Ohio Politician Ends Presidential Campaign

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Rep. Tim Ryan ended his floundering presidential campaign on Thursday. In a series of Tweets, Ryan said he ran to give voice to forgotten communities.

“While it didn’t work out quite the way we planned, this voice will not be stifled,” Ryan said. “I will continue to advocate and fight for the working people of this country.”

The field of Democratic contenders for president is narrowing before primary elections begin. Ryan joined the bustling field in April, launching a website and making an appearance on “The View” to start his campaign.

Despite briefly rising to national attention, Ryan’s message never broke through to voters. He was mired behind bigger names — like Sanders, Biden and Warren — from the jump.

Still, Ryan has steadily raised his profile among Democrats in Ohio and the Midwest. He first made a national splash by announcing in 2016 that he planned to challenge Nancy Pelosi for leadership of House Democrats. Ryan lost that bid, but he garnered ink and TV time in the process. He positioned himself as a needed change for Democrats at the time.

Ryan has been a consistent critic of President Donald Trump and his administration, and has supported workers at a General Motors plant in Northeast Ohio. He was one of three Buckeye State politicians who met with GM’s Mary Barra after the Lordstown closing was announced. (The other Democrat in that meeting, Sen. Sherrod Brown, also mulled a presidential campaign.)

While a presidential bid failed for Ryan, he has been linked to other offices in the past, including the governorship and senate. Could Ryan’s future hold a bid for Rob Portman’s senate seat, or a chance to unseat Mike DeWine as governor? Time will tell.

Le Hérisson: Josiane Balasko en Ugly Betty du rez-de-chaussée

Le Hérisson sort aujourd’hui dans les salles obscures. C’est l’occasion pour le spectateur de découvrir Josiane Balasko en habits de concierge mais aussi le mystérieux acteur japonais au flegme très Britannique, Togo Igawa.

La réalisatrice Mona Achache a eu un coup de foudre pour L’Elégance du Hérisson, écrit par Muriel Barbery. Fascinée par «la superposition, due au hasard, de vies si différentes» et par les deux personnages principaux (la petite fille et la concierge), la réalisatrice confie s’être «complètement identifiée à cette petite fille et à cette concierge».

L’histoire? Plusieurs personnages vivant dans le même immeuble se rencontrent: Paloma Josse, une gamine de 11 ans, redoutablement intelligente et suicidaire, Renée Michel, concierge parisienne râleuse et solitaire, et l’énigmatique Monsieur Kakuro Ozu…

Plutôt qu’une voix off, la réalisatrice Mona Achache a préféré mettre une caméra dans les mains de la petite Paloma, qui devient le support de sa voix. Dans le rôle de Renée, Josiane Balasko délivre une remarquable interprétation: perruque grisonnante et faux sourcils, elle devient une sorte d’Ugly Betty du rez-de-chaussée.

Elle confie: «Je trouve ça plus confortable et moins angoissant (de s’enlaidir) que d’être obligée de faire semblant d’être sexy ou belle, … , souvent dans la rue, on me dit «oh mais vous êtes bien mieux que dans les films». Togo Igawa, qui joue le rôle du mystérieux inconnu, était tout excité à l’idée de partager l’affiche avec cette grande dame du cinéma français. Et leur couple, surprenant, est parfaitement convaincant.

Mercredi 1er juillet 2009

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VIDEO. “Je dors mieux ici que chez moi” : à Hong Kong des dizaines de personnes dorment chaque nuit au McDonald’s

À Hong Kong (Chine), en plein milieu de la nuit, dans l’un des 110 McDonald’s de la ville ouverts 24 heures sur 24, l’ambiance est étrange. Le lieu ressemble plus à un dortoir qu’à un restaurant. Il y a plus de dormeurs que de consommateurs. On les appelle les “McRéfugiés” ou “réfugiés du McDo”. Lors de la visite de France 2 dans l’un de ces restaurants, le journaliste a pu comptabiliser une trentaine de dormeurs.De jour comme de nuitDans la ville, ils seraient plus de 300 à tomber ainsi dans les bras de Morphée. “Les gens arrivent le soir, vers minuit. Et le matin, autour de 6 heures, tout le monde se réveille et s’en va”, explique Chan Wai Man, un ingénieur en informatique. Étonnamment, la direction et le personnel de l’établissement laissent faire. En tout cas la nuit, cela ne semble déranger personne. “Il y a des SDF, mais surtout des gens qui ont des problèmes familiaux ou qui ne veulent pas rentrer chez eux”, remarque Pak Wah, une employée. Parce qu’ils habitent trop loin de leur lieu de travail, parce que le transport coûte très cher et surtout, parce que l’immobilier, spéculation oblige, est hors de prix à Hong Kong, les restaurants du géant américain sont devenus des refuges de nuit comme de jour pour tout le monde. Une mère de famille rencontrée par France 2 y vient notamment pour jouer avec sa fille. Chez elle, c’est trop petit, 7m².Le JT

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Condamné à perpétuité en Italie pour homicides, l’ex-militant d’extrême gauche Cesare Battisti a été arrêté en Bolivie

L’ex-militant d’extrême gauche italien Cesare Battisti, qui était en cavale depuis sa disparition au Brésil en décembre, a été capturé en Bolivie, annonce un conseiller du président brésilien, dimanche 13 janvier. Les principaux médias brésiliens ont indiqué que le fugitif avait été intercepté dans la ville de Santa Cruz de la Sierra (Bolivie), en citant des sources de la police fédérale brésilienne.Traqué par une équipe d’Interpol composée d’Italiens, de Brésiliens et de Boliviens, Cesare Battisti a été arrêté dans la rue et n’a pas opposé de résistance, selon plusieurs médias italiens, dont le Corriere della sera (en italien). Lors de son arrestation, précise le quotidien, le fugitif portait une fausse barbe. 

“Le terroriste italien Cesare Battisti a été arrêté en Bolivie cette nuit et sera ramené d’ici peu au Brésil, d’où il sera probablement envoyé en Italie pour purger sa peine à perpétuité, en accord avec la décision de la justice italienne”, a tweeté Filipe G. Martins, conseiller spécial du nouveau président brésilien Jair Bolsonaro pour les affaires étrangères.

Le président Bolsonaro favorable à une extraditionL’ex-président brésilien Michel Temer avait signé mi-décembre l’acte d’extradition réclamé depuis des années par l’Italie, où Cesare Battisti a été condamné par contumace en 1993 à la prison à perpétuité pour quatre homicides et complicité de meurtres dans les années 1970. Ancien militant d’un groupe d’extrême gauche classé comme terroriste par la justice italienne, les Prolétaires armés pour le communisme, Cesare Battisti affirme être innocent et vivait exilé au Brésil depuis 2004, après avoir passé près de quinze ans en France.Au terme d’un séjour en prison et d’un long processus judiciaire pour l’extrader, le président brésilien de gauche Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (2003-2011) avait décidé en 2010 de ne pas livrer le fugitif à l’Italie. Jair Bolsonaro, président d’extrême droite qui a pris ses fonctions le 1er janvier, avait, lui, réitéré en décembre son intention d’extrader l’ancien militant, affirmant sur Twitter que le gouvernement italien pouvait “compter” sur lui pour le renvoyer vers son pays d’origine.“Le Brésil n’est plus une terre de bandits. Matteo Salvini [le ministre de l’Intérieur italien], le ‘petit cadeau’ va arriver”, s’est félicité le fils du nouveau président brésilien, le député Eduardo Bolsonaro. L’ambassadeur d’Italie au Brésil, Antonio Bernardini, a également accueilli la nouvelle avec satisfaction : “Battisti est en prison ! La démocratie est plus forte que le terrorisme.”Click Here: cheap nsw blues jersey

The Liverpool Way: How the Reds are building football's next generation

The Merseysiders have three players included in the NxGn 2020 list of the world’s best teenagers, but their academy is about more than just wonderkids

Ask James Milner to name his favourite moment from this season and the chances are that his answer will not be one you would expect.

Not his last-minute penalty winner against Leicester in October, nor the victory over Manchester City at Anfield a month later. Forget the Merseyside derby in December, or the memorable triumphs against Manchester United, Tottenham, Chelsea and Arsenal.

No, Milner’s high point came in February – and in a game in which he didn’t even play. 

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“I’ve never seen him so happy – ever!” says one club source, referring to the night a Liverpool Under-23 side, led by Neil Critchley, defeated Shrewsbury in an FA Cup fourth-round replay at Anfield as Milner watched on from behind the dugout. “He was absolutely thrilled for the young lads, and for Critch and the staff.”

What a night it was for Liverpool’s academy, as a team with an average age of just 19 years and 28 days, and led by the youngest captain in the club’s history, got the better of League One opposition in front of a raucous 52,000 crowd. “They played like a Liverpool team,” said a beaming Critchley, “I’m so proud of them.”

It has been a rather unusual campaign of course, with circumstances meaning that so many of the Reds’ young brigade have been able to get a taste of senior football. There have, remarkably, been 22 first-team Liverpool debuts this season, with 21 of them aged 22 or under. And that’s before we even take into account the contributions of Curtis Jones, Pedro Chirivella, Ki-Jana Hoever or, of course, the brilliant Trent Alexander-Arnold.

There have been great stories everywhere. Take Adam Lewis, the Fazakerley-born left-back who starred against Shrewsbury. That was the 20-year-old’s first 90 minutes of the season, with a serious knee injury having kept him out for the first half of the campaign. He has been at Liverpool since the age of five, and was dreaming of playing at Anfield even before then. 

What about Tom Hill, a baby-faced 17-year-old attacker from Formby who had not even played for the U18s when this season began, but who can now say he has played in a League Cup quarter-final? Or Leighton Clarkson and Jake Cain, inseparable pals off the pitch, who can now talk about the night they bossed the midfield in front of a full house at Anfield? 

Yasser Larouci was a winger 18 months ago, but in January he was a left-back, keeping the likes of Theo Walcott and Richarlison on lockdown in a Merseyside derby, while on the other flank Neco Williams produced his best Alexander-Arnold tribute act. Both, remember, are still teenagers, babies in footballing terms.

Wonderful stories, wonderful memories. But at Kirkby, the message is clear; enjoy the moment, but never stop looking to the future. 

“We don’t celebrate debuts,” Alex Inglethorpe, Liverpool’s academy director, told Goal last year. “We don’t want a player’s best moment in football to be their debut, or winning the FA Youth Cup. If that’s the highlight, then we’ve failed.

“The question should always be ‘what’s next?’”

So, what is next?

That is the big question. There are, of course, no guarantees with young footballers. Inglethorpe uses an analogy that “some take the elevator, while some take the stairs”, and for every Alexander-Arnold, whose rise has been meteoric, there are many, many others who are forced to build their career in a different way.

For many, that will be in the Football League. Others will drop further down the pyramid, while some will, inevitably, drift away from the game altogether. Research conducted by the Professional Footballers’ Association (PFA) in 2017 showed an alarming ‘drop-out’ rate, with as many as five in six boys who are in elite academies at 16 finding themselves out of professional football by the age of 21. It is a brutal sport, and toughness is required – mentally as well as physically – if you are to crack it. 

Liverpool, of course, are acutely aware of such issues. Neil Mellor, a striker who made 22 first-team appearances for the Reds between 2002 and 2005, remembers being told by Steve Heighway that the academy’s aim was “to prepare you for the day you leave Liverpool”, and it is clear speaking to the likes of Inglethorpe or Phil Roscoe, the head of player care, that there is a huge effort from the club to develop not only players, but rounded human beings too – people ready to handle the world, whether as an elite professional or not.

Inglethorpe has already overseen a 40 per cent reduction in player numbers at Kirkby, the aim of which was two-fold; firstly, to make it easier to spot and develop those with first-team potential, and secondly to avoid giving false hope to those who are never going to make it at Anfield. “Common sense,” he says. 

An academy salary cap of £40,000 ($47,000) a year has also been implemented, although those who progress rapidly to first-team level can expect to be looked after by the club. 

“It’s the right thing to do,” Inglethorpe says. “I’ve seen players paid an awful lot when they’re young, and I can’t think of too many examples where they have fulfilled their potential.

“But I’ve seen players paid enough to live on, wages which kept them humble and hungry, those players, I have quite a long list of the ones who came through.”

The benefits of this approach can be seen in the development of players such as Jones, who made his U18s debut at 15 and who has now made nine senior appearances and enjoyed that moment against Everton, or Williams, an unassuming full-back from Wrexham who is now considered a genuine first-team option by Jurgen Klopp. 

Both have been at the club since U9s level, and have been schooled in ‘The Liverpool Way’ – self-belief, yes, but also hard work and humility, an understanding of who you are and where you have come from. People first, players second.

Education forms a huge part of that process. Most of Liverpool’s academy players attend Rainhill High, a comprehensive secondary school around 10 miles away from Kirkby.  

In-house, meanwhile, the club work hard to ensure players are educated on social, health, domestic and practical issues. Regular visits are organised, with players encouraged to read up and learn new skills, be it cookery or language. Classes are provided; the aim, staff say, is not only to educate and to offer essential life skills, but to provide perspective and an appreciation of others, and of the world outside.

In February, for example, a group of academy players visited Normandy’s Gold Beach, one of the five areas of the Allied invasion of German-occupied France in 1944. Prior to that, they had been visited by Bernard Morgan, a former RAF codebreaker, who recounted his World War Two experiences.

A week or so earlier, Barry Lewtas’ U18s squad had been in Walton prison, hearing from inmates about their lives and crimes, experiences and mistakes. It was, according to one staff member who was present, a moving, at times emotional, afternoon.

Such visits are intended to open the eyes of young players, to make them think about their life choices and appreciate their gifts. Being a footballer requires sacrifice and dedication, but so does working at the Jaguar Land Rover factory in Halewood, or being part of the army. Lewtas’ squad spent two days at the Weeton Barracks, near Preston, as part of their pre-season training schedule last summer. “A valuable experience,” says Roscoe. 

Roscoe was formerly the academy’s head of education and welfare, before moving into his new role earlier this season. A couple of weeks prior to that Shrewsbury game, Goal ran into him at an U23s game. 

What stood out was his knowledge of, and care for, those who had been with the club and since departed. He spoke of Sam Hart, a young full-back who had moved on in 2017 but who was now on loan at Shrewsbury from Blackburn, and of Jordan Lussey, formerly the captain of the U21s but now making his way with local side Marine in the eighth tier of English football. Adam Phillips, on loan from Norwich at Morecambe in League Two, was another player mentioned. 

Liverpool’s aim is to have players like this dotted around Europe’s leagues, and in particular in England. Not just talented footballers, but solid professionals, grounded individuals, people with a handle on life. They take pride in the rise of someone like Conor Coady, the Wolves captain, or Jay Spearing, skipper at Blackpool. Ryan Kent’s form at Rangers is closely watched, as are the likes of Raheem Sterling, Jordon Ibe, Jon Flanagan, Andre Wisdom, Tom Ince and Jack Robinson.

“Just because they don’t play here anymore, doesn’t mean we forget about them,” Roscoe said at that U23s game. That statement is perhaps best exemplified by the regular presence of Tom Brewitt, the Morecambe defender, at Kirkby. 

Brewitt left Liverpool in 2017 but has now returned to begin what looks to be a hugely promising coaching career. The 23-year-old has been helping out Lewtas and assistant Jonathan Robinson with the U18s, and has also been taking evening sessions with the U13s and 14s. He has already achieved his UEFA B license, and hopes to complete his A license in the next 12 months. 

Brewitt’s story featured in the first edition of a new regular newsletter which is to be sent to all Liverpool academy players, past and present. It aims not only to celebrate the successes of its former alumni but to offer help and support, to keep them connected to the club. 

The presence of ex-players at Kirkby helps. Rob Jones, the former Reds defender, spends a lot of time with Lewtas and his U18 squad, while Steve McManaman can often be spotted at games. Heighway, meanwhile, was invited by Inglethorpe to return as a coaching consultant, working across all age-groups. His experience and wisdom has, according to sources, been an invaluable tool. 

There will be significant changes at Kirkby this year. Critchley’s surprise departure to take the manager’s job at League One club Blackpool will prompt a coaching reshuffle. It is expected that the highly-rated Lewtas will move up to take charge of the U23s, with his assistant Robinson taking over the U18s group. Continuity is seen as key.

Beyond that, Kirkby is preparing for the arrival of Klopp and his senior squad who were, prior to the current coronavirus crisis, set to move into their new £50 million ($59.5m) complex this summer, bringing the club’s entire footballing operation on one site for the first time. 

A key move, and one which should, in theory, only aid the progression of young players from academy to first team.

Not that Liverpool have been struggling in that regard anyway, mind. 

The present is glittering, but the future looks pretty bright too.

Nurses urge Trump to expand production of protective equipment

National Nurses United on Thursday said President TrumpDonald John TrumpMilitary personnel to handle coronavirus patients at facilities in NYC, New Orleans and Dallas Navy hospital ship USNS Comfort has total of 20 patients: report Fauci says that all states should have stay-at-home orders MORE must invoke the Defense Production Act (DPA) to expand production of personal protective equipment (PPE) amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The union, which represents over 155,000 registered nurses, in a letter called on the president to order increased production of facial shields, respirators, coveralls, gloves, gowns, ventilators and testing equipment and supplies.

“Across the nation, our health care workforce does not have the personal protective equipment it needs to safely care for patients without risking exposure to the virus,” NNU stated in the letter.

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“As a result, health care workers are at risk of illness and death, which puts our entire health care system at risk of collapse. Further, when health care workers are exposed to the virus, they risk transmitting the virus to their families, patients, and communities,” it continued. “If our country fails to immediately protect our health care workers, we will fail to contain the COVID-19 pandemic.”

“The president has taken the first steps to exercise the authorities given to him by the Defense Production Act,” NNU Executive Director Bonnie Castillo added. “We applaud him for using the statute to order ventilator production by General Motors, and we urge him to take similar actions to order manufacturers to immediately increase production of respirators, including N95s, and other personal protective equipment.”

The union also called on Trump to direct the Department of Health and Human Services to collect information on existing supplies and impose restrictions on the hoarding of such supplies, while also ensuring the continued release and distribution of PPE and testing equipment in the national stockpile.

A Wednesday report from The Washington Post indicated the national stockpile of PPE is nearly empty, with a Department of Homeland Security official telling the newspaper, “The stockpile was designed to respond to a handful of cities. It was never built or designed to fight a 50-state pandemic.”

Malaysia's government apologizes for urging women not to be 'sarcastic' to husbands during coronavirus lockdown

Malaysia’s government is apologizing for releasing a series of “tips” that urged women to avoid being “sarcastic” or nagging their husbands during coronavirus lockdown. 

“We apologize if some of the tips we shared were inappropriate and touched on the sensitivities of some parties,” the Ministry for Women, Family and Community Development said Tuesday in a statement obtained by Reuters.

The ministry faced international backlash following the list of “advice” for women to avoid domestic conflicts during partial lockdown, including the hashtag #WomenPreventCOVID19.

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Women were encouraged to dress up and wear makeup while at home, and one of the campaign’s posters asked women to refrain from being “sarcastic” if they need help with household chores.

Women’s Development Department director-general Akhma Hassan said the aim of the campaign was to send out positive messages, according to state-run news agency Bernama.

“The approach used was to share methods and practices to maintain positive relationships within the family and during the phase of working from home,” Hassan said in a statement.

Reuters noted that the online posters have since been removed.

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“[It] is extremely condescending both to women and men,” Nisha Sabanayagam, a manager at the advocacy group All Women’s Action Society, told Reuters. “These posters promote the concept of gender inequality and perpetuate the concept of patriarchy.”

Malaysia has documented 3,116 confirmed cases of the virus and 50 deaths as of Thursday afternoon, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Last month, Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin enacted a series of measures aimed at stemming COVID-19, including strict restriction of movement and lockdowns of all travel.

Since the measures were implemented, a government hotline for domestic abuse victims and vulnerable children has seen incoming calls double to nearly 2,000, Reuters reported, citing local media.

Most believe stopping virus is larger priority than saving economy: poll

The majority of Americans believe that fighting and stopping the coronavirus outbreak should be the federal government’s top priority, ahead of fixing the country’s crippled economy, a new Public Agenda/USA Today/Ipsos poll finds.

According to the poll, conducted March 27-30, 72 percent of Americans surveyed said that government should focus on stopping the outbreak of COVID-19, while 21 percent said saving the economy should be the main focus.

More than 80 percent of respondents said that they supported restarting the economy gradually to avoid putting more people’s lives in danger.

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Additionally, 74 percent said they believed that state and local governments were doing all they could to fight the virus, while only half said they believed the same of the federal government.

This was largely split along party lines, with 74 percent of Republicans saying the federal government was doing all it could, while just 33 percent of Democrats said the same.

Respondents said they expected the crisis to last for months, with 23 percent saying they believe the measures to deal with the outbreak will be in place for at least six months.

The Trump administration has tried to juggle handling the flailing economy while supporting hospitals and agencies that have struggled to keep the pandemic under control, with more than 245,000 confirmed cases of coronavirus in the country as of Friday morning, according to Johns Hopkins University.

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The survey had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

Aircraft carrier captain removed from duty after pleading for help with coronavirus outbreak

The captain of an aircraft carrier struggling with a coronavirus outbreak has been relieved from command after a letter he penned pleading for help leaked to the media.

“Today at my direction the commanding officer of the USS Theodore Roosevelt, Capt. Brett Crozier was relieved of command,” acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly announced Thursday at a Pentagon briefing.

“I have no doubt in my mind that Capt. Crozier did what he thought was in the best interest of the safety and well being of his crew. Unfortunately it did the opposite,” Modly added, saying it panicked families of sailors on board and gave information about the ship’s capabilities to America’s adversaries. “In my judgment, relieving him of command was in the best interest of the United States Navy and the nation in this time when the nation needs the Navy to be strong and confident in the face of adversity.”

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Modly said there was no pressure from the White House to fire Crozier and that Defense Secretary Mark EsperMark EsperMilitary personnel to handle coronavirus patients at facilities in NYC, New Orleans and Dallas Aircraft carrier captain removed from duty after pleading for help with coronavirus outbreak Esper: Military personnel could help treat coronavirus patients ‘if push comes to shove’ MORE supported the decision.

In a brief statement alongside Modly, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Michael Gilday said he supported Modly’s decision.

“Make no mistake, nobody cares more about our sailors and those aboard the Theodore Roosevelt than our leadership in the Navy,” Gilday said. “Our sailors deserve the best leadership that we can absolutely provide.”

Crozier wrote a letter to Navy leaders that was obtained and published by the San Francisco Chronicle on Tuesday, in which he warned of dire consequences if most of the sailors on Roosevelt aren’t evacuated.

Modly, who noted the Chronicle is the captain’s hometown paper, said he does not know if Crozier is the one who leaked it, but that he sent the letter to dozens of people and therefore didn’t do his responsibility to ensure it wasn’t leaked.

“It was copied to 20 or 30 other people. That’s just not acceptable. He did not take care and what that did is it created a little bit of a panic on the ship,” Modly said. “And at the same time, the families here in the United States were panicked about the reality.”

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As of Thursday, 114 sailors on board the Roosevelt had tested positive for COVID-19. The 4,800-crew ship has been docked in Guam since last week while the entire crew is tested for the virus.

In his letter, Crozier pleaded in stark terms for permission to evacuate all but 10 percent of the crew from the Roosevelt, where he said it was impossible to properly isolate and quarantine sailors to stop a growing coronavirus outbreak.

“We are not at war. Sailors do not need to die,” Crozier wrote. “If we do not act now, we are failing to properly take care of our most trusted asset — our sailors.”

Modly shot back Thursday that “while we may not be at war in a traditional sense, neither are we truly at peace.”

“We all understand and cherish our responsibilities and, frankly, our love for all of our people in uniform, but to allow those emotions to color our judgment when communicating the current operational picture can at best create unnecessary confusion, and at worst, provide an incomplete picture of American combat readiness to our adversaries,” Modly said.

After Crozier’s letter leaked, Navy officials announced they would offload 2,700 sailors by Friday.

Modly asserted Thursday plans were already in place for to address the outbreak before Crozier’s letter became public, arguing the leak gave a false impression that the plan was a response to the memo.

“The captain’s actions made his sailors, their families and many in the public believe that his letter was the only reason help from our larger Navy family was forthcoming, which was hardly the case,” Modly said.

Modly also said Crozier’s comments to Navy leaders in other conversations were not as dire as the ones in his letter. For example, Modly said, Crozier told him that six ventilators would be enough for the ship despite saying in the letter sailors could die.

Despite Crozier losing his job, Modly said there should not be a chilling effect on those reporting issues up the chain of command.

“It would be a mistake to view this decision as somehow not supportive of your duty to report problems, request help, protect your crews, challenge assumptions as you see fit,” he said. “This decision is not one of retribution. It is about confidence. It is not an indictment of character, but rather of judgment. While I do take issue with the validity of some of the points in Capt. Crozier’s letter, he was absolutely correct in raising them.”

Executive officer Capt. Dan Keeler is commanding the ship temporarily while Rear Adm.-select Carlos Sardiello travels to Guam to take command, Modly said.

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Vice Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Robert Burke will also conduct an investigation into the circumstances and climate in Pacific Fleet that led to a breakdown in the chain of command, Modly said.

Democrats on the House Armed Services Committee blasted the Navy for firing Crozier.

“While Capt. Crozier clearly went outside the chain of command, his dismissal at this critical moment – as the sailors aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt are confronted with the COVID-19 pandemic – is a destabilizing move that will likely put our service members at greater risk and jeopardize our fleet’s readiness,” committee Chairman Adam SmithDavid (Adam) Adam SmithOvernight Defense: Aircraft carrier captain removed from duty after pleading for help with outbreak | Trump to expand use of defense law to build ventilators | Hospital ships receiving few patients Aircraft carrier captain removed from duty after pleading for help with coronavirus outbreak Top Armed Services Republican unveils proposals on military families, acquisition reform MORE (D-Wash.) and subcommittee chairs Reps. Joe CourtneyJoseph (Joe) D. CourtneyOvernight Defense: Aircraft carrier captain removed from duty after pleading for help with outbreak | Trump to expand use of defense law to build ventilators | Hospital ships receiving few patients Aircraft carrier captain removed from duty after pleading for help with coronavirus outbreak Procedural politics: What just happened with the coronavirus bill? MORE (D-Conn.), John GaramendiJohn Raymond GaramendiOvernight Defense: Aircraft carrier captain removed from duty after pleading for help with outbreak | Trump to expand use of defense law to build ventilators | Hospital ships receiving few patients Aircraft carrier captain removed from duty after pleading for help with coronavirus outbreak Biden rise calms Democratic jitters MORE (D-Calif.) and Jackie SpeierKaren (Jackie) Lorraine Jacqueline SpeierOvernight Defense: Aircraft carrier captain removed from duty after pleading for help with outbreak | Trump to expand use of defense law to build ventilators | Hospital ships receiving few patients Aircraft carrier captain removed from duty after pleading for help with coronavirus outbreak House Democrats eyeing much broader Phase 3 stimulus MORE (D-Calif.) said in a joint statement.

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“Throwing the commanding officer overboard without a thorough investigation is not going to solve the growing crisis aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt,” they added. “What’s more, we are very concerned about the chilling effect this dismissal will have on commanders throughout the Department of Defense.”

 

Murder conviction in Daniel Pearl's death overturned

A Pakistani court on Thursday overturned the conviction of the man found guilty in the 2002 kidnapping and killing of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.

The Karachi court instead found Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh guilty of kidnapping, sentencing him to seven years in prison, The Associated Press reported.

Pearl, who was the newspaper’s South Asia bureau chief at the time of his death, traveled to Pakistan while investigating connections between Richard Reid, who was convicted of attempting to detonate a bomb in his shoe on an airplane, and al Qaeda.

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Pearl was kidnapped and beheaded in February 2002, and Saeed was convicted and sentenced to death that July.

As Saeed has been on death row for 18 years, he will likely be freed with time served unless the government challenges the decision, his lawyer, Khwaja Naveed, told The Associated Press. Faiz Sha, prosecutor general for Sindh province, said the government plans to appeal the judgment to Pakistan’s Supreme Court.

The province’s High Court also acquitted three other men who had previously been serving life sentences in connection with the killing, Fahad Naseem, Sheikh Adil, and Salman Saqib, according to the AP.

Saeed initially admitted to sending a series of anonymous emails to Pakistani and U.S. news organizations in the wake of Pearl’s disappearance that demanded better treatment of prisoners at the U.S. Naval Base in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, but he has since recanted.

“Omar has already served 18 years, so his release orders will be issued sometime today. He will be out in a few days,” Naveed told Reuters.

“We will go through the court order once it is issued, we will probably file an appeal,” Shah told the news service.

During the appeals process, all of the accused will likely be freed, Muhammad Farooq, a lawyer at the Sindh High Court who was uninvolved in the case told Reuters.

“The prosecution cannot stop their release in this case, unless they produce a Supreme Court interim order,” he said.

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