several minutes.

His death has sparked a series of global protests into deaths in custody.

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