LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) A UPS plane crashed on takeoff from the airport in Louisville, Kentucky, igniting a huge fire on ground, officials said Tuesday.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) A UPS plane crashed on takeoff from the airport in Louisville, Kentucky, igniting a huge fire on ground, officials said Tuesday.
The U. S. Department of Agriculture will pay about half of November benefits for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, though benefits could take months to flow to recipients, the department said Monday in a brief to a federal court in Rhode Island, despite a court order to tap the necessary money to distribute them. The post Only Reduced Food Stamps Benefits Will Be Issued, and May Take Months to Get To You appeared first on FlaglerLive.
The Trump administration left an immigration expert floored after deporting a woman who had gone to the police to secure justice against her husband for leveling death threats despite Congress having created a visa program explicitly to protect people in that precise situation. The case, originally reported by the Los Angeles Times, concerns an undocumented woman known only as “Carmen. Carmen’s abusive husband came home drunk one night last summer. He pounded and kicked the door. He threatened to kill her as her young son watched in horror. She called police, eventually obtaining a restraining order. Months later he returned and beat her again. Police came again and he was eventually deported,” reported Rachel Uranga. “Thinking she finally escaped his cruelty, Carmen applied for what is known as a U-Visa. The visa provides crime victims a way to stay in the United States legally.”However, according to the report, that application was left to gather dust and then, “During a regular immigration check-in in June, Carmen was detained. Two months later, she was put on a plane with her 8-year-old son, who just completed second grade. She was headed to her home country, terrified her husband would find her.”Carmen, according to the report, is one of several deportees represented by a group of lawyers who in October “sued the Trump administration in the Central District of California for detaining and deporting survivors with pending visa applications, some of whom have been granted status to stay and sometimes work.”A number of deportation cases under the Trump administration have triggered public outrage, one of the most high-profile being Kilmar Abrego Garcia of Maryland, who was shipped off to the infamous Salvadoran CECOT megaprison despite a court order prohibiting his deportation to that country, then after months was repatriated only for the administration to slap dubious gang charges on him and shop around for a deal for any other country to accept him.
New York Attorney General Letitia James, Connecticut Attorney General William Tong and 20 other attorneys general have filed a lawsuit in U. S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts against the U. S. Department of Education and Linda McMahon in her official capacity as secretary of the Department of Education. McMahon used to be CEO of [.] The post AGs James, Tong other sue Linda McMahon and her department appeared first on Westfair Communications.
The New York Times reports that on Wednesday, the Supreme Court will “consider for the first time whether to say ‘no'” to President Donald Trump “in a lasting way” as they weigh in on the president’s “use of emergency powers to impose sweeping tariffs on nearly every U. S. trading partner.”According to the Times, the case is a difficult one, made even worse by Trump’s “efforts to personalize the dispute. Observers of the court said the justices would be keenly aware that Mr. Trump would perceive a legal defeat as a personal blow,” the Times notes. Donald B. Verrilli Jr., who was the solicitor general during the Obama administration, agrees, saying “You can’t help but think that that’s going to be hovering over the decision-making process in this case.” Thus far, the Supreme Court’s six conservative justices have “so far been receptive to Mr. Trump’s claims of presidential authority,” the Times says. The tariffs case, however, is the first time the justices will weigh in on “the underlying legal merits” of Trump’s actions.”At the end of this term, we’ll see wins and losses for Trump on presidential power,” said Jack Goldsmith, a Harvard Law School professor and former top Justice Department lawyer under George W. Bush. “This is the case I think is the closest, so I don’t know which way it will cut.”This case, the Times says, “has divided the conservative legal community.”Trump’s lawyers say an obscure 1977 statute “gives him broad authority to impose tariffs when he believes an emergency exists,” but that law doesn’t mention “tarrifstaxes”, or “duties,” the Times explains.“Emergency powers are meant to be used in emergencies,” said Michael W. McConnell, a former federal appeals court judge nominated by President George W. Bush, who is leading the coalition of small businesses. “No Supreme Court would want to provoke a confrontation with a president of the United States unnecessarily, but on the other hand, the law is the law.”University of Texas at Austin law professor Tara Lee Grove says may find it “a stretch” to characterize trade deficits as an emergency, but the ’77 statute, she says, is “broad and appears to give the president a lot of discretion.”“The justices will be struggling with whether they want to second-guess any presidential decision about an emergency,” she said. Court observers have pointed to a dissenting opinion from Judge Richard G. Taranto, who was appointed by President Barack Obama, as a possible guidepost for the Supreme Court’s conservatives, should they back Trump, the Times explains. Taranto, the Times says, “argued that Congress intentionally used broad language to give presidents flexibility,” embodying “an eyes-open congressional grant of broad emergency authority in this foreign affairs realm.”D. John Sauer, the solicitor general, said Trump’s use of the ’77 statute to impose tariffs was not an unlimited delegation of power and referred to Judge Taranto’s dissent 10 times in his filing. Grove says the court will face a “legitimacy dilemma” as “they weigh the implications of their decision for the president’s legacy and the economy.”“No matter what they do in this case, it will be painted as political,” Grove says. Goldsmith says that he thinks the Supreme Court still has some integrity, but if Trump attends oral arguments as he said he intends to, things can get “awkward.”“I doubt the court wants to be perceived as bowing down to him,” Goldsmith says, but if Trump does show up, “it’s just going to make it harder for them to rule for him.”.
On Thursday, Tesla shareholders will gather for the company’s annual meeting and will vote on Musk’s $1 trillion compensation package.
Parts of the U. S. economy, particularly housing, may already be in recession because of high interest rates, U. S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Sunday, repeating his call for the Federal Reserve to accelerate rate cuts.
Illinois passes sanctuary law blocking ICE arrests near courthouses, creating 1, 000-foot buffer zones. Legal experts question constitutionality under federal supremacy.
With a new lawsuit against Kamehameha Schools, many Native Hawaiians see the challenge to its admissions policies as a matter of history and sovereignty.