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Friday 15 April 2022

At 97, Mormon president becomes oldest in church history

 At 97, Mormon president becomes oldest in church history

Russell Nelson, the president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, became the faith's oldest leader in history on Thursday

SALT LAKE CITY -- The president of the The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints became the faith's oldest leader in history on Thursday at 97 years, seven months and six days.

President Russell Nelson, a former heart surgeon, has led the faith known widely as the Mormon church since 2018 and oversees everything from the church's multibillion-dollar financial holdings to church doctrine and policy. Members of the faith believe the president-prophet receives divine revelation and direct word from God.

Church presidents serve until they die.

Nelson's surpasses the previous oldest church president, Gordon B. Hinckley, who died in 2008 at the age of 97 after serving 13 years.

Nelson has thus far served for four years as president, a much shorter period than his immediate predecessors, who served about eight and 10 years. Before becoming president, he served for 34 years as a high-ranking church official.

Tennessee inmate seeks execution halt over DNA evidence

 Tennessee inmate seeks execution halt over DNA evidence

A Tennessee death row inmate is asking the state Supreme Court to vacate his execution date so that an appeals court can review new evidence in his case

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- A Tennessee death row inmate asked the state Supreme Court on Thursday to vacate his execution date so that an appeals court could review new evidence in his case.

Oscar Smith, 71, is scheduled to receive a lethal injection April 21. He was convicted of fatally stabbing and shooting his estranged wife, Judith Smith, and her sons Jason and Chad Burnett, 13 and 16, at their Nashville home on Oct. 1, 1989. Smith has maintained that he is innocent.

Earlier this month, Smith asked the Davidson County Criminal Court to reopen his case after a new type of DNA analysis found the DNA of an unknown person on one of the murder weapons. The judge denied that request as well as a second request to reconsider, writing that the evidence of Smith's guilt was extensive. Smith has appealed to the Criminal Court of Appeals and asked for an expedited hearing.

In a Thursday motion, Smith's attorneys asked the Tennessee Supreme Court to halt Smith's execution so that the Appeals Court could have time to fully consider the new evidence. They argue that the Criminal Court judge incorrectly applied the law when it denied Smith's request to reopen his case.

Smith previously sought to prove that fingerprint evidence used against him was unreliable. In Thursday's motion, Smith's attorneys argued the combination of a fingerprint and DNA from an unknown person on one of the murder weapons should be considered together as strong proof of his innocence.

States scale back food stamp benefits even as prices soar

 States scale back food stamp benefits even as prices soar

Month by month, more of the roughly 40 million Americans who get help buying groceries through the federal food stamp program are seeing their benefits plunge

The payments to low-income individuals and families are dropping as governors end COVID-19 disaster declarations and opt out of an ongoing federal program that made their states eligible for dramatic increases in SNAP benefits, also known as food stamps. The U.S. Department of Agriculture began offering the increased benefit in April 2020 in response to surging unemployment after the COVID-19 pandemic swept over the country.

The result is that depending on the politics of a state, individuals and families in need find themselves eligible for significantly different levels of help buying food.

Nebraska took the most aggressive action anywhere in the country, ending the emergency benefits four months into the pandemic in July 2020 in a move Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts said was necessary to "show the rest of the country how to get back to normal.”

Since then, nearly a dozen states with Republican leadership have taken similar action, with Iowa this month being the most recent place to slash the benefits. Benefits also will be cut in Wyoming and Kentucky in the next month. Arkansas, Florida, Idaho, Missouri, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska, South Dakota and Tennessee have also scaled back the benefits.

Republican leaders argue that the extra benefits were intended to only temporarily help people forced out of work by the pandemic. Now that the virus has eased, they maintain, there is no longer a need to offer the higher payments at a time when businesses in most states are struggling to find enough workers.

But the extra benefits also help out families in need at a time of skyrocketing prices for food. Recipients receive at least $95 per month under the program, but some individuals and families typically eligible for only small benefits can get hundreds of dollars in extra payments each month.

The entire program would come to a halt if the federal government decides to end its public health emergency, though the Biden administration so far hasn’t signaled an intention to do so.

For Tara Kramer, 45, of Des Moines, the decision by Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds to end the emergency payments starting April 1 meant her monthly SNAP benefit plunged from $250 in March to $20 in April. Kramer, who has a genetic disorder that can cause intense pain, said the extra money enabled her to buy healthier food that made her feel better and help her to live a more active life.

“My heart sank,” Kramer said. “All the memories from before the emergency allotment came rushing back.”

Alex Murphy, a spokesman for Reynolds, noted the extra benefits were always intended to help people who lost jobs because of the pandemic and said, “we have to return to pre-pandemic life.” Murphy pointed out that Iowa has over 86,000 job openings listed on a state unemployment website.

But Kramer said she’s not able to work and that even getting out of her apartment can be a struggle at times.

Vince Hall, who oversees public policy for the nationwide food bank network Feeding America, said ending the extra benefits ignores the reality that even as the pandemic wanes there hasn’t been a decline in demand at food banks.

Wages have been increasing in the United States and the national unemployment rate in March dropped to 3.6%, but those gains have been offset by an 8.5% increase in inflation compared to a year ago. Food is among items rising the fastest, leaving many families unable to buy enough groceries.

“The COVID pandemic is giving way to a hunger pandemic,” Hall said. “We’re in a real, real struggle.”

Feeding America, which represents 200 food banks, reports that demand for food has increased just as these organizations are seeing individual donations dwindle and food costs rise. The organization estimates the nation’s food banks will spend 40% more to buy food in the fiscal year ending June 2022 as in the previous year.

For people like Annie Ballan, 51, of Omaha, Nebraska, the decision by Ricketts to stop participating in the program reduced the SNAP payments she and her son receive from nearly $500 a month to $41. Both have health problems and can’t work.

“From the middle of the month to the end of the month, people have no food,” Ballan said, her voice rising in anger. “This is all the governor’s fault. He says he loves Nebraskans, that Nebraskans are wonderful, but he’s cut off our food.”

The demand on food banks will only grow as more states reduce their SNAP payments, which typically provide nine meals for every one meal offered by food banks, Hall said.

Valerie Andrews, 59, of St. Charles, Missouri, said the SNAP benefits that she and her husband rely on fell from $430 a month to $219 when Missouri ended the extra payments in August 2021. Andrews, who is disabled, said she tries to budget carefully and gets food regularly from a food pantry but it's difficult.

“We’re barely making it from paycheck to paycheck,” she said. “It gets pretty rough most of the time.”

Officials at food banks and pantries said they will do their best to meet increased demand but there is no way they can fully offset the drop in SNAP benefits.

Matt Unger, director of the Des Moines Area Religious Council network of food pantries in Iowa’s capital city, noted the pantry's cost for a 5-ounce can of chicken as jumped from 54 cents in March 2019 to a current price of $1.05.

“Costs are just going through the roof,” he said.


US gambling group seeks crackdown on illegal betting sites

 US gambling group seeks crackdown on illegal betting sites

The gambling industry’s national trade association is asking the federal government to crack down on illegal betting sites, saying consumers need to be protected

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. -- The U.S. gambling industry's national trade association is asking the federal government to crack down on illegal betting sites, saying consumers need to be protected.

The American Gaming Association said Thursday it sent a letter to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland asking the Justice Department to investigate and prosecute the largest illegal bookmaking operations.

“While the challenge of illegal gambling is not new, the brazen and coordinated manner in which it occurs — both online and in communities — has elevated this problem to a level that requires significant federal attention,” wrote Bill Miller, the association's president.

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.

Sports betting is currently legal in 33 states and Washington, D.C., and more than 157 million American adults either have or soon will have the ability to bet legally on sports in their state.

But the illegal market continues to exist, including through websites, many based in foreign countries.

Those illegal operators can offer better odds and promotions than legal operators because the offshore operations do not pay taxes or have to comply with government regulations, Miller said.

“Illicit gambling operations have also been known to at times simply disappear, walking away with their customers’ funds,” he added.

Miller said the association has done research showing that most consumers want to use legal, regulated gambling options, but are not always able to tell which sites are legal and which ones aren't.

Miller also said internet searches for illegal betting sites increased by 38% last year, faster than the rate of searches for legal betting sites.

Sports betting used to be illegal in all but four U.S. states until New Jersey won a Supreme Court case in 2018 allowing any state to offer it legally.

Florida fraud victim tracks down suspect, calls police

 Florida fraud victim tracks down suspect, calls police

When a Florida woman noticed fraudulent activity on her bank account, she tracked down the suspect at a gas station and called police

STUART, Fla. -- When a Florida woman noticed fraudulent activity on her bank account, she began investigating on her own, and was able to track him to a gas station. Then she called police.

The woman first noticed the charges on Wednesday coming from a WaWa gas station, Stuart police said in a Facebook post.

She was able to find out that a man driving a white work truck had made the charges, police said. They didn't say how she got this information.

The woman thought that perhaps the man was a creature of habit and would return to the scene of the crime. So she went to the gas station on Thursday and waited. A white work truck pulled up and began pumping gas, police said.

She saw the man toss credit cards in the trash and at the same time was receiving fraudulent alerts from her bank.

That's when she called 911.

A Stuart police sergeant came to the gas station and talked to the man, who is from Fort Lauderdale.

Detectives later found multiple steel tanks in the back of the truck as well as other tanks hidden in the bed of the truck, the report said. They also found 28 fraudulent credit and debit cards in the truck.

The man was arrested and charged with trafficking in or possessing counterfeit credit cards, unlawful conveyance of fuel, obtaining fuel by fraud, fraudulent use of a credit card more than two times within six months, and unlawful possession of a personal ID of five or more persons.

Tornado causes housing crunch in poor, rural Alabama county

 Tornado causes housing crunch in poor, rural Alabama county

A tornado that hit a rural Alabama county has created a housing crunch by damaging one of the most densely populated areas in the region: A public housing community

EUTAW, Ala. -- Only 7,600 or so people live in impoverished Greene County, and hundreds of them are clustered in a public housing community called Branch Heights. Officials are now trying to find housing for more than 100 residents who were displaced when a tornado hit the neighborhood late Wednesday.

“We have to find somewhere for them to live, they have to have shelter,” Anita Lewis, executive director of the Greene County Housing Authority, told WBMA-TV on Thursday. “The more I looked, the more devastating it got.”

More than 40 homes in the community were damaged by what the National Weather Service said was a weak tornado, and 27 are uninhabitable with significant damage to roofs and other parts of the structure. About 110 people were displaced, officials said.

Mattie Roscoe, who rode out the twister with one of her grandchildren, was briefly trapped in the wreckage of her home.

“All I said was take care and have mercy on me, Lord,” Roscoe told WBRC-TV.

The storm presented the first crisis of first-term Mayor LaTasha Johnson's new administration. She said she had made it a priority to clean up the storm damage and find housing for displaced people.

“Right now we’re in the process of getting families located to have somewhere to stay, and we’re asking for help, any help we can get,” Johnson said.

The damage wasn't widespread, and it's unclear whether the area qualifies for outside aid. The housing authority plans to put people in a hotel and work as quickly as possible to get apartments ready for residents to move back, but some of the work could take longer.

“We don’t have any vacant units," Lewis said. "We’ve reached out to other housing authorities to see if they have any vacancies. ... If not here, we will have to go to Tuscaloosa.”

But there’s concern about transportation if residents are placed outside of Greene County, which is among the poorest regions in Alabama.

“A lot of residents don’t have cars, so this is the best place for them to be,” said Lewis. “We are going to have to try to figure out how we are going to deal with that.”

Wednesday 13 April 2022

Mother of teen killed at school by police files lawsuit

 Mother of teen killed at school by police files lawsuit

The mother of a teenage boy who was killed by police in his Tennessee high school has filed a federal lawsuit over the shooting

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. -- The mother of a teenage boy who was killed by police in his Tennessee high school has filed a federal lawsuit over the shooting.

Chanada Robinson filed suit Monday against the city of Knoxville, the Knoxville Police Department and the Knox County Board of Education in the death of her 17-year-old son, Anthony Thompson Jr., last year at Austin-East High School, news outlets reported.

The suit alleges officers didn't follow proper training and procedures, didn't provide appropriate medical care and weren't properly trained on de-escalation tactics.

Robinson is seeking damages that include the cost of burial for her son and additional training for the Knoxville Police Department.

“We need to get to the heart of what happened to Anthony. We need to see some policy changes so that this never happens again, (so that) there’s never another mother sitting in my position,” Robinson said.

Knox County District Attorney General Charme Allen determined the shooting was justifiable under Tennessee’s self-defense law last year.

Video footage of the April 12, 2021, shooting shows four officers responded to the school after a domestic abuse call from the mother of Thompson’s former girlfriend. The officers went into a bathroom where they believed Thompson was, but Allen’s office said the officers did not know the teen was carrying a handgun.

The video shows the officers locating and then attempting to handcuff Thompson. One officer grabbed Thompson’s right arm, but Thompson’s left arm was in his sweatshirt pocket, where the video shows he was holding a handgun. The barrel of the weapon could be seen peaking through the pocket. Thompson’s weapon went off, hitting a trash can but not any of the officers.

The shot confused the officers into thinking their lives were in danger and one of them was potentially injured, Allen said — pointing to the various statements they later gave investigators.

Officer Jonathon Clabough can be seen removing his weapon and shooting Thompson in the shoulder. Allen said the officers did not know Thompson had been shot until two minutes after handcuffing him and turning over his body. That’s when they saw the large amounts of blood and called the school nurse for medical assistance.

Knoxville police, the city and Knox County Schools declined to comment, citing the pending litigation.