Allen County Prosecutors formally charged 25-year-old Kayla Renae Morgan with criminal recklessness with a deadly weapon, neglect of a dependent, domestic ...
Raesha Stevens of Terre Haute is charged with battery resulting in injury of a person less than 14 years of age, a Level 5 felony.
“Trump flushed White House docs” by Dave Granlund, PoliticalCartoons.com via Cagle Cartoons. Author. Daily Freeman. Join the Conversation.
Areas with more gastroenterologists had fewer deaths from alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD), a national study found. Each additional GI specialist per ...
For this study, Lee and colleagues examined data from five federal registries -- U.S. Census, WONDER, Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, National Survey of Substance Abuse Treatment Services, as well as the Health Resources and Services Administration -- on ALD-related deaths between 2010 and 2019. "Mid-Atlantic states had the highest geographic density of gastroenterologists and lowest ALD-related mortality, whereas mountain states had the lowest geographic density of gastroenterologists and highest ALD-related mortality," they noted. Over a five-fold difference was seen between states for the geographic density of gastroenterologists (ranging from 10.1 per 100,000 in the District of Columbia to 1.8 per 100,000 in Alaska) and the ALD-related deaths (ranging from 289 per million in Wyoming to 52 per million in New Jersey). ALD is growing fastest in populations that include racial minorities, women, and young adults. For gastroenterologists, the national mean geographic density was 4.6 per 100,000 people during 2019, while the ALD-related death rate was 85.6 per one million population during 2010-2019 across the continental states and District of Columbia. A state that hit that mark had 34.3 fewer ALD deaths per million than states in the lowest quartile for number of gastroenterologists (3.7 per 100,000 people) -- and that difference in access to care could account for some 40% of national ALD-related deaths, the researchers estimated.
As a student, one of the main challenges you'll face is keeping your work organised. Juggling multiple assignments can be a chore on desktop word processors ...
Google Docs has made this much easier by giving you the option to add an image directly from its source. Here are some of the platform’s best features that you might not know about, and how you can use them to your advantage: By typing the “@” sign, you’ll see a drop-down of all the features the platform offers. From there, Google Docs will open a brand new document for you that merges the two files, so you can work without worrying. Google Docs’ compare documents feature helps remove this fear by giving you direct comparison to two different files. As a student, one of the main challenges you’ll face is keeping your work organised.
Seven UCF Health doctors have been named Top Physicians in a 2022 Orlando Family Magazine reader's poll. The physicians are all UCF College of Medicine ...
Sharon Wasserstrom, M.D. is board certified in internal medicine and lifestyle medicine. The physicians are all UCF College of Medicine faculty and provide care at UCF Health, the medical school’s academic practice. Shazia Bég, M.D. is board-certified in Internal Medicine and Rheumatology. Abdo Asmar, M.D. is board certified in internal medicine and nephrology. Vladimir Neychev, M.D., Ph.D. is a board-certified general surgeon and an expert in endocrine and endocrine cancer surgery. “Thank you to our community for recognizing these outstanding faculty physicians who exemplify excellent, patient-centered care,” she says.
A man performing a lap dance with a woman is accused of sexually battering her at Piere's this past weekend.
AUBURN, Ind. (WANE) – Felony theft and official misconduct charges filed against a retired Auburn Police Department detective were dismissed Monday, ...
A set of questions is coming into clearer view following the FBI searches at Mar-a-Lago on Monday: Were there classified records at former President Donald…
“This information had to be obtained and gotten back into the possession of the government,” he said. “It’s petty bureaucracy at its finest, government simpletons not following a president’s orders to have them marked ‘declassified,’” Patel said. Throughout the spring, reports indicate that the DOJ began to investigate the matter with some urgency. Federal law prohibits the theft of government property, for example, regardless of whether the material is classified or not. Four federal investigators, including the chief of the Counterintelligence and Export Controls Section of the DOJ’s National Security Division, reportedly visited Mar-a-Lago in early June. And, if so, what were they?
The raid on former President Trump's private residence at Mar-a-Lago was connected to records Trump allegedly took with him from the White House when he ...
"What is the difference between this and Watergate, where operatives broke into the Democrat National Committee?" he continued. "After working and cooperating with the relevant Government agencies, this unannounced raid on my home was not necessary or appropriate," Trump said. "There are things that have been declassified by the president, which the Justice Department doesn't know about." They took boxes and documents to go through them later. A source familiar told Fox News that agents brought a "safe cracker" and cracked a "relatively new" safe in Mar-a-Lago. The source told Fox News there was "nothing in it." "The National Archives did not ‘find’ anything, they were given, upon request, Presidential Records in an ordinary and routine process to ensure the preservation of my legacy and in accordance with the Presidential Records Act," Trump said in a statement at the time, adding that Democrats "are in search of their next Scam."
Former President Donald Trump tosses a MAGA hat into the crowd at a rally in Arizona. A man who helped Donald Trump write his book in the 90s speculates that ...
An author who once helped Donald Trump write a book has a theory on why the former president might've taken some documents from the White House. - A man who helped Donald Trump write a book has a theory why Trump may've taken White House records. Leerhsen wrote on Facebook his theory about why Trump might've taken documents.
The court-authorized search of former President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate is another unmistakable signal that the Justice Department is trying to ...
But what it is trying to deliver is a Capitol riot case, not a case of mishandling classified documents. As previously explained, I believe it would foolhardy for the Biden Justice Department to indict a former president on such debatable non-violent crime charges. The Justice Department well knows that the qualifications for a presidential candidate are set out in the Constitution. They may not be altered by statute, precisely because the Framers did not want the executive branch to be dominated by the legislature, as would happen if Congress could disqualify incumbent or potential presidents simply by passing a law. Being a felon is not a disqualification, so even crimes potentially far more serious than mishandling classified information are not a bar to seeking the presidency. In addition, since it is believed Trump did not return everything that was shipped out of the White House in those hectic days of January 2021, there was significant reason to suspect he continued to retain classified information at Mar-a-Lago. Obviously, then, there is speculation that DOJ may be mobilizing now in order to trigger the Section 2071 disqualification.
The Justice Department has been investigating the potential mishandling of classified information after the National Archives and Records Administration ...
Not even the president of the United States. Not even a former president of the United States." That Trump would become entangled in a probe into the handling of classified information is all the more striking given how he tried during the 2016 presidential election to exploit an FBI investigation into his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, over whether she mishandled classified information via a private email server she used as secretary of state. Trump lambasted that decision and then stepped up his criticism of the FBI as agents began investigating whether his campaign had colluded with Russia to tip the 2016 election. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican who is considered a potential 2024 presidential candidate, said in a statement on Twitter that it was “an escalation in the weaponization” of U.S. government agencies. There are multiple federal laws governing the handling of classified records and sensitive government documents, including statutes that make it a crime to remove such material and retain it at an unauthorized location. The National Archives said Trump should have turned over that material upon leaving office, and it asked the Justice Department to investigate. Agents were also looking to see if Trump had additional presidential records or any classified documents at the estate. “My father always kept press clippings,” Eric Trump said. The search intensifies the months-long probe into how classified documents ended up in more than a dozen boxes located at Mar-a-Lago earlier this year. "Nonetheless, we believe in the rule of law. Familiar battle lines, forged during a a four-year presidency shadowed by FBI and congressional investigations, quickly took shape again Monday night. Trump has previously maintained that presidential records were turned over “in an ordinary and routine process.” His son Eric said on Fox News on Monday night that he had spent the day with his father and that the search happened because “the National Archives wanted to corroborate whether or not Donald Trump had any documents in his possession.”
South Carolina Republican members of Congress like Lindsey Graham and Jeff Duncan weighed in on the FBI's Monday search of Donald Trump's home at ...
“It has to be something of incredible magnitude for at least my side of the aisle to say that was warranted. “When you drain the swamp, the swamp fights back. “To those who feel like you need to violently react, the answer is don’t,” Graham added. “If the Mar-a-Lago raid is really about documents, it makes me wonder if the local police can send the SWAT team to kick in your front door to get your overdue library books. “Every Republican believes that the FBI when it comes to Trump and other organizations have lost their mind.” “He believes the country is going in the wrong direction. “The FBI has proven time and again that it is corrupt to the core. “They came after Trump the candidate. “The DOJ needs to provide information about the raid immediately. “Time will tell regarding this most recent investigation,” Graham tweeted. “What you need to do is you need to make sure you show up and vote, stop some of this madness and we do have a legal system in this country and we will get to the bottom of it like we did with the Mueller investigation.” “I told him that there’s legal systems in this country.