Justices make the tough but right call in cross-border shooting case | TheHill – The Hill

The U.S. Supreme Court held last week in Hernandez v. Mesa that the parents of a Mexican national shot and killed in Mexico by a U.S. Border Patrol agent cannot sue that agent in federal court. The decision was 5-4, dividing the court along what many observers regard to be predictable ideological lines.

But to view this decision through the lens of partisan ideology would be a mistake.

The incident that launched the case is horrifying. When 15-year-old Sergio Adrin Hernndez Gereca was playing in a cement culvert between El Paso, Texas, and Cuidad Juarez, Mexico, in 2010, the Border Patrol agent detained his friend and shot Hernndez in the face, killing him. Hernndez was standing in Mexican territory.

At bottom, this case was not about whether Hernndezs family deserves an avenue for seeking redress for the alleged violation of their sons Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights. Rather, it is about the power of federal courts to provide a remedy where Congress has provided none.

The key legal precedent at issue in Hernandez originates from Bivens v. Six Unknown Federal Narcotics Agents, a 1971 decision in which the Supreme Court held that a person victimized by an unlawful arrest and search could bring a claim for damages in federal court directly under the Fourth Amendment, even though neither the text of that amendment nor any federal statute authorized such a claim.

That decision has been called into question by the court in recent years, based on the idea that recognizing claims not provided for in the Constitution or by Congress risks engaging federal courts in the exercise of legislative rather than judicial power.

The question in the Hernandez case was whether to extend the Bivens decision into the new context of a cross-border incident that was alleged to have violated the victims constitutional rights. In light of the international context of this dispute, the court concluded that fashioning a judicial remedy not created by Congress risked interfering not only with Congresss legislative authority but also with the presidents authority, as it pertains to national security and international affairs.

In other words, if the federal courts are effectively going to make up a right to sue that no constitutional or statutory text endorses perhaps an altogether dubious enterprise they at least should avoid such an undertaking in circumstances presenting considerations of foreign relations and border protection; such considerations are meant to be addressed by the executive branch, and involve the weighing of costs and benefits of a kind the judiciary is ill-suited to assess.

True, the result of acknowledging that federal courts lack the power to improvise judicial remedies in this context means that the victims parents in this case cannot recover damages in a federal civil action. But the proper way to address that undesirable outcome is to urge Congress to enact legislation that would authorize the lawsuit that Hernandezs parents seek.

There are several statutes in which Congress has authorized claims against government officials for alleged wrongdoing. Section 1983 of Title 42 of the U.S. Code permits the recovery of damages for constitutional violations by state officials. The Federal Tort Claims Act provides a remedy for most claims against federal government employees, but it does not apply to claims arising in a foreign country.

Either of these provisions could be amended to extend the ability to sue federal government officials for conduct that violates rights of persons abroad. The fact that neither of these statutes nor any other statute permits these suits provides a fairly strong indication that it would be inappropriate for the federal courts to permit them on their own initiative.

It is indeed tragic that Hernandez lost his life in this incident. It is also tragic that his parents cannot seek monetary damages for their loss in U.S. federal courts. But the culprit in this tragedy should not be seen as a block of conservative ideologues on the Supreme Court but, rather, a Congress that has opted not to open our courthouse doors to those whom our officials harm abroad.

A. Benjamin Spencer is the Bennett Boskey Visiting Professor of Law atHarvard Law School and the Justice Thurgood Marshall Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Virginia School of Law. Follow him on Twitter @PROFSPENCER.

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Justices make the tough but right call in cross-border shooting case | TheHill - The Hill

Bivens Liability and Its Alternatives – Reason

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court decided in Hernandez v. Mesa that there is no cause of action for damages if a federal border patrol agent unconstitutionally shoots somebody across the border. The Court had recognized a cause of action under the Fourth Amendment against federal law enforcement agents in a 1971 case called Bivens, and extended it in two subsequent cases, but it has rejected further Bivens claims in every Supreme Court Bivens case in my lifetime and that doesn't seem likely to change. Two Justices, Thomas and Gorsuch, have called for Bivens to be overruled on the grounds that it lacks a formal or historical basis.

Justices Thomas and Gorsuch are right about that the lack of a formal and historical basis, but I worry about the broader picture. As Justice Thomas's concurrence notes, it's not like there was no remedy for unconstitutional conduct before Bivens. Rather, as Thomas writes:

From the ratification of the Bill of Rights until 1971, the Court did not create implied private actions for damages against federal officers alleged to have violated a citizen's constitutional rights. Suits to recover such damages were generally brought under state law.

What Justice Thomas does not note is that it has become very hard to bring those suits under state law either. There is some debate about whether that difficulty is attributable to Congress's 1984 enactment of the Westfall Act, various judicial decisions arguably misconstruing that act, or what (see this article by Vladeck and Vasquez), but I think at this point we're entitled to wonder, if the Court is going to abolish the 20th century remedies for unconstitutional conduct, can we at least have the 19th century remedies back?

Normally the Court lacks the ability to take a big-picture view in these cases, since it has only the issue before it. But in Hernandez, the petitioner foresaw this problem and petitioned the Supreme Court to consider a second question if there is no Bivens liability, then, he asked:

whether the Westfall Act violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment insofar as it preempts state-law tort suits for damages against rogue federal law enforcement officers acting within the scope of their employment for which there is no alternative legal remedy.

So Hernandez is the rare case in which the Court could have considered both questions at the same time and thus provided an account for what violations of constitutional violations remain. It does seem perverse to think that Congress can eliminate state law damages for constitutional violations without either Congress or the courts providing an alternative . It's possible that this seemingly perverse result is constitutional, especially if one takes a broad view of federal power, but it seems troubling for the Court to repeatedly narrow Bivens without at least considering that question.

[Cross-posted from Summary, Judgment.]

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One thing these two New Mexico sheriffs agree on: ‘Red flag’ law will end up in court – Las Cruces Sun-News

What every New Mexican should know about the state's new "Red Flag" law Las Cruces Sun-News

LAS CRUCES - New Mexico's Extreme RiskFirearmProtection Order Act will take effect on May 20, after Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed it into law on Tuesday.

Addressing New Mexico sheriffs who opposed the bill and threatennot to enforce it, Lujan Grisham said ignoring the law was not an option.

"If they really intend to do that, they should resign as a law enforcement officer and leader in that community," she said.

A majority of New Mexico sheriffs opposed the law, which provides for civil orders requiring individuals to surrender their firearms within 48 hours if a court views them as presenting a threat to themselves or others.

While much of the opposition to the billcentered on the Second Amendment right to bear arms, critics of the bill also raised questions about due process rights, searches and seizures and the prospect of overreach by law enforcement.

San Juan County Sheriff Shane Ferrari on the day he took the oath of office, Monday, Dec. 31, 2018.(Photo: Hannah Grover/The Daily Times)

"We have a saying in law enforcement: You don't look for an elephant in a shoebox," San Juan County Sheriff Shane Ferrari told the Sun-News. "That restricts law enforcement from going outside the scope of their duties looking for things they're not supposed to. If I'm looking for a TV set, that doesn't mean I get to open your underwear drawer."

As originally filed, Senate Bill 5 would have required sheriff's deputies to search a respondent's home for firearms and ammunition, creating an opportunity for searches without a criminal warrant, Ferrari said. The bill was amended before passage, however.

In its final version, the law allows relatives, employers or school administrators to file affidavits requesting a law enforcement agency to petition a court for a civil order requiring an individual to surrender their firearms.

For reporting on how legislation affects you,subscribe to the Las Cruces Sun-News today.

"We still have some constitutional issues, where you're being ordered by the government to give up your guns when you didn't commit a crime," Ferrari said, while indicating relief that deputies would be serving a court order rather than entering someone's home to confiscate their guns.

"That's a fight for another day," Ferrari said. "At some point, either the U.S. Supreme Court or the New Mexico Supreme Court is going to have to look at these issues."

Doa Ana County Sheriff Kim Stewart, a supporter of the bill, agreed the law will be reviewed in court.

"It's groundbreaking legislation," Stewart said in an interview for the Sun-News. "It will be challenged in court and probably it should be. I think some of it hopefully will be clarified."

Doa Ana County Sheriff Kim Stewart at the podium during the Board of Commissioners meeting on Tuesday, August 13, 2019.(Photo: Algernon D'Ammassa/Sun-News)

Stewart said the law includes confusing language about standards of evidence to be met in considering a petition, and some conflation of criminal and civil process among other details.

She claimed credit for one improvement made to the bill during this winter's legislative session: What happens if a law enforcement officer is subject to a protective order seeking their guns?

"That's not something where agencies want to be pitted against each other," Stewart said. "That's got to be decided by someone other than the local agency. That's got to go to the Attorney General or the District Attorney's office."

On her recommendation, legislative staff incorporated the change in a floor amendment to the bill.

More:Doa Ana County Commission votes against supporting red flag bill

Other questions remain, Stewart said, including what her agency is supposed to do if a persondoes not comply with an order to surrender their guns.

"Can we search the garage? Does it mean we can search the barn? Where does that stop?" she asked. "What if he has a storage locker full of guns? Can we go and search the storage locker?"

An additional problem, in the event guns are confiscated, is that her agency would be stuck with the costs of storing and even the maintenance of impounded weapons. In this respect, she described the law as "an unfunded mandate."

She could not predict how often the new law would be used, but observed that a 2019 law allowing the confiscation of guns from domestic abusers and stalkers had not yet been used to impound a single weaponin Doa Ana County.

Stewart said she wished more sheriffs had offered input to improve the bill instead of categorically opposing it.

Legislative staff "are tasked to write a law and they would like the law to be as reasonable and realistic and valuable as possible," Stewart said. "When they reach out and the only answer is no, that hinders them."

Ferrari, on the other hand, said sheriffs opposed to SB 5 would have been on board with amending existing statutes providing for civil commitments in cases where a subject presents a danger.

"The one thing we agree on is this: People that are threatening themselves or others shouldn't have a firearm," Ferrari said."We already have a law on the books that allows law enforcement to take a person who's a threat to themselves or others and we can immediately take them down to the hospital."

Senate Bill 5 sponsors Sen. Joseph Cervantes, D-Las Cruces, right, and Reps. Daymon Ely, center, D-Corrales, and Joy Garratt, left, D-Albuquerque, during a floor debate at the New Mexico state Senate on Friday, Feb. 7, 2020.(Photo: Morgan Lee/AP)

Ferrari said the statute allows for legal counsel and judicial review, and focuses on getting treatment to people who need it rather than focusing on their property.

"Both sides would have agreed on that, but egos got in the way," Ferrari said. "They weren't happy with amending something. It was all about the title. It wasn't the new law that the new governor came up with. It was a campaign promise that was met."

Ferrari maintained thelawstill presents Fourth Amendment concerns regarding privacy and property. He called it "a Pandora's box skirting around constitutional limits" in ways that will be tested before judges.

Ferrari argued that the law can be manipulated by law enforcement to use a civil process for discovery of criminal evidence.

"Unfortunately, the train was really being driven by a lot of Second Amendment stuff because we're talking about guns here, and not everybody's a gun owner," he said. "Well, now let's talk about me beating on your door and coming into your house."

Stewart, on the other hand, said: "It's about having another tool in our bag and I think we use them let's give law enforcement a little more credit I think we use these things judiciously."

As elected law enforcement officers, Ferrari argued he and other sheriffs were exercising a duty to warn the public about legislation that endangered their liberties.

In opposition to gun legislation filedduring the 2019 legislative session, a majority of New Mexico countiespassed resolutionsstating they would not require their sheriffs to enforce the proposals if they became law.

More: What people in 'Second Amendment sanctuaries' should know about red flag laws

Ferrari spoke to the Sun-News days before Gov. Lujan Grisham signedthe bill and issuedher challenge to sheriffsresistant to enforcing the law. He made clear that sheriffs answered to voters.

"Our job is to stand between law enforcement and the public," he said. "We answer to no one but the public. No one. We're not overseen by a division of anything, we don't share our powers like country commissioners and city councilors.We are directly responsible for the people who put us in power. "

Enforcing protective orders under the act might also endanger his deputies, Ferrari said:"This can put law enforcement at risk and it also can put the public at risk. It definitely treads on that line of trust that we have."

For Stewart, the rhetorical focus on the Bill of Rights by sheriffs opposed to SB 5risked omitting the rule of law.

"I take an oath to the Constitution and the laws of the state of New Mexico," Stewart said. "If I swear allegiance to the Constitution of the U.S. only, I could never arrest a murderer or a rapist. The U.S. Constitution doesn't mention them. The only thing that gives me that power is the state."

Stewart's support for the law have made her unpopular with the New Mexico Sheriff's Association, which has firmly opposed red flag laws. "They don't talk to me," she said.

Kristin Wamle and Sam McBurney open carry at a Doa Ana County Commission discuss a resolution supporting a NM red flag bill in Las Cruces on Tuesday, Jan 28, 2020.(Photo: Nathan J Fish/Sun-News)

More:New Mexico 'red flag' bill protested at the state Capitol in Santa Fe

Where she and Ferrari agreeis that the new law has ambiguities and unclear consequences that will lead to court challenges and perhaps amendments in subsequent legislative sessions in Santa Fe.

"There are real legitimate questions that this doesnt address and that will certainly be ferreted out through the legal system and the judiciary," Stewart said.

Ferrari expressed little faith that lawmakers would improve the law next year, and did not guess how courts might rule on legal challenges to a law he criticized as both ill-conceived and rushed.

"What is more important," he asked, "that New Mexico joins the red flag club or that we have good legislation? Because we don't."

Algernon D'Ammassa can be reached at 575-541-5451,adammassa@lcsun-news.comor @AlgernonWrites on Twitter.

More: New Mexico Republican Party calls donkey target practice complaint 'fake outrage'

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One thing these two New Mexico sheriffs agree on: 'Red flag' law will end up in court - Las Cruces Sun-News

Cops are using body cameras to live-stream from crime scenes – Fast Company

One morning last April, SWAT teams swarmed a house in Henry County, Georgia. A gunman had taken his girlfriend and her teenage son hostage. But some of the officers werent only equipped with live ammunition: They were live, sending video from smartphones that were mounted on their chests back to a nearby command post where supervisors huddled over laptops. In two of the streams, the supervisors saw SWAT officers wounded by gunfire. Another stream, from a phone dropped into a window, offered audio of what was happening inside. When the police used a robot to deliver another phone to the gunman, that was also secretly streaming video. By the time the standoff was over, 17 hours later, the gunman had killed his hostages before fatally shooting himself. And a new technological era had begun.

We were able to verify the gunmans and officers locations, and gather more intelligence because we were live-streaming, says Randall McGlamery, the police departments spokesperson. Henry County, which adopted the technology in 2017, is one of the first of a growing number of police agencies using live video to remotely monitor encounters from the vantage point of officers chests. If youre in a chase or if youre in a flight or if we think somethings wrong, we can tap in live, and in real time know whats happening remotely, and report to other people whats going on, says McGlamery.

The technology also heralds other new tantalizing police-enhancing tools, he adds: I think weve just touched the bottom level of what is going to happen in the future.

After a series of high-profile police shootings in recent years, public demand for stronger police transparency and accountability has helped lead governments across the U.S. to spend millions of dollars putting body-worn cameras on officers. Now, advances in hardware and data connectivity are supercharging the devices with features that promise a new set of police powers, and a new set of questions.

Ive been doing this for 30 years and to see that advance in technology is phenomenal, says Sergeant Steve Saunders of the Cincinnati Police Department. The ability to tune inthats a game changer.

In February, Cincinnati said it had the largest fleet of live-streaming cameras anywhere: Nearly 1,000 of its officers can stream video from their chests, using devices made by Axon, the body camera and electroshock weapons giant formerly known as Taser. The cameras rely on LTE connections to transmit video over the internet; once an officer puts their camera into recording mode, authorized users are permitted to tune in through a cloud-based platform.

[Photo: courtesy of Axon]According to Saunders, live video could have helped police commanders during an active shooter situation at a bank building downtown last yearanswer questions faster, like, is the threat just in the lobby of the building or did they get into the tower? Extra eyes on a scene could also help officers during tense or risky encounters.

Saunders and others believe that streaming might also make citizens feel more comfortable interacting with police officers if they knew their encounters were being monitored by a third party in real time.

Eventually, mental health workers could even tune in in order to help police evaluate and speak with people in emotional distress, he mused, and could potentially be another asset to us in the field, says Saunders.

Live video is a feature that agencies are increasingly making required for officer safety reasons, says Alex Popof, CEO of Visual Labs, which doesnt sell its own hardware like Axon but helps departments turn smartphones into streaming-ready body-worn cameras. The startup says it is working with more than 100 law enforcement agencies, including Henry County and Fontana, California, as well as the security teams for the San Francisco 49ers and Baltimore Ravens.

Axon says that a handful of departments in the U.S. are using its new cameras, which can cost as much as $699 per device. That doesnt include other costs, such as a subscription to the companys Evidence.com cloud-based data management platform. But as part of a 10-year, $26 million contract with Axon, Cincinnati will go all in on its ecosystem of connected technologies: cameras that activate when an officer draws a weapon, automatic transcriptions of audio, video redaction tools, and new Tasers. The department is also considering adopting a new app for streaming live video from aerial drones, called Axon Air, based on a partnership with drone maker DJI. Were looking at it for search and rescue operations, says Saunders.

From a real-time crime center, Cincinnati police commanders would eventually be able to tap into body camera and drone footage, in addition to live feeds from hundreds of existing neighborhood surveillance cameras. Having that situational awareness as a field commander is unprecedented, Saunders says. But I also think its so new for us, we still havent really figured out what its going to mean for us in the future.

There are also unprecedented questions about what this technology means for the public. A connected network of cameras providing up-close, real-time images from the street or inside buildings or homes raises civil rights concerns that pre-recorded video and stationary surveillance footage does not. Experts caution that streaming live police video could also expose sensitive footage to abuses like leaks and hacking. And live video risks transforming tools that are intended for transparency into roving, on-the-ground nodes in a growing web of surveillance technologies.

Police body cameras were never supposed to be like another kind of surveillance camera; they were supposed to be an oversight mechanism, says Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst with the American Civil Liberties Union. The danger is that by streaming to a centralized location, they become much more like government surveillance and less like oversight.

Streaming video nudges the devices into more Orwellian territory.

Streaming video nudges the devices into more Orwellian territory and transmutes police body cameras into a significant new surveillance technology, says Stanley. Among other things, streaming is a step that eases the pathway towards live real-time face recognition, a scenario that could violate Fourth Amendment protections and lead to dangerous misidentifications. Unless you load a photo set onto a device, youre going to have to be relying on the cloud, which means streaming.

Axon uses facial-detection software to help police redact faces in body camera footage, but the company has said it would pause development of software for recognizing those faces, citing the concerns of an ethics panel it assembled. Axons former head of AI was also opposed to real-time facial recognition before he left the company, and a handful of U.S. cities have passed ordinances that ban or restrict the use of automated surveillance tools such as face recognition by police.

But Axon hasnt ruled out using the technology in the future and has even secured a patent for it. They may decide to do it down the road, and I may disagree with that, Barry Friedman, a constitutional law professor at New York University and a member of the ethics panel, told me in 2018. But they are definitely thinking through some of the problems.

For now, in any case, the company cannot prevent police departments from already combining video from its cameras with a growing array of facial-recognition tools. Such software can easily be applied to pre-recorded video, and both Amazon and Microsoft sell cloud-based recognition tools to law enforcement for that purpose. Third-party apps like Clearview AI, designed to ID individuals using a phones camera, could allow police to attempt to identify people passing an officers body camera in real time.

I think all of these surveillance technologies will raise the stakes of all the others, says Stanley. A technology like face recognition makes it more important to put limits on a technology like streaming.

Even as body cameras have been widely adoptedtens of thousands have been sold in the U.S.there are no national standards regarding them. Many cities have laws that govern how theyre used, who can access the footage, and how its released, but most of those rules were written before the introduction of live video. In a 2014 report, the Justice Dept., which has spent tens of millions of dollars to help departments buy body cameras and cloud storage, advised agencies to proceed very cautiously when it comes to combining police cameras with features such as face recognition and live feed, given potentially serious risks to public privacy.

In Cincinnati and Henry County, the tech has stoked more immediate anxieties, but not from the public: Even if streaming only works when a camera is recording, police officers themselves worry about supervisors tuning in to scrutinize their every move. When you tell somebody I have the ability to live-stream at any moment, theyre going to have privacy concerns, says McGlamery.

The growth and normalization of surveillance may not be a strong argument for more of it.

In Cincinnati, where the police are already using live-streaming on a case-by-case basis, there is no specific policy around the feature yet. Saunders acknowledges the publics concerns about real-time face recognitioneveryones going to deal with that in some way in the future, he saysbut reckons that live-streaming on its own does not pose the same risks.

Were on scenes all the time where citizens are live-streaming on Facebook Live or Twitter, he says. We just have a new app that came to town, the Citizen app, that lets people upload video, so its just the way technology has gone. People have home surveillance cameras like the Ring video doorbell, or other things that they can upload and put on Facebook in minutes, let alone live-stream stuff.

But the growth and normalization of surveillance may not be a strong argument for more of it. Police departments and municipalities may also be helping to foster that kind of surveillance culture by partnering with Amazon-owned Ring to help promote its devices and to streamline the collection of neighborhood videos. (Cincinnatis police department has asked citizens to register their home surveillance cameras as part of its camera network, but it is not a Ring partner.) Meanwhile, growing calls for legislation around surveillance show that the public does care about who uses these kinds of technologies and how they fit together, says Stanley.

However, in many cases, including in Cincinnati, police are using tools like live streaming before formulating written policies, or before they have notified the public, much less sought its input. When it comes to tools like streaming, Stanley says, the community should not only be informed but should be asked if they want departments to have that capability in the first place.

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Cops are using body cameras to live-stream from crime scenes - Fast Company

Diversion agreement hearing set for teen accused of stabbing his dad – Journal & Courier

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John D. Vanderwielen walks out of the Tippecanoe County Courthouse, Friday, Feb. 28, 2020 in Lafayette. Vanderwielen is accused of aggravated battery with risk on life, domestic battery with a deadly weapon, battery with a deadly weapon, domestic battery, battery resulting in bodily injury, criminal recklessness with a deadly weapon, resisting law enforcement and possession of paraphernalia after allegedly taking three hits of acid before attacking his parents.(Photo: Nikos Frazier | Journal & Courier)

LAFAYETTE Eighteen-year-old John Vanderwielen is one step away from formalizing his 18-month diversion agreement that allows him to avoid jail and prison for allegedly attacking his father with a knife and punching his mother.

During a hearing Friday, Tippecanoe Superior 2 Judge Steven Meyer set a hearing for 1 p.m. March 18 to decide if the court will sanction the agreement between Vanderwielen and prosecutors.

The hearing will give prosecutors time to correct a few typos in the Feb. 13 signed agreement, Vanderwielen's attorney, Steve Knecht, told the court Friday.

Vanderwielen, who was 17 at the time of the Jan. 26, 2019, attacks, will be required to maintain lawful behavior, get his high school equivalency and successfully complete the Restoration Men's Ministry through Faith Church, according to the agreement.

Until his acceptance into the Restoration Men's Ministry, he will remain on community corrections and will live with his aunt and uncle, where he's lived since posting bond last summer.

Vanderwielen's agreementwaiveshisconfidentially for the ministry's program, and he also waived his Fourth Amendment protections from unreasonable search and seizure, according to the agreement.

During the agreement, Vanderwielen cannot return to his parent's house in the 3900 block of Sunnycoft Place in rural West Lafayette, where the attacks happened, according to the agreement.

Additionally, the no-contact order prescribing how he can interact with his parents remains in effect during the deferment program.

His status will be reviewed by the court every 90 days during the deferment, according to the agreement.

If he goes astray from the agreement's conditions, prosecutors can revoke the agreement, and he might be prosecuted.

If prosecutors revoke the agreement, Vanderwielen faces felony charges of domestic battery with a deadly weapon, battery with a deadly weapon and criminal recklessness with a deadly weapon. He also faces misdemeanors of domestic battery, battery with injury, resisting law enforcement and possession of paraphernalia. Additionally, prosecutors could refile the most serious charge aggravated battery with substantial risk of death, a Level 3 felony. That chargewas dismissed earlier this month.

According to Indiana law, a diversion agreement can be offered by prosecutors to defendants charged with lower level felonies, as well as misdemeanors. The Level 3 felony was an impediment to the diversion agreement.

The teen's legal problems in adult court started early Jan. 26, 2019, when he punched his mother in the face, then went downstairs and stabbed his father in the neck and face, according to a probable cause affidavit filed after his arrest.

Vanderwielen was waived into adult court on Feb. 14, 2019.

Reach Ron Wilkins at 765-420-5231 or at rwilkins@jconline.com. Follow on Twitter: @RonWilkins2.

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Diversion agreement hearing set for teen accused of stabbing his dad - Journal & Courier

A Democratic president could have a big impact on the tech industry here’s where the candidates stand on important tech issues – CNBC

Democratic presidential candidates (L-R) former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), former Vice President Joe Biden, former South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg, and Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) arrive on stage for the Democratic presidential primary debate at Paris Las Vegas on February 19, 2020 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Ethan Miller | Getty Image

Voters from the 14 states and one U.S. territory hosting primaries and caucuses on Super Tuesday have plenty of issues to consider in choosing a presidential nominee. Besides top issues like healthcare and gun policy, some voters may be weighing the Democratic candidates' stances on technology.

Americans have grown increasingly concerned about the power Big Tech companies like Facebook, Google, Amazon, Apple and Microsoft wield over their personal information and future job prospects. A Pew Research Center survey found that attitudes toward tech companies soured in the last half of the decade. Between 2015 and 2019, the percentage of adult U.S. respondents who said tech companies have a positive effect on the way things are going in the country declined from 71% to 50%,.

Among the Democratic candidates, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren has made the biggest and earliest splash with her views on the tech industry, releasing her plan to "break up Big Tech" in March. But Warren is not the only candidate to have weighed in on tech issues, which extend well beyond antitrust.

Here's what voters should know about the stances of the top-polling Democratic presidential candidates on the key tech issues:

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said at a Washington Post event last year that he would "absolutely" try to break up Facebook, Google and Amazon. Sanders is perhaps only second to Warren in his readiness to declare support for a breakup.

Former South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg said that as a candidate for office, he doesn't feel it's appropriate to dictate what companies should be broken up, according to his interview with the New York Times Editorial Board. But he would empower the Federal Trade Commission to better assess and handle anticompetitive behavior by tech firms, he said at a CNN town hall in April.

Former Vice President Joe Biden said we should "be worrying about the concentration of power" in an interview with The New York Times Editorial Board. The tech industry experienced relatively positive treatment under the Obama administration, but Biden told the editorial board, "There are places where [Former President Barack Obama] and I have disagreed."

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren was the first out of the gate with her proposal to break up Big Tech. Since then, she's maintained a persistent drumbeat on the topic. Warren has pledged to turn down large donations from Big Tech executives to shirk any questions of influence, though it's not entirely clear what her campaign counts as its threshold.

Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, the top Democrat on the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee, said "this consolidation issue is the most underrated discussed issue of our time," in her interview with the Times Editorial Board. Klobuchar said strong antitrust enforcement involves looking back at past mergers like that of Facebook and Instagram. Last year, Klobuchar introduced legislation to update antitrust enforcement, including by shifting the burden onto companies to prove that very large mergers won't hurt competition.

Former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg, a billionaire tech and media mogul himself, told the The Mercury News in January that Warren and Sanders don't "know what they're talking about" when it comes to breaking up the big tech companies. He said he is open to more narrow forms of enforcement.

Sanders told Vox, "Americans have the right to their own data and that there should be strict penalties for companies who are negligent in protecting that data." He added that there should be oversight of the collection and sale of consumer data, particularly by Big Tech companies like Facebook.

Buttigieg said in a podcast interview that he believes Americans should have a "right to be forgotten," similar to that granted to citizens of the European Union. Buttigeg told journalist Kara Swisher on the Recode Decode podcast, "we need to have some level of relationship to the value that is created in our name." A U.S. version of the "right to be forgotten" would likely raise serious First Amendment issues, but Buttigieg argued tech companies are already making decisions around speech "because the policy world didn't figure it out."

Biden told the Times Editorial Board, "we should be setting standards not unlike the Europeans are doing relative to privacy," while speaking about a variety of tech issues. The EU's flagship privacy policy, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) gave citizens more control over their data, including the right to find out why a company is storing their data and choose to transfer it to another provider.

Warren has proposed legislation that would allow executives of companies with more than $1 billion in annual revenue to be held criminally liable in cases where they are found to have acted negligently and violated civil law impacting the personal data of 1% of a state or American population.

Klobuchar has signed on a key Democratic privacy bill in the Senate that would allow for states to continue to issue and enforce their own privacy laws and give individuals the right to bring their own lawsuits against companies they feel violated their rights.

Bloomberg has indicated a preference for consistency in federal digital privacy legislation, seeming to align with conservatives who want a federal law that preempts state law, according to an interview with The Mercury News.

Sanders told Vox he opposes "the Trump administration's efforts to compel firms to create so-called 'backdoors' to encrypted technologies an attack on the First and Fourth Amendments that would ultimately leave everyone less secure." He also said, "Technology cannot shield people from the justice system, especially when it comes to white-collar and other financial crimes."

Buttigieg told Vox, "End-to-end encryption should be the norm," but that "we also need to ensure that law enforcement has access to the tools it needs to keep us all safe." He advocated for "heightened legal standards" for government officials trying to gain access to data with new tools, such as a court order and proof all other options have been exhausted.

Biden hasn't commented much on encryption this election cycle, but he did introduce a counter-terrorism bill in 1991 that would have allowed government officials to obtain data and communications from electronic service providers "when appropriately authorized by law." While the bill did not become law and technology has rapidly evolved in the intervening years, the legislation is reminiscent of Attorney General William Barr's calls for tech companies to build in a way for law enforcement to access encrypted devices and messages with a warrant.

Warren has said, "The government can enforce the law and protect our security without trampling on Americans' privacy. Individuals have a Fourth Amendment right against warrantless searches and seizures, and that should not change in the digital era," according to her response to Vox's question.

Klobuchar, a former prosecutor, expressed an understanding of law enforcement's challenges during the 2016 standoff between Apple and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which requested help unlocking an iPhone used by a shooter in an attack in San Bernadino, Calif. Klobuchar said in a statement to the MinnPost at the time that "very real risks have been presented as criminals and terrorists are constantly trying to utilize the latest technologies to evade capture and conviction," adding that "any proposal that would limit data security available to the public could impede efforts to protect American businesses and consumers from cyber-attacks by criminals and foreign governments."

Bloomberg dug into the tech industry for resisting calls to build a backdoor into encryption for government officials in a 2016 Wall Street Journal op-ed following the public fight between Apple and the FBI over unlocking the San Bernadino shooter's phone. Bloomberg acknowledged encryption's benefits for people living under repressive regimes, but said, "We can work to undermine repressive regimes in ways that do not compromise our own safety, and we should expect tech leaders to help lead the way."

Sanders told Vox that Section 230, the law that shields online platforms from legal liability for their users' posts, was drafted "well before the current era of online communities, expression and technological development." Sanders said he "will work with experts and advocates to ensure that these large, profitable corporations are held responsible when dangerous activity occurs on their watch, while protecting the fundamental right of free speech in this country and making sure right-wing groups don't abuse regulation to advance their agenda."

Buttigieg hasn't made clear his stance on Section 230 but has suggested tech companies should take more responsibility for their role in spreading hate online and should be required to root out misinformation in political ads. Buttigieg told Vox he would "identify online platforms and other companies that refuse to take steps to curb use by hate groups."

Biden has taken the most extreme view of the Democratic candidates when it comes to Section 230, telling the Times editorial board that it "should be revoked ... For [Facebook CEO Mark] Zuckerberg and other platforms." Other candidates have not taken such a strong approach on Section 230 likely because it also allows for online platforms to engage in "good faith" content moderation to remove the most insidious content from their sites without fearing legal repercussions.

Warren said in a campaign plan that she would "push for new laws that impose tough civil and criminal penalties for knowingly disseminating this kind of information, which has the explicit purpose of undermining the basic right to vote," referring to false information about voting in U.S. elections. She called on tech platforms to take responsibility for spreading disinformation, asking them to share resources and even open up information about their algorithms and allow users to opt out so they don't need to be subject to amplified material.

Klobuchar said Section 230 "is something else that we should definitely look at as we look at how we can create more accountability," in an interview at South By Southwest recorded for the Recode Decode podcast. But she said, it's not the goal to "destroy" tech companies.

Bloomberg has said social media companies should be held to similar legal standards as media outlets. In an interview with The Mercury News, Bloomberg said, "Society shouldn't give up the protections that we have from the press's responsibility just because it helps them make more money." He stopped short of saying Section 230 should be repealed and said he didn't know which part of the law should be altered.

Sanders has been long been a vocal supporter of net neutrality, the concept that broadband providers should not be allowed to block or slow access to websites or require payments to deliver faster speeds. When Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai ordered net neutrality to be repealed in 2017, Sanders said the decision was "an egregious attack on our democracy." He advocates for reinstating net neutrality in his campaign plan.

Buttigieg said on Twitter last year he would "make net neutrality the law of the land." Buttigieg was one of 100 mayors to sign the Cities Open Internet Pledge while in office, which required internet providers doing business with those part of the pledge to follow principles of net neutrality.

Biden has not said much on net neutrality recently, but he has previously positioned himself as a skeptic. In 2006, while serving as a Delaware senator on the Judiciary Committee, Biden said it didn't seem necessary to introduce a preemptive law because if discrimination feared by net neutrality advocates did occur, there would be such a dramatic public response that "the chairman will be required to hold this meeting in this largest room in the Capitol, and there will be lines wandering all the way down to the White House." The Obama administration in which he served, however, was a champion of net neutrality.

Warren has advocated in the Senate to restore net neutrality rules, saying in 2018 that their repeal "has corporate greed and corruption written all over it." In her plan for "Investing in Rural America," Warren said she would appoint FCC commissioners who would restore net neutrality.

Klobuchar has publicly supported net neutrality in the Senate, calling the rules "important protections" and saying the FCC's vote to eliminate them "will harm consumers, particularly in rural areas. It will limit competition. And it will hurt small business entrepreneurship and innovation." In her "Plan for the Future of Work and a Changing Economy," Klobuchar promises to "work to codify strong net neutrality principles and make immediate progress in her first 100 days [as president] by using federal contracting requirements to encourage broadband providers to honor net neutrality principles and promote a free and open internet."

Bloomberg hasn't said much either way about net neutrality at this point in the campaign.

Sanders has said, "We do need new trade policies that are fair to the working people of this country, not just to the CEOs, but as usual, I think Trump gets it wrong in terms of implementation," according to Vox. Sanders said on CNN last year he would "of course" use tariffs to reach a deal with China, but only "used in a rational way within the context of a broad, sensible trade policy."

Buttigieg said on CNN last year that it's "a fool's errand to think you will be able to get China to change the fundamentals of their economic model by poking them in the eye with some tariffs." In the June Democratic debate, Buttigieg shared his concerns with China's advancement in technology, saying, "China is investing so they could soon be able to run circles around us in artificial intelligence and this president is fixated on the relationship as if all that mattered was the balance on dishwashers... The biggest thing we have to do is invest in our own domestic competitiveness."

Biden said in a speech last summer that if the U.S. fails to act to counter China, it will "keep moving and robbing U.S. firms" of technology and intellectual property. He advocated creating "a united front" of economic partners who can hold China accountable. Biden said at the time, "there's no going back to business as usual on trade with me."

Warren said in 2018 that U.S. policy toward China had been "misdirected" for years and "Now U.S. policymakers are starting to look more aggressively at pushing China to open up the markets without demanding a hostage price of access to U.S. technology," according to Reuters. In a campaign blog post, Warren said, "tariffs are an important tool, [but] they are not by themselves a long-term solution to our failed trade agenda and must be part of a broader strategy that this Administration clearly lacks."

Klobuchar has said it can make sense to use tariffs, but that there needs to be a level of consistency to both the promises and threats made in the process. She criticized Trump's tariffs as being too broad and hurting allies in the process during the September Democratic debate.

Bloomberg said at the most recent Democratic debate that "we have to deal with China, if we're ever going to solve the climate crisis." Addressing his past statements that Chinese President Xi Jinping is not a dictator, Bloomberg said "he does serve at the behest of the Politburo" but that "You can negotiate with him. That's exactly what we have to do, make it seem that it's in his interest and in his people's interest to do what we want to do, follow the rules, particularly no stealing of intellectual property; follow the rules in terms of the trade agreements that we have are reciprocal and go equally in both directions."

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A Democratic president could have a big impact on the tech industry here's where the candidates stand on important tech issues - CNBC

NY Safe Act’s Mental Health Reporting Is Bad But Proposed Mental Eval Bill Is Worse – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

OpinionPart Five

New York -(AmmoLand.com)- We will now drill down into the critical mental health area of the new restrictive New York gun bill so you can see and truly appreciate the extent to which the proposed bill builds upon the present mental health law affecting New Yorkers who simply wish to exercise their Second Amendment right, tightening the noose on those New Yorkers, for it is in New Yorks Mental Hygiene Law that things become interesting.

When Cuomo signed the New York Safe Act into law in 2013, Section 20 of the Safe Act was codified into law.

A new State governmental reporting system was added to the Mental Health Law that did not previously exist. Section 20 of NY Safe, codified in Section 9.46, Subsection (b) of Article 9 of the Mental Health Law of the Consolidated Laws of New York, sets forth:

Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, when a mental health professional currently providing treatment services to a person determines, in the exercise of reasonable professional judgment, that such person is likely to engage in conduct that would result in serious harm to self or others, he or she shall be required to report, as soon as practicable, to the director of community services, or the directors designee, who shall report to the division of criminal justice services whenever he or she agrees that the person is likely to engage in such conduct. Information transmitted to the division of criminal justice services shall be limited to names and other non-clinical identifying information, which may only be used for determining whether a license issued pursuant to section 400.00 of the penal law should be suspended or revoked, or for determining whether a person is ineligible for a license issued pursuant to section 400.00 of the penal law, or is no longer permitted under state or federal law to possess a firearm.

Section 9.46 (b) of the Mental Health law of New York insinuates itself not only into the Second Amendment but also insinuates itself into the unreasonable searches and seizures clause of the Fourth Amendment and violates the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as well. No less Proposed Section 7.09 (M) of New Yorks Mental Hygiene Law unconstitutionally infringe upon fundamental rights, but, its impact of those American citizens and residents of New York who wish to exercise their right to keep and bear arms is even more intrusive and egregious.

There is an obvious presumption in favor of maintaining sensitive medical information among medical providers. New Yorkers expect this as does every American. If that were not the case Americans would, quite understandably, be reluctant to divulge such information, especially if doing so might negatively impact the exercise of their fundamental right to keep and bear arms.

But New York State Government officials have their own agendaand that agenda is unrelated to the needs and best interests of the individual. And the concern is very real since Government bureaucrats, operating with the Hive Mentality of all Collectivists, likely dont give a damn about the privacy concerns of individual Americans, anyway. And, even if they did care about individual Americans' privacy concerns, they would be obliged to relinquish such concerns consistent with the requirement of their jobs and their wish to hold onto their jobs.

Proposed Section 7.09 (M) of New Yorks Mental Hygiene Law, were it to become law, would permit the State Government to entwine itself extraordinarily deep into medical matters, where it should never go, and it does so, even more somuch more sothan the mental health reporting requirement as set forth in the present New York law.

No other State has anything like this or has, to our knowledge, proposed anything, as yet, quite like it. Andrew Cuomo wants New York to be in the vanguard of the most extreme and outrageous anti-Second Amendment measures existent in the Nation and he is succeeding in that endeavor. That was the purpose for Cuomos having pushed, quickly through the State legislature, in the dead of night, by emergency decree, sans debate, his New York Safe Act. And that is what informs Cuomos actions to this very day. But, you might wish to ask the New York Governor and the other anti-Second Amendment zealots who drafted the mental health evaluation bill why they feel that enactment of this bill is necessary since the Safe Act already requires mental health providers to divulge confidential mental health matters to State Government officials if those providers believe that a patient poses a danger to self or others.

The New York Safe Act and New York's new mental health evaluation bill opens the floodgates to impermissible Constitutional infringement of a fundamental right from the get-go, unconstitutionally infringing exercise of the right of the people to keep and bear arms of every New York firearm's owner: tens of thousands of New Yorkers.

But, as horrible as the New York Safe Act reporting requirement is, the mental health evaluation bill is many times worse. The NY Safe Act requirement depends upon mental health provider acquiescence to the reporting law.

Cuomo and other Anti-Second Amendment zealots must have realized that mental health providers might very well be reluctant to violate a sacred trust between physician and patientas doing so would be detrimental to the health and well-being of the patient, and contrary to the faith the patient has placed in his medical provider that the patient's sensitive medical information will remain confidential, and contrary to the rights and liberties codified in the U.S. Constitution.

After all, there is an obvious presumption in favor of maintaining sensitive medical information. In fact, New Yorkers may, quite understandably, avoid conveying embarrassing and sensitive personal information to their physician or mental health provider if they believe such information can and will be divulged to New York State Government officials who have their own agendaunrelated to the needs and best interests of the individual. That concern is very real, since Government bureaucrats, consistent with the Hive Mentality of Collectivists, likely dont give a damn about the needs and concerns of individual Americans. And, even if they did care about the individual Americans' privacy, they would be obliged to relinquish such concerns consistent with the requirement of their jobs and their wish to hold onto their jobs.

So, realizing that the mental health reporting requirements would not, or could not, and, perhaps, have not, yielded the results they wanted, the Anti-Second Amendment zealots and Collectivists went back to the drawing board and devised a new scheme to avoid the problems inherent in the mental health reporting requirement as it presently exists. The scheme cunningly devised, as illustrated in the new mental health evaluation bill, essentially dispenses with the need for the New York Safe Act's mental health reporting requirement since New York State administrators, or those mental health practitioners working directly for the State Government, insinuate themselves directly into the firearms acquisition process in the first instance, obviating the need for mental health providers to get involved in the second instance.

If the mental health evaluation bill were enacted into law, a person who wishes to acquire, sell, exchange or dispose of a firearm must undergo a mental health evaluation, irrespective of any ongoing relationship a person may have with a personal mental health provider.

For, if an individual realizes that he or she must undergo a mental health evaluation that will forever be part of the State records, that person may have second thoughts about obtaining a firearm in the first place. Cuomo, along with the Legislative team that drafted the mental health evaluation measure, must have known this, and anticipating the results, are hopeful that many would-be firearms' owners would voluntarily forsake exercise of their fundamental right. After all, it would be far easier for Cuomo's Government if law-abiding New York residents were simply discouraged from being compelled to jump through the labyrinthine hurdles of obtaining a firearm at the get-go than it would be and, in fact has been, to attempt to divest New Yorkers of their firearms after the fact, when they would be more averse to do so.

And Cuomo might well succeed because, if an individual realizes that he or she must undergo a mental health evaluation that will forever be part of State records, that person may have second thoughts about obtaining a firearm in the first placehence the reason for proposing such a bill at all.

About The Arbalest Quarrel:

Arbalest Group created `The Arbalest Quarrel' website for a special purpose. That purpose is to educate the American public about recent Federal and State firearms control legislation. No other website, to our knowledge, provides as deep an analysis or as thorough an analysis. Arbalest Group offers this information free.

For more information, visit: http://www.arbalestquarrel.com.

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NY Safe Act's Mental Health Reporting Is Bad But Proposed Mental Eval Bill Is Worse - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

What the 2020 election means for encryption – The Verge

This is a living guide to encryption: what it is, what it isnt, why its controversial, and how it might be changed. This guide will be updated as events warrant.

Encryption is the process of scrambling information so only the intended recipients can decipher it. An encrypted message requires a key a series of mathematical values to decrypt it. This protects the message from being read by an unwanted third party. If someone without the key tries to hack in and read the message, theyll see a set of seemingly random characters. Using modern encryption techniques, extracting the original message without the key is nearly impossible.

That basic process is a fundamental building block of network security, ensuring that information can travel over the public internet without being intercepted in transit. Without some form of encryption, it would be impossible to implement basic online services like email, e-commerce, and the SSL system that verifies webpages.

While most uses of encryption are uncontroversial, the wide availability of techniques has opened up new political questions around lawful access. Presented with a warrant for a particular users information, businesses are legally required to turn over all the information they have. But if that information is encrypted and the company doesnt have the key, there may be no way to work back to the original data.

Some products hold copies of user keys and decrypt data when served with a warrant, including Gmail, Facebook pages, and most cloud storage providers. But messaging apps like WhatsApp, Telegram, and Signal do not, and the device encryption used by iOS also makes the phones local data inaccessible. That approach has both privacy and security benefits: since the data is not available outside of the local device, the apps are far more resilient to breaches and centralized attacks.

In 2014, James Comey, the then-director of the FBI, wrote a memo spelling out his concerns about encryption. Those charged with protecting our people arent always able to access the evidence we need to prosecute crime and prevent terrorism even with lawful authority, he wrote.

Comey went on to warn that encryption would make it more difficult for law enforcement to catch suspected criminals. If communications are encrypted by default, he said, the government cant monitor and collect communications, even if a judge allows them to do so. Encryption, he summarized, will have very serious consequences for law enforcement and national security agencies at all levels. Sophisticated criminals will come to count on these means of evading detection. Its the equivalent of a closet that cant be opened. A safe that cant be cracked. And my question is, at what cost?

The governments position on encryption hasnt evolved a whole lot in the intervening years. Attorney General William Barr and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) argued last year that hardened encryption makes it difficult to figure out when messaging platforms are used to coordinate crimes. If a large-scale terrorist attack is carried out, the government needs to act quickly to understand the national security risks. Hardened encryption could make this discovery process harder.

In 2016, in the wake of the San Bernardino shooting, the FBI asked Apple to hand over information from the suspects iPhone. At first, the company complied, giving the FBI data from the suspects iCloud backup. Then the FBI demanded access to the phones local storage. This would have involved Apple deploying an entirely new version of iOS to the device, which the company refused to do. In a statement, a company spokesperson said: We believed it was wrong and would set a dangerous precedent.

The FBI responded by trying to force Apple to help, citing the All Writs Act of 1789. Just before a hearing on this case, however, the FBI was able to unlock the iPhone using an anonymous third-party company. The phone did not contain much new information the FBI hadnt already had, but the conflict escalated the fight between tech companies and the government over encryption.

In 2019, after the shooting at the Pensacola Naval Air Station, the government again asked for Apples assistance unlocking the suspects iPhone. Apple did not comply, but it did hand over data from the suspects iCloud backups. In response to Apples refusal to unlock the shooters iPhone, President Donald Trump tweeted: We are helping Apple all of the time on TRADE and so many other issues, and yet they refuse to unlock phones used by killers, drug dealers and other violent criminal elements.

A week later, it was revealed that the company had dropped plans to allow users to encrypt their iCloud backups after the FBI argued the move would harm future investigations.

In March 2019, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg published a memo laying out his vision for a new privacy-focused social network. In it, he stated the companys plan to roll out encryption across its various messaging apps. People expect their private communications to be secure and to only be seen by the people theyve sent them to not hackers, criminals, over-reaching governments, or even the people operating the services theyre using, he wrote.

The news set off a firestorm of criticism from certain politicians most notably, AG Barr. In a letter to the company, Barr, along with officials in the United Kingdom and Australia, wrote, Companies should not deliberately design their systems to preclude any form of access to content, even for preventing or investigating the most serious crimes. They added that encryption put people at risk by severely eroding a companys ability to detect and respond to illegal content and activity, such as child sexual exploitation and abuse, terrorism, and foreign adversaries attempts to undermine democratic values and institutions, preventing the prosecution of offenders and safeguarding of victims. They asked Facebook to stop the encryption rollout. Facebook did not comply with this request.

Republicans seem to want US tech companies to comply with law enforcement in the event of a major national security attack. They do not want US tech companies to make accessing user data more complicated through end-to-end encryption. In his letter to Facebook, Barr asked Zuckerberg to allow law enforcement to obtain lawful access to content in a readable and usable format, as reported by The New York Times.

Most Democratic presidential candidates are supportive of end-to-end encryption. When asked whether the government should be able to access Americans encrypted conversations, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) said: [I] firmly [oppose] the Trump administrations efforts to compel firms to create so-called backdoors to encrypted technologies. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) did not answer directly, but she said that the government can enforce the law and protect our security without trampling on Americans privacy. Individuals have a Fourth Amendment right against warrantless searches and seizures, and that should not change in the digital era. During his primary run, former South Bend, Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg said, End-to-end encryption should be the norm. Former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg, in an op-ed from 2016, argued against end-to-end encryption and said tech companies shouldnt be above the law in refusing court orders to hand over user data.

Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act protects websites from lawsuits if a user posts something illegal. Theres been a large debate about whether companies should continue to have these protections, with various lawmakers proposing plans to change or amend Section 230.

In January, one proposed change called Eliminating Abusive and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies Act (EARN IT) sought to strip tech companies of their Section 230 protections if they didnt comply with new rules for finding and removing content related to child exploitation. And while the bill, titled the National Strategy for Child Exploitation Prevention, didnt lay out many specifics, complying with these rules would likely mean not encrypting some user data.

Apple has taken the lead on the issue so far, and it has been careful to valorize law enforcement and lawful access provisions, while firmly opposing a backdoor. As CEO Tim Cook framed it in an open letter at the start of the San Bernardino case, Apple is willing to do everything it can including turning over iCloud logs and other user data but unlocking device encryption is a step too far. Up to this point, we have done everything that is both within our power and within the law to help [the FBI], Cook wrote. But now the U.S. government has asked us for something we simply do not have, and something we consider too dangerous to create. They have asked us to build a backdoor to the iPhone.

For the most part, other tech companies have lined up behind Google with the Facebook-owned WhatsApp leading the way. In response to Barrs letter in 2019, Will Cathcart, head of WhatsApp, and Stan Chudnovsky, who works on Messenger, said the company was not prepared to build the government a backdoor in order to access user messages. Cybersecurity experts have repeatedly proven that when you weaken any part of an encrypted system, you weaken it for everyone, everywhere, they wrote. It is simply impossible to create such a backdoor for one purpose and not expect others to try and open it.

Still, many tech companies that rely on government contracts have had to walk a more politically delicate line. Microsoft supported Apple publicly during the San Bernardino case, but more recent statements from Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella have taken a softer line. In January 2020, Nadella expressed opposition to backdoors but optimism about legislative or other technical solutions, saying, We cant take hard positions on all sides.

As tech companies like Facebook continue to move forward with large-scale encryption projects, more major changes could come in the form of legislation aimed at helping or hurting large-scale encryption initiatives. In 2019, Rep. Ted Lieu (D-CA) reintroduced a 2016 bill called the Ensuring National Constitutional Rights for Your Private Telecommunications Act (ENCRYPT), which would create a national standard for encrypted technology. Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), along with a bipartisan coalition, also introduced the Secure Data Act, which would stop federal agencies from forcing tech companies to build backdoors into their products, thereby weakening encryption. Finally, theres still the draft of the National Strategy for Child Exploitation Prevention, which would make it much harder for tech companies to encrypt their products.

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What the 2020 election means for encryption - The Verge

Bernie Asked If Democrats Are ‘Staging Coup Against’ Him. He Refuses To Answer. – The Daily Wire

Socialist Bernie Sanders, the front-runner in the race for the Democratic nomination for president, refused to answer during an interview on CNN whether the Democratic Party was trying to take the nomination away from him.

President Trump questioned last night the timing of Buttigiegs withdrawal, tweeting in part, this is the real beginning of the Dems taking Bernie out of play, no nomination again, CNNs Anderson Cooper said to Sanders. He also also tweeted again this afternoon, they are staging a coup against you.

Is he right? Cooper asked.

Sanders refused to answer the question.

You know what, I really wish that the president of the United States, might kind of spend his time doing his job, Sanders responded. Maybe, just maybe, he might wanna worry about the coronavirus, he might wanna worry about the stock market, he might worry about the 500,000 people in this country who are homeless, or the massive level of income and wealth inequality that exists.

So, President Trump, stay out of the Democratic primary, Sanders continued. Why dont you do your job for a change as president? Stop lying, stop running a corruption administration, pay attention to the American people not just your own political aims.

WATCH:

Trump has repeatedly accused the Democrats of plotting to take the nomination away from Sanders again, writing in January, They are taking the nomination away from Bernie for a second time. Rigged!

Mini Mike is a 54 mass of dead energy who does not want to be on the debate stage with these professional politicians, Trump tweeted last month. No boxes please. He hates Crazy Bernie and will, with enough money, possibly stop him. Bernies people will go nuts!

The Dems are working hard to take the prized nomination away from Bernie. Back room politics, which Bernie is not very good at, Trump tweeted last week. His people will not let it happen again!

The Daily Wire highlighted Sanders extreme policy stances in a profile piece last year:

On The Issues: Sanders calls himself ademocratic socialistwho, whiledisavowingwhole-hearted socialist theory with respect to government ownership of the means of production, nonetheless has consistently advocated for economic class warfare that pits the lower and middle classes against the wealthy. He has routinely supported anti-capitalistic and anti-growth economic policies, heavy-handed government regulation over the private economy, robust labor unions, and the Nordic model of a sprawling welfare state. On foreign policy, he has frequently mollycoddled communist dictatorships and has often been hostile toward Americas closest geopolitical allies. Overall, he is a far-left progressive who has long defined the leftward flank of what it means to be a progressive in America.

Constitution: Sanders supports a living Constitution interpretive methodology that effectively empowers unelected federal judges to determine large swaths of the laws that govern Americans lives. He is hostile to the First Amendments protection of free speech and has supported a constitutional amendment to overturn the political speech-affirming 2010 U.S. Supreme Court decision ofCitizens United v. F.E.C.He has generally supported a more robust role for Congress and a more diminished role for the presidency in the context of foreign policy and the conduct of overseas military operations. He takes an expansive view of the Fourth Amendment and has even praised disgruntled NSA leaker Edward Snowden.

Continue reading The Daily Wires profile piece on Bernie Sanders here.

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Bernie Asked If Democrats Are 'Staging Coup Against' Him. He Refuses To Answer. - The Daily Wire

The exploration of the Moon and Mars continues apace – The Economist

Two craft probe beneath these bodies surfaces

Feb 27th 2020

THIS WEEK has seen the publication of results collected by probes to two heavenly bodies: Change 4, a Chinese mission to the Moon, and InSight, an American mission to Mars. Change 4 landed in January 2019; InSight arrived the previous November. The Chinese team, bowing to the realities of scientific publishing, have presented their results in Science Advances, an American journal. The Americans, however, have chosen Nature Geoscience, a British journal owned by German publishers.

Change 4 is Chinas second successful lunar lander, and the first from any country to touch down intact on the Moons far sidethe part never visible from Earth. Its purpose, other than demonstrating Chinas technological prowess, is to investigate the geology of Von Krmn crater in the Moons southern hemisphere. To that end it is fitted with a ground-penetrating radar which can peer many metres down.

This radar shows three distinct layers of rock, the top two each 12 metres thick and the lowest 16 metres thick. Below that, the signal is too fuzzy to see what is going on. The upper layer is composed of regolithcrushed rock that is the product of zillions of small meteorite impacts over the course of several billion years, and which covers most of the Moons surface. The other two, distinguishable by the coarseness of the grains within them, are probably discrete ejecta from separate nearby impacts early in the Moons history that were subsequently covered by the regolith.

InSight (pictured above as an artists impression) is intended to probe deeper than this. It is fitted with instruments designed to measure heat flow from Marss interior, any wobble in the planets axis of rotation (which would probably be caused by an iron core) and Marsquakes. The heat-flow instrument has so far been a washout. The mole, a device intended to dig into Marss surface, pulling this instrument with it, has refused to co-operateto the point where the projects directors are about to take the time-honoured step of hitting it with a hammer (or, rather, with the scoop on the probes robot arm) to persuade it to stay in the hole that it is supposed to be excavating. And the wobble detector, though working correctly, has insufficient data to report. So the release this week is mainly about the quakes.

InSights seismograph recorded 174 quakes between the crafts landing and the end of September 2019. The strongest were between magnitudes three and fourjust powerful enough, had they happened on Earth, for a human being to notice them. Quakes are a valuable source of information about a planets interior. A network of seismographs, as exists on Earth, allows their points of origin to be triangulated, their speed measured and their reflections from subsurface rock layers observed. From all this can be deduced those layers composition and depth. With but a single instrument, such deductions are trickier. InSights masters do, though, think that two of the quakes originated in Cerberus Fossae, a set of faults 1,600km from the landing site that are suspected of still being seismically active.

This article appeared in the Science and technology section of the print edition under the headline "Beneath the surface"

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The exploration of the Moon and Mars continues apace - The Economist

Storm-ravaged Bahamas rebuilding its power grid with emphasis on solar energy – 60 Minutes – CBS News

Exactly six months ago this evening, Hurricane Dorian slammed into the northern Bahamas. It was the fifth Category 5 Atlantic hurricane in just the last three years. Before that, there hadn't been a single "Cat-5" storm in nearly a decade.There's a growing consensus among scientists that climate change is what's making hurricanes stronger and more destructive. That's very bad news for the Bahamas, a string of more than 700 low-lying islands stretching from Florida nearly down to Cuba, in the heart of what's come to be known as "Hurricane Alley."

But the Bahamas has found a ray of hope - specifically, a solar array - that can help its islands survive future hurricanes. And in the process, it may have important lessons the rest of the world should learn, as Mother Nature continues to brew devastating storms like Dorian.

With sustained winds of 185 miles per hour, gusts above 200, and a storm surge well over 20 feet in some spots,Dorian wreaked unimaginable havoc on the Bahamian islands known as the Abacos.

"There's not enough words in the dictionary to describe what Hope Town looked like after that storm," Vernon Malone told correspondent Bill Whitaker.

Hope Town has been Malone's home for all of his 82 years. His family has lived here since 1785. He's the town baker and grocer, and he and his wife rode out the storm in his store. It survived, but their home just up the street did not.

Vernon's son, Brian, had a home just around the corner. Had a home.

"That's actually two and a half houses," Brian Malone said when Whitaker pointed out a pile of rubble. "Mine's on the bottom."

Hope Town is a Bahamian landmark. Its candy-striped lighthouse dates to 1863 and is pictured on the country's ten-dollar bill. The lighthouse stood up to Dorian, but as we saw coming into the harbor, not much else did.

"I hear generators everywhere," Whitaker said to Brian Malone and Matt Winslow, an American who owns a vacation home on the island. "Is this how you guys are getting through?"

"Yep," they both said.

Winslow told Whitaker why all those generators are still running.

"The substation in Marsh Harbor which feeds us the power's destroyed," Winslow said. "And then, of course, you can see all the utility poles-- are pretty much destroyed. So this isn't a case where you-- you come in and replace some poles, and you flick a switch. This is months, and months, and months of-- of work."

Hope Town is on one of several small islands ravaged by Dorian, which then moved across 7 miles of open water to Marsh Harbour, the largest town in the Abacos. At least 60 people died in Marsh Harbour, and destruction is still everywhere. Total damage and loss from Dorian is estimated at $3.4 billion.

"When you see the extent of the destruction, where do you even begin?" Whitaker asked Bahamian Prime Minister Hubert Minnis. "How do you even begin?"

"That's always the question," Minnis said. "Where do we begin?"

Prime Minister Minnis and Viana Gardiner, a top aide, visited Marsh Harbour with Whitaker and pointed to one huge priority: restoring electric power.

"How do you bring this back?" Whitaker asked.

"The power," Minnis said. "We had to make determination to set up micro-grids."

The microgrids Prime Minister Minnis is talking about are small-scale systems. More and more, they're solar arrays with battery storage for when the sun's not shining. They can either feed electricity into the larger grid or operate independently to power a single facility or a neighborhood. The way electricity has been produced in the Bahamas is with diesel-fueled generating stations on each inhabited island, about 30 in all, feeding power to everyone through overhead lines.

"The main power plant for this island is literally 25 miles south of here, Chris Burgess said. "That's 25 miles of line that has to be rebuilt."

Burgess and Justin Locke run the 'Islands Energy Program' for an American non-profit called the Rocky Mountain Institute. They have solar projects throughout "Hurricane Alley." After Category 5 Maria hit Puerto Rico in 2017, they put microgrids on the roofs of ten schools. Maria also brushed St. Vincent, which has now installed its first microgrid. Now, the Islands Energy Program has come to Marsh Harbour.

"So how big will this solar array be?" Whitaker asked.

"15 acres," Burgess said. "Right through here."

That microgrid will satisfy 10% of Marsh Harbour's total power needs, and will be built right between its government center and hospital, both of which were without power for weeks after Dorian.

"This is high ground, which makes it less vulnerable to storm surge or other types of disaster events," Locke said.

"So if a storm like Dorian hits again, the power to these two critical facilities stays on?" Whitaker asked.

"Correct," Locke said.

The push to build storm-proof solar microgrids in the Bahamas began in 2017 after Hurricane Irma, another Category 5 storm, tore through tiny Ragged Island, at the southern tip of the island chain.

"After Ragged Island was devastated, I made a statement: Let us show the world what can be done," Prime Minister Minnis said. "We may be small, but we can set an example to the world."

Minnis said it's his goal to make Ragged Island a green island.

"Absolutely. After which, we can expand it. We can expand it," Minnis said.

To see the prime minister's green experiment, Whitaker flew to Ragged Island with Whitney Heastie, CEO of government-owned utility Bahamas Power and Light. Engineer Burlington Strachan met them there and took us to what he calls the very first hurricane-proof solar microgrid being installed in the Bahamas.

"Unlike other solar designs, it's very low to the ground," Strachan said. "So this installation is rated to withstand 180 mile an hour winds."

180 mph winds are an even harder punch than when Irma landed back in 2017.

"It was significant devastation on this island As you can see, some of the poles snapped right at the very base of the pole," Strachan said. "That happened throughout the island."

This microgrid will produce enough electricity for Ragged Island's roughly 100 residents. The prime minister calls it a laboratory for the solar future. The past is a diesel generator needing boats to deliver fuel from hundreds of miles away, a system Whitney Heastie says is "a nightmare."

"You know, in summer we're almost on the verge of running out of fuel in some of these islands, because bad weather sometimes prohibits the ships from actually getting to some of these locations," Heastie said.

The Bahamian government spends nearly $400 million a year on imported fuel to keep its power plants running and passes that cost along to its citizens. They pay three to four times what people in the mainland U.S. pay for electricity.

"Right, and that isn't price gouging, Burgess said. "I mean, that's just inherent cost."

Everything costs more in the islands. The bill to install one new solar microgrid on Ragged Island is $3 million. Heastie insists it's money well spent.

"So you have this initial big outlay to build these panels," Whitaker said to Heastie. "But over time, the cost of generating power actually goes down?"

"Absolutely," Heastie said. "By using what God has blessed us with, which is the natural sun."

It's not a perfect solution on Ragged Island; notably, the power from these panels will still feed into the vulnerable overhead power lines; the money's not there yet to bury them.

"One of the first things that I think everyone can agree on is everything has to go underground," Matt Winslow said.

Back in Hope Town, Winslow said they have the funds to bury their lines. Americans with second homes here add a lot to the economy, Winslow's family foundation has donated nearly a million dollars to rebuilding efforts. They already have a makeshift microgrid powering the fire station and health clinic and Winslow has hired engineers to help plan a much bigger one on a nearby island.

"It's possible that over in Great Abaco we could put, you know, a solar array, 18 acres," Winslow said. "That power is piped through... preferably a new undersea cable to the island. And that could be a main source of our power."

Winslow said that would be enough to power the island.

The Bahamas' goal is to produce 30% of its energy from renewable sources by 2030. Justin Locke and Chris Burgess of the Islands Energy Program believe the country can do even better.

"The price of renewables have come down to the point where they're now very, very competitive with diesel," Burgess said. "And in most cases, way cheaper than diesel."

"The key game changer has been battery storage," Locke said. "Battery storage has decreased in cost over 60% over the last five years. And what battery storage does is it enables the sun to shine when the sun is not shining. Renewables make more sense here than anywhere else in the world."

And microgrids in the Caribbean are starting to show their value. When earthquakes struck Puerto Rico in January, the entire island's big electrical grid was shut down for days. But remember those solar microgrids installed at schools? They kept providing power. The lessons can really apply anywhere.

"California has the same system architecture as here in the Caribbean, right? Fossil fuel, long transmission distribution lines," Locke said. "And you see that PG&E had to proactively shut off power to millions of people in order to prevent fire."

"If there had been these micro grids might it have been that PG&E would not have had to cut off power to millions of consumers?" Whitaker asked.

"Correct. Correct," Locke said.

Here in the Bahamas there are still huge economic obstacles. Losses from Dorian equal nearly 30% of the country's entire annual GDP.

"You've got this incredible outlay to rebuild these islands that were devastated by Dorian," Whitaker said to Prime Minister Minnis. "Can you afford to bring on a new form of electrical generation?"

"We cannot afford it," Minnis said. "We recognized from day one that we cannot do it alone."

Just weeks after Dorian hit, Prime Minister Minnis spoke at the United Nations. He emphasized that most of the Bahamas was not damaged and eager for tourists, the lifeblood of the economy. Then he said that first-world countries and their pollution are at least partly to blame for the threat of ever-stronger hurricanes.

"First World nations-- and this is what I said at the U.N. I said, 'First World nations make the greatest contribution to climate change,'" Minnis told Whitaker. "They are the ones responsible for the changes that we see. The increase in velocity and ferocity of the hurricanes and the different-- and the changes, typhoons that we see today, but we're the innocent victim. We're the ones that are being impacted by what you have created."

Minnis and leaders of other island nations have proposed that the U.S. and European countries contribute to an insurance fund think of it as a "really rainy day" fund to help rebuild from future storms.

"That's what you say, and what you said at the U.N., the First World nations should do?" Whitaker asked Minnis.

"Absolutely," Minnis said.

But are they doing it?

"It's an ongoing discussion," Minnis said. "It's an ongoing discussion."

"Does this make the change to renewable energy that much more important, imperative, urgent for you here in the Bahamas?" Whitaker asked.

"It is," Minnis said. "Because even though our contribution to climate change is minimal, it's miniscule to compare with First World nation, but we still have a responsibility."

Produced by Rome Hartman. Associate producer, Sara Kuzmarov. Broadcast associate, Emilio Almonte. Edited by Matt Richman and Aisha Crespo.

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Storm-ravaged Bahamas rebuilding its power grid with emphasis on solar energy - 60 Minutes - CBS News

Bahamas Races Ahead With Its ‘Sand Dollar’ Digital Currency – Bitcoinist

Forget about China, Sweden, or even project Libra. The tiny Caribbean island country of the Bahamas is racing ahead with its central bank digital currency (CBDC), dubbed the Sand Dollar. Pilot projects have already reached two of its largest island chains.

The Bahamian central bank is way ahead of most countries when it comes to launching their CBDCs. In fact, Bitcoinist recently reported that it was on track to have it rolled out to all islands by the second half of 2020.

According to a report today, the Sand Dollar is now available on the island of Abaco. This will give its inhabitants easier access to financial services, according to Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance K Peter Turnquest.

The first pilot project of the digital Bahamian dollar was introduced by the countrys central bank in December. This began in the geographically dispersed islands of the Exumas of which only a few of the 365 islands are inhabited. The project has now been extended to its fourth largest island collection, the Abacos.

Turnquest spoke at the launch of the digital dollar in Abaco saying:

A few months ago, the Abaco islands sustained catastrophic damage to their infrastructure, various economic sectors and the very fabric of their lives Hurricane Dorian was one we will never forget, but it is our hope that through the Sand Dollar, the Abaco islands can find some normalcy again, especially as it relates to their financial sector.

He added the Bahamian government was in full support of this digital innovation and was:

committed to ensuring the success of the Sand Dollar on every island of the Bahamas.

He clarified that the Sand Dollar is the exact equivalent of its paper version, in that it is fully backed by the external reserves of the Central Bank. He also said that for those people who had sustained great property damage and even lost everything, this would give them easier access to financial services.

For example, they can now make payments through their mobile devices without incurring fees in direct peer-to-peer transfers.

Furthermore, the consumers can feel secure as the Sand Dollar offers multi-factor authentication where they can use facial recognition, biometrics or a password to access their Sand Dollar app on their mobile devices.

When it comes to the security and privacy of the transactions he reassured his citizens on two counts.

It is also important to note that the Sand Dollar is not anonymous but it is confidential. The Central Bank is working diligently to ensure the safety and security of every consumer in the digital sphere.

During the pilot projects, one of the key components to be worked upon will be the use of the Sand Dollar with offline functionality. This is something that would be absolutely vital in the case of natural disasters that the islands frequently face. Turnquest said:

The Sand Dollar will revolutionize the way business is conducted throughout our islands. Once again, the Government of the Bahamas is in full support of this initiative and we look forward to the continued roll-out in the rest of the Bahama Islands.

While world superpowers take steps towards launching their own digital currency, the Bahamas is way ahead. It may be able to teach some vital lessons about the effect of currency digitizationfor better or for worse.

Do you think the Bahamas will be the first country to launch a fully operational CBDC? Add your thoughts below!

Images via Shutterstock

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Bahamas Races Ahead With Its 'Sand Dollar' Digital Currency - Bitcoinist

Bahamas and Bologna Go On the Offensive to Battle Coronavirus Concerns – TravelPulse Canada

Destinations around the world are taking the offensive to battle travel worries and the coronavirus.

The Bahamas put out a statement on the weekend to say there have been no cases in the island chain, while Bologna, Italy put out a video saying the city is open for business.

"The Bahamas Ministry of Health is working closely with the all pertinent government agencies throughout the destination to execute The Bahamas National Preparedness and Response Plan for COVID-19," officials said in their release. "At this time, there are no reported cases of the coronavirus in The Bahamas."

"The World Health Organization (WHO) does not currently recommend any restriction of travel or trade, and The Bahamas continues to welcome visitors to the destination. The Bahamas is one of the few countries conducting COVID-19 testing and is actively employing several measures used globally to screen visitors and residents and to manage the response to individuals of concern in line with international health best practices. Traveller health questionnaires and a screening protocol are used at ports, hotels and rental properties to identify guests who may require surveillance or treatment."

There are currently only four quarantine cases in The Bahamas.

A destination-wide education campaign is underway in The Bahamas to remind the public of the basic hygiene practices that can be used to prevent the spread of the virus including frequent, proper hand washing, use of hand sanitizers, frequent disinfection of surfaces and avoiding close contact with those exhibiting signs of respiratory illness.

"The WHO (World Health Organization) currently considers the risk to The Bahamas and Caribbean from the coronavirus to be low, but a key element of the IHR plan is to inform the public of relevant updates regularly," Bahamas officials said.

Bologna officials are using the hashtag #BolognaWontStop for their campaign, and said the video they posted is meant to spread a positive message about the city and about the country of Italy.

We strongly believe that it is important to adequately communicate the current situation, the City of Bologna is constantly monitoring the evolution of events but at the moment things here in Bologna are normal and everything is going on as usual, they said. This is the reason why we created the video, following the first one by the City of Milan, to spread the message that Italy, and Bologna, won't stop. We hope that other Italian cities will follow.

I was in Bologna and the Emilia-Romagna region for a week or so several years ago and loved it. The food was spectacular and theres a tremendous amount of history to the area, not to mention lovely wines and beautiful, hilltop villages such as San Leo and Verucchio.

The massive ITB travel conference slated for Berlin this week was cancelled late last week. But officials with the U.S. Travel Association say the annual IPW gathering, slated this year for Las Vegas starting in late May, is full speed ahead at this point.

While IPW is several months away, we're presently on track to host an outstanding event in Las Vegas, Nevada, May 30-June 3. It's "all systems go" and planning for all scenarios is well underway. Registration is strong from both domestic and international attendees, said IPW General Manager Malcolm Smith.

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Bahamas and Bologna Go On the Offensive to Battle Coronavirus Concerns - TravelPulse Canada

Bahamas braves the elements on mainline trip – Keighley News

SNOW and flooding failed to stop Keighley's historic Bahamas as it steamed through the Yorkshire Dales to Carlisle.

The 85-year-old locomotive's latest journey on the mainline, from Keighley to the famous Settle to Carlisle railway, sold out.

The train, owned by the Ingrow-based Bahamas Locomotive Society, ran successfully on time throughout its entire trip despite poor weather.

Among the passengers were Keighley town mayor Cllr Peter Corkindale and Keith Whitmore, chairman of the Bahamas Society.

Another of the passengers, Keighley-born Sam Steventon, a member of the society, entered the raffle and won the prize of the numberplate 45596 of Bahamas which was carried on the loco.

Bahamas minutes long-awaited return to the mainline last year with two sold-out journeys, after volunteers and specialists had spent several years restoring the locomotive with 1 million Heritage Lottery Fund money.

The locomotive was saved from scrap in 1967 by the Bahamas Locomotive Society, which has a workshop and museum at Ingrow West railway station. The Keighley and Worth Valley Railway organised the railtour.

Bahamas was built as a standard Jubilee Class in 1934 by the North British Locomotive Company and entered service in January 1935. It was withdrawn from traffic on July 23 1966 after getting through nine boilers, ten tenders and running over 1.25 million miles.

Locomotive Society.

Keith Whitmore, chairman of the Bahamas Locomotive Society Chairman, said his organisation had been delighted to once again work with the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway following the sell-out Settle to Carlisle trips last year.

High-profile visitors to Bahamas since its restoration have included HRH the Duke of Kent and the Bishop of Wakefield, Tony Robinson.

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Bahamas braves the elements on mainline trip - Keighley News

Beautiful Bimini: A Photo Guide to the Tiny Island in the Bahamas – TravelPulse

Just a hop and a skip (or a seaplane) from southern Florida, Bimini is a pocket-sized island paradise complete with turquoise waters. Proximity to Miami is a mere 50 miles, making it an easy weekend getaway to ultimate relaxation. Tropic Ocean Airways flies out of Miami seaplane base or Fort Lauderdale for a quick thirty-minute flight. A ferry boat runs to the island duo as well, from Port Everglades with Balearia and takes approximately two hours to reach Bimini.

Friendly locals will make you feel more than welcome on this under the radar Bahamian island speck. Whether you fancy a swim, want to try your hand at deep-sea fishingor crave authentic island vibes, Bimini is your nearby destination to check those boxes like the famous visitors, Ernest Hemingway and Martin Luther King Jr.Let these 10 photos guide you through the best way to experience the island...from fresh seafood eats to getting around from beach to beach, this is how to do Bimini.

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Beautiful Bimini: A Photo Guide to the Tiny Island in the Bahamas - TravelPulse

Kylie Jenner’s Lavish Vacation Villa in the Bahamas Costs Over $10,000 a Night to Rent – Yahoo Lifestyle

From Cosmopolitan

Admit it: Despite your absolute best efforts, you've probably been scrolling mindlessly on Kylie Jenner's Instagram feed these past few days, and TBH, I can't even blame youthe girl is on the most enviable vacation rn. This time, Kylie's living it up in the Bahamas with her besties in one of the most gorgeous getaway homes I have ever laid my eyes on. The good news? I've found out exactly where it is, and I am here to give you a tour. Welcome back to another episode of Ah, So That's How the Other Half Lives!

Instead of staying in a hotel (those are so last season, haven't you heard?), Kylie and her closest friends are staying in a luxe Airbnb located on Beach Harbour Island which is home to the Rosalitaa stunning beachfront villa with six bedrooms, seven and a half bathrooms, and more space than I would ever know what to do with.

The property comes built in with tons of amenities, because let's get realKylie only wants the best. The Rosalita has terraces, multiple balconies, gym access, a heated swimming pool, and a small staff consisting of a chef, housekeeper, and a gardener. It's absolutely insane, y'all.

Kylie (and her friends) seem to have taken a huge liking to the poolshe's posted not one, not two, but five (5!) pictures of her lounging in the vicinity of the pool's crystal blue waters.

Believe it or not, but that's just a snippet of this lavish property. Check out the whole villa in the Very Extra video, below:

If all of this sounds good to you and you're feeling overcome with desire to live out Kylie's vacay for yourself, you can check out the home on Airbnb. The property costs over $10,000 USD on its cheapest days, and if you're trying to go during spring break szn, it goes up to $15,000. Don't think of the price, think of how good the pics will look on the 'gram!

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Kylie Jenner's Lavish Vacation Villa in the Bahamas Costs Over $10,000 a Night to Rent - Yahoo Lifestyle

Virus: Carnival Ship forced to Divert from Grand Bahamas – The St. Kitts-Nevis Observer

In a statement by Carnival, it elected to make the change this week given uncertainty over policies with the countries involved:

We are implementing some itinerary changes on voyages scheduled to call on Grand Cayman and Jamaica this week. A number of Caribbean destinations continue to work through their policies with regards to cruise ship visits. And while we are following all U.S. CDC and World Health Organization screening protocols and guidelines, we want to avoid any possibility of a visit to a destination where there is uncertainty or we risk being turned away.

To be clear, there is no health situation on board to trigger this concern, but we are making this change to avoid even the possibility of a disruption. We understand some guests will be disappointed and trust they will understand that this decision is being made to protect their vacation and maximize their experience with us.

SEE ALSO: Coronavirus: Cancellations, suspensions and shortages related to the global virus outbreak

Carnivals move comes in the wake of six total deaths in the U.S. attributed to the worldwide outbreak.

Chiefly, the U.S. has taken in patients from an evacuated Japanese cruise ship, the Diamond Princess. Those patients have been treated in Texas, Washington state and California, among other states.

SEE ALSO: Coronavirus patient from Japan cruise ship quarantine shares experience on home isolation

As of late last week, the Centers for Disease Control counted 11 confirmed cases in Texas, but it was revealed Monday that one of those patients was erroneously discharged from a care facility and then visited several places in the San Antonio area.

While there are confirmed cases in the U.S., health officials said most of them are from patients who contracted the respiratory illness overseas.

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Virus: Carnival Ship forced to Divert from Grand Bahamas - The St. Kitts-Nevis Observer

Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson’s Bahamas Home Is on Sale for $8.5 Million See the Photos! – Yahoo Entertainment

Edward VIII and Wallis Simpsons former Bahamas home is on the market for $8.5 million.

After Edward abdicated the British throne so he could marry American socialite Wallis Simpson, whom he wed in 1937, he became the Duke of Windsor by his brother King George VI and was appointed Governor of the Bahamas, a job that allowed him to live and work on the island for five years.

While the official Governors mansion was being refurbished to Simpsons liking, the couple lived in Sigrist House, a 15,000-square-foot private gated residence, which occupies four acres on the crest of Prospect Ridge in Cable Beach, Nassau.

RELATED:6 Shocking Facts About Wallis Simpson, the Scandalous American Who Stole King Edward VIIIs Heart

Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson's Nassau home | Damianos Sothebys International Realty

Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson's Nassau home | Damianos Sothebys International Realty

Built in the mid-1930s by British aviation pioneer and movie producer Frederick Sigrist, the sprawling estate boasts a total of 15 bedrooms accompanied by 13 full bathrooms, which is spread across a four-bedroom suite main residence, two four-bedroom guesthouses and a three-bedroom apartment.

Designed with expansive patios and extensive high ceiling loggia make spaces either it either an intimate getaway spot or the perfect place to host occasions, with 12 foot ceilings allowing for optimal air circulation throughout.

RELATED:Rare Photos of King Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson

Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson's Nassau home | Damianos Sothebys International Realty

The Great Room and office are paneled with white mahogany, which was hand selected in Honduras before being taken to England for the milling. There are a total of four fireplaces, all of which were imported from country homes in Britain and custom fit for the estate.

Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson's Nassau home | Damianos Sothebys International Realty

Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson's Nassau home | Damianos Sothebys International Realty

The land possesses flourishing tropical gardens, which include fruit and coconut trees, a swimming pool and jacuzzi, all of which are stocked with the beautiful views of the saltwater canals and Atlantic Ocean.

The gourmet kitchen has its own custom cabinetry, which has been upgraded for a thoroughly contemporary functional workspace.

RELATED:Queen Elizabeth Makes Last-Minute Cancellation on Tea Time with Local Women Due to a Cold

Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson's Nassau home | Damianos Sothebys International Realty

Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson's Nassau home | Damianos Sothebys International Realty

The private residence, listed by Damianos Sothebys International Realty, is in an ideal spot close to, but not too near, the beaches, shopping and all of the new amenities offered at the Baha Mar Resort and Casino.

Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson's Nassau home | Damianos Sothebys International Realty

The American-born Duchess of Windsor, who died in April 1986, is the reason Queen Elizabeth eventually took the throne. King Edward VIII, gave up the throne after less than a year because his family (and parliament) wouldnt accept Simpson, the woman he loved (and a two-time divorced American) as Queen.

Wallis Simpson and Edward VIII | Keystone-FranceGamma-Rapho via Getty Images

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Edwards abdication put his younger brother, George VI, on the throne, thus making the present Queen Elizabeth II the heir apparent.

Queen Elizabeth is the U.K.s longest-reigning monarch, with Feb. 6 officially marking 68 years since she took the throne.

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Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson's Bahamas Home Is on Sale for $8.5 Million See the Photos! - Yahoo Entertainment

Two charged in connection with murder on Grand Bahama – Bahamas Tribune

Tyreke Mallory, 21, (left) and Ricardo Jones, 27, are escorted to court on Friday to face murder and abetment to commit murder charges. Photos: Vandyke Hepburn

By DENISE MAYCOCK

Tribune Freeport Reporter

TWO Freeport men were charged in the Freeport Magistrates Court on Friday in connection with the islands third murder.

Ricardo Jones, 27, of No 44 Strafford Way; and Tyreke Antonio Mallory, 21, of No 4 Scott Avenue, appeared before Magistrate Rengin Johnson in Court Three.

Mallory was charged with the murder of Frithzon Kersaint. It is alleged that on February 23, at Freeport, the accused intentionally caused the death of Kersaint by means of unlawful harm.

Jones was charged with abetment to commit murder. It is alleged that on the same date and place, he aided and abetted Mallory in the commission of the murder of Kersaint.

According to reports, police were called to several disturbances in the Caravel Beach area last Sunday when gunshots were heard, and a man was found dead.

Mallory was represented by Paco Deal of Carlson Shurland & Co. Neither of the accused men was required to enter a plea to the charges, which are both indictable offences.

Because the Magistrates Court cannot grant bail for such offences, Magistrate Johnson informed the accused men that bail was denied, but that they could make a bail application to the Supreme Court.

The case was adjourned to May 19 when it will proceed by way of the Voluntary Bill of Indictment.

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Two charged in connection with murder on Grand Bahama - Bahamas Tribune

Deltec Bank, Bahamas says Big Data and AI Are Changing Banking for Good – MENAFN.COM

(MENAFN - GetNews)

Big data is taking over seemingly every industry discipline from STEM research to banking. The more banks begin to introduce innovative technology into their customer and professional experience, the more customers they can serve. A large customer base requires more efficient services, something that can be helped by improving the data science aspect of banking.

According to Deltec Bank & Trust, The Bahamas 'There is an immense amount of data that is generated and managed in banking and finance, especially as customer use leans more and more toward the digital realm. Big data analytics have allowed banks to keep up with customer demand by the gathering of electronic records, abundant, dynamic data storage, and acquiring real-time industry insight. The rapid technological changes in the industry have given rise to financial technology, or 'Fintech, the main applications of which are to make online transactions and ease the process of managing investments.

What is Big Data?

Big data in and of itself is essentially exactly what it sounds like. Falling under the umbrella of data science, this term simply refers to large datasets that need to be statistically analyzed to visualize trends and correlations. In the field of banking and finance, the large datasets allow employees to predict customer behavior and strategize business activity based on that.

There are two primary divisions of data:

The value of data is very much dependent on how it was collected, processed, and stored. The interpretation of that data is even more important, as it directly influences business activity, and therefore success. As the technology becomes more widespread, banking professionals become more precise and significantly faster in their work.

The Benefits of Big Data in Banking

The uses of big data in the banking and finance industries extend much further than just convenience. Also referred to as 'business intelligence (BI) tools, some applications of big data assist professionals to identify risks of money lending and analyzing market trends. These uses will aid finance experts to determine interest rates based on up-to-date data and reduce any risk of errors in customer data records. Safety and security of service have been largely improved, allowing analysts to more easily identify fraudulent transactions and better screen for ineligible customers.

Big data can also greatly improve the customer experience by allowing banks to better monitor customer behavior. Based on data on customer investment patterns, shopping habits, and financial circumstances, banks can improve customer relations and increase maximize lead generation.

There are also many advantages of big data on the customer end: the incorporation of big data into the digital banking experience is what allows customers to check their balances, deposit paychecks, transfer funds between accounts, and so much more. Largely due to the eases of such a self-service experience, banks that have applied the tech to their business have been reported to see a revenue increase of 8% and 10% savings in business costs.

Customer service and relations aren't only improved collectively but for individuals as well. Users of mobile banking apps, for example, can have a highly personalized experience in digital banking, in fact, they expect it! It has been estimated that nearly 1/3 of banking customers expect their bank to be familiar with a certain amount of their personal information. If their relationship with their bank is not based on or somehow tailored to that information, they are likely to end that business relationship.

Artificial Intelligence in Banking

According to Deltec Bank, Bahamas 'AI is an incredibly unique application of big data in any industry including banking.' The use of machine learning based on the statistical analyses of large data sets further improves the customer experience in digital banking. Applications of AI include chatbots in mobile banking apps or websites, along with voice assistance and security in the form of biometric authorization.

Some of the most well-known uses of AI in the industry include Kasisto's conversational AI to use as either a chatbot or virtual assistant, and Affectiva's world-renowned robot, Pepper, a humanoid that reads human emotion.

Although the current applications of big data have already shaken the banking industry to its core, we have yet to see everything fintech can do. The innovation is showing no signs of slowing down, so all banks would do well to move toward integrating the technology into their business model.

Disclaimer: The author of this text, Robin Trehan, has an Undergraduate degree in economics, Masters in international business and finance and MBA in electronic business. Trehan is Senior VP at Deltec International http://www.deltecbank.com . The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in this text are solely the views of the author, and not necessarily reflecting the views of Deltec International Group, its subsidiaries and/or employees.

About Deltec Bank

Headquartered in The Bahamas, Deltec is an independent financial services group that delivers bespoke solutions to meet clients' unique needs. The Deltec group of companies includes Deltec Bank & Trust Limited, Deltec Fund Services Limited, and Deltec Investment Advisers Limited, Deltec Securities Ltd. and Long Cay Captive Management.

Media Contact Company Name: Deltec International Group Contact Person: Media Manager Email: Send Email Phone: 242 302 4100 Country: Bahamas Website: https://www.deltecbank.com/

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Deltec Bank, Bahamas says Big Data and AI Are Changing Banking for Good - MENAFN.COM