Powerful lawmakers join effort to kill surveillance program protected by Trump administration – POLITICO

But a newfound appetite for curtailing U.S. surveillance practices has emerged among Republicans who have criticized the FBIs eavesdropping of former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page, making them willing to buck the Trump administrations demands that the program be permanently extended.

And intelligence officials arent making the case to keep to phone records program, either. Theyve previously admitted it has become too technically complex a burden to maintain.

Longtime privacy advocates on the Hill are seizing on this momentum to kill the program theyve argued is ineffective and violates Americans rights before the statute authorizing it expires on March 15.

This is a big moment for reformers, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), a senior member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, who is looking to push for greater surveillance changes given this new climate in Congress, told POLITICO this month.

Intelligence Chairman Richard Burr (R-N.C.) and Virginia Sen. Mark Warner, the panels top Democrat, introduced legislation that would render the program essentially inoperable while renewing the laws other surveillance authorities predominantly used by the FBI for another eight years.

I plan to propose to leadership that we move, in some fashion, [our] bill, Burr said.

Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), whose panel held a contentious public hearing with an NSA official who couldnt offer examples of the program helping in terror probes, said the proposed legislation works for him.

Meanwhile, in the Democrat-controlled House, the Judiciary and Intelligence committees have been working together for months on a bill that would pull the plug on the surveillance tool once and for all.

The panels are writing a proposal that will both renew authorities necessary to the protection of national security, while also bolstering additional privacy and transparency safeguards where appropriate, a senior Democratic House Intelligence Committee official told POLITICO.

Obviously, time is of the essence, and we hope to come to [a] consensus in the coming month or so, the official added.

A House Democratic aide said the program was built to address an adversary and a technological gap that existed 25 years ago, but times have changed. Bad guys don't use landlines to talk to each other anymore The technology is different. It is less valuable to us today than it was than it would have been in 2001 when they needed it.

But a critical player is Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who has yet to indicate he would buck the White House over the intelligence tool. A McConnell spokesperson declined to comment, and a spokesperson for the National Security Council did not respond to a request for comment from POLITICO about the broad resistance from Congress.

The NSA gained the ability to access and analyze Americans domestic calling records shortly after 9/11. Established in secret, the program was designed to vacuum up metadata the numbers and time stamps for calls or text messages but not the actual content so the agency could sift for links among possible associates of terror suspects.

The Snowden leaks eventually forced the Obama administration and Congress to settle on a new law, the USA Freedom Act, that ended NSAs bulk phone collection but allowed the records to be retained by telephone companies and accessed by the federal government with court approval.

Problems with the revised system began to emerge publicly in 2018 when the NSA announced it had uncovered technical irregularities that caused it to collect more phone records than it had legal authority to gather. The agency dumped its entire collection of phone records. However, the problem soon resurfaced, according to an inspector general report.

The recurring compliance headaches around the program, its negative association with Snowden and an inability by intelligence leaders to offer concrete examples of its value in fighting terrorism led a spectrum of observers including former and current intelligence officials to question if the scaled down system was worth keeping at all.

The administration had been quiet about its intentions for the future of the program. Thats a contrast to 2017 when the White House and the intelligence community successfully pressed lawmakers to renew a separate set of warrantless programs that intercept digital traffic of foreign targets while collecting personal information on Americans.

In March, a senior congressional aide revealed that the NSA had deactivated the domestic surveillance program. Then-Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats confirmed that fact in a letter to Congress in August, which acknowledged that the system has been indefinitely shut down but still asked lawmakers to extend its legal basis.

On Capitol Hill, the urge to strike the program from the books only grew. But in December, lawmakers were forced to include language in a stopgap government funding bill that punted the deadline for the surveillance programs by 90 days, until March 15.

The move was made, in part, because the House impeachment inquiry dominated much of the congressional calendar and to wait for potentially consider additional surveillance reforms, some of which were highlighted by Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitzs review of the FBIs handling of its investigation of the Trump campaign in 2016.

A lot of very smart people had a notion that it would be a bad idea for us to pass a bill the first week of December and to have an IG report detailing the inner depths of the FISA process come out the second week of December and then look foolish, the House Democratic aide told POLITICO.

The aide said that on big ticket questions there isnt a lot of daylight between the existing Senate bill and the one that will be produced by the House Judiciary and Intelligence panels, though an eight-year extension of the other authorities isnt likely to pass the lower chamber.

Other issues could also complicate the short window left for lawmakers to take up the surveillance law.

This week, Wyden and a bipartisan group of House and Senate lawmakers introduced a bill that would end the program, codify an intelligence community decision to stop location-tracking surveillance activities, and change the process for obtaining court approval for surveillance, while proposing additional transparency measures.

To pass a bill where everybody says the thing doesn't work and we're just going to write into law what they're already doing and then call it a day, I think, would be very unfortunate because there's a lot more to do, Wyden said.

But additional changes appear to be a non-starter for Burr, who advised Wyden and others to introduce legislation if they want to see them enacted.

Elizabeth Goitein, a privacy advocate and co-director of the Liberty & National Security Program at the Brennan Center for Justice, said offing the program should be the bare minimum lawmakers try to achieve.

When you have a surveillance program that has collected more than a billion records of Americans some of them without legal authorization, and all of them without any significant benefit its a no-brainer that the program should be terminated, she said.

The House aide said the expectation is for legislation to be introduced and voted on, at least by the Judiciary Committee, before going to the full chamber before the March 15 deadline. An overwhelmingly bipartisan House vote could send a message to the Senate to get on board with its bill.

Burr suggested that any extension would have to be hitched to another must-pass bill something in short supply this time of year. Such a move would prevent the legislation from being jammed on the floor by privacy hawks like Wyden and Republican Sens. Rand Paul (Ky.) and Mike Lee (Utah).

Burr didnt rule out another short-term extension, either.

Im not going to rule out that we may have an effort by leadership to extend the authorization another 90 days or 60 days or something, Burr said.

We still have to do it. This is a must do.

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Powerful lawmakers join effort to kill surveillance program protected by Trump administration - POLITICO

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Edward Snowden warns that Assange and Greenwald prosecutions mark new stage in assault on press freedom – World Socialist Web Site

Edward Snowden warns that Assange and Greenwald prosecutions mark new stage in assault on press freedom By Oscar Grenfell 30 January 2020

In an opinion piece published in the Washington Post on Sunday, National Security Agency (NSA) whistleblower Edward Snowden warned that US charges against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and a Brazilian prosecution of Intercept journalist Glenn Greenwald are the spearhead of a campaign by governments around the world to abolish press freedom.

Calling for all supporters of democratic rights to rally to the defence of both Assange and Greenwald, Snowden wrote: The most essential journalism of every era is precisely that which a government attempts to silence. These prosecutions demonstrate that they are ready to stop the pressesif they can.

Snowdens voice carries the weight and authority of a courageous individual who risked everything to alert the population to government crimes. In 2013, Snowden revealed mass NSA spying on the American and world population, as well as on the political rivals of US imperialism, including its own formal allies, in violation of the US constitution and international law.

For these actions, he has been relentlessly hounded by the US government and its intelligence agencies. His successful flight to Russia and bid for political asylum was carried out with assistance from WikiLeaks.

Snowdens appeal comes at a crucial stage in the fight to free Assange. British court hearings for the WikiLeaks founders extradition to the US, where he faces Espionage Act charges and the prospect of life imprisonment, begin on February 24. If extradited, Assange would be prosecuted over his role in WikiLeaks publishing activities, including its exposures of war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan and human rights abuses at the US military prison at Guantnamo Bay.

The British judiciary, and all of the official political parties, have already greenlighted what can only be termed an extraordinary rendition operation. The US Department of Justice has made clear Assange would be denied the First Amendment protections for freedom of the press and free speech, despite the fact that he has been charged under domestic US law.

Glenn Greenwald was charged last week in Brazil with conspiracy and hacking offences for his role in exposing how Brazilian officials used an anti-corruption probe to railroad political opponents of the countrys fascistic president Jair Bolsonaro in the lead-up to the countrys 2018 national election. Snowden described the prosecution of Greenwald as a straightforward attempt to intimidate and retaliate against Greenwald and the Intercept for their critical reporting on the Brazilian government.

In his article, headlined Trump Has Created a Global Playbook to Attack Those Revealing Uncomfortable Truths, Snowden noted that this attack was a direct application of the Assange precedent.

The NSA whistleblower wrote: The legal theory used by the Brazilian prosecutorsthat journalists who publish leaked documents are engaged in a criminal conspiracy with the sources who provide those documentsis virtually identical to the one advanced in the Trump administrations indictment of [Assange] in a new application of the historically dubious Espionage Act.

The arrest and unveiling of a US indictment against Assange last year has also been followed by police raids against journalists in Australia, and threats by the French government to prosecute journalists for exposing its complicity in the Saudi-led war on Yemen.

The connection between the US attacks on Assange and Brazils move against Greenwald is likely even more direct. In comments this week, the Intercept journalist noted that the Bolsonaro government would not have initiated a prosecution without receiving the go-ahead from the Trump administration. The US State Department has said nothing about the charges against Greenwald. In other words, the same political forces are spearheading the persecution of both Assange and Greenwald.

Snowden pointed to the way in which the Trump administration has accelerated a protracted government assault on press freedom.

The NSA whistleblower commented that while former US President Barack Obama initiated the US-led vendetta against Assange, his administration did not publicly-unveil charges against the WikiLeaks founder over his publishing activities, for fear of triggering a constitutional crisis. Instead, the Obama administration used US allies, including Sweden and Britain, to concoct a sexual misconduct frame-up against Assange that was used to blacken his name and deprive him of his liberty.

The attempt to prosecute Greenwald similarly represented a rapid escalation, after an August 2019 order from a Brazilian Supreme Court judge banned the police from even investigating the journalist.

Snowdens article followed an opinion piece in the New York Times by Intercept reporter James Risen, who warned that the cases against Julian Assange and Glenn Greenwald may be models for a crackdown. It noted that the charges against Greenwald were eerily similar to those contained in the US Espionage Act indictment of Assange.

Risen wrote: Both cases are based in part on a new prosecutorial conceptthat journalism can be proved to be a crime through a focus on interactions between reporters and their sources. Prosecutors are now scrutinizing the processes by which sources obtain classified or private information and then provide it to journalists. Since those interactions today are largely electronic, prosecutors are seeking to criminalize journalism by turning to anti-hacking laws to implicate reporters in the purported criminal activity of their sources in gaining access to data on computers or cellphones without authorization.

He noted that if this model were successful, it would provide the government with a detour around the First Amendment protections of the US constitution and would imperil journalists everywhere.

The publication of articles defending Assange in two of the largest daily newspapers in the US underscores the fears of the major media corporations that this campaign could disrupt their decades-long collaboration with governments and state authorities and their lucrative business models.

For years, the New York Times, the Washington Post and other mainstream publications have aided the assault on press freedom, including by repeating the official smears used to discredit Assange. Both publications promoted the bogus Swedish sexual-misconduct allegations against him.

The Times collaborated with Assange in 2010 on the very publications over which Assange has been charged. By 2011, however, they had thrown the WikiLeaks founder to the wolves and undermined his First Amendment protections by falsely claiming that he had functioned as a source and not a co-publisher.

Risens piece, even as it warned against the implications of Assanges persecution, gave succour to the unsubstantiated assertions of the Democratic Party and the intelligence agencies that he functioned as an agent of the Russian government in 2016.

In reality, WikiLeaks 2016 publications proved that the Democratic National Committee had sought to rig the Democratic Party primaries against Bernie Sanders in favour of Hillary Clinton, in violation of its own rules. They demonstrated that Clinton had promised multi-billionaire bankers that she would govern in their interests and support more predatory US military interventions.

Risen has long promoted the discredited Russiagate conspiracy theory, including by slandering Assange. This underscores the fact that there will be no genuine defence of the WikiLeaks founder, or of democratic rights, from the corporate press, which is thoroughly integrated into the state apparatus. It demonstrates that the fight to free Assange and all class war prisoners, and to defend Greenwald, requires the development of an independent political movement of the working class.

2019 has been a year of mass social upheaval. We need you to help the WSWS and ICFI make 2020 the year of international socialist revival. We must expand our work and our influence in the international working class. If you agree, donate today. Thank you.

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Edward Snowden warns that Assange and Greenwald prosecutions mark new stage in assault on press freedom - World Socialist Web Site

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Home Prices Rose in All 20 Metro Areas Reported by S&P – Professional Builder

Demand is up, inventory is down, and home prices are on the rise. According to the Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index, home prices experienced the highest gain in November since February 2018. This trend is not limited to any region: All 20 metro areas measured by the S&P experienced an increase in the median price of a home with Seattle and Charlotte, North Carolina, leading the pack in home price appreciation. And with no end to the affordable housing shortage in sight, experts expect prices to continue increasing.

The Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index, reported by S&P Dow Jones Indices, rose at a seasonally adjusted annual growth rate of 6.2% in November, following a 5.1% increase in October. It was the highest gain since February 2018. On a year-over-year basis, the Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price NSA Index posted a 3.5% annual gain in November, up from 3.2% in October. After the slowdown in the early of 2019, home price appreciation has accelerated in the last two months due to tight inventory and strong demand. Home prices are expected to continue rising as tight inventory remains a concern.

Meanwhile, the Home Price Index, released by the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), rose at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 2.7% in November, following a 4.3% increase in October. On a year-over-year basis, the FHFA Home Price NSA Index rose by 4.9% in November, after an increase of 5.2% in October, marking a slowdown from the previous month.

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Home Prices Rose in All 20 Metro Areas Reported by S&P - Professional Builder

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Sheep farmers invited to the NI NSA AGM – Farming Life

Published: 08:52 Tuesday 28 January 2020

The Northern Ireland Region of National Sheep Association is offering an open invitation to its members and any sheep farmer to the Annual Regional Members Meeting.

The venue is The Ross Park Hotel, Kells, Ballymena on Thursday 6th February with ARMM at 7.30pm and open meeting at 8.00pm.

Katie James from NSA headquarters will be giving a quick overview of current NSA work and involvement with UK government. Since the UK voted to leave the UK the NSA has been working tirelessly to represent sheep farmers and make sure they were not forgotten in any negotiations. There is less talk or urgency about Brexit at present but now more than ever we need to keep the pressure on to ensure a suitable outcome. The new Agriculture Bill is now on the table and NSA will be keeping a close eye on the interpretations of the content.

CEO Phil Stocker said: The aspiration to create a fairer supply chain is commendable but we would like to see commitments to protect our farmers from products of lower standards, particularly if we see a strong drive to increase environmental and welfare standards.

The main speaker for the evening is a young farmer from Wales.

Rhys Edwards manages the family farm with his parents in the South Wales valleys. Now 225 acres, Hendre Ifan Goch farm is in an SDA Region. Ranging from approximately 600-1300ft above sea level and rainfall is over 2m annually. The farm is currently running 600 ewes and 150 ewe lambs running dry. Of the 600 ewes, 400 are Texel mules/Aberfields that are used for the ram compare project, with the remaining 200 mainly welsh mules are used for breeding ewe lamb replacements. Ewes are lambed in doors .

The NI Region expect Rhys to give an inspiring and interesting presentation and he will be available for questions from those present.

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Sheep farmers invited to the NI NSA AGM - Farming Life

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Explaining why Reality Winner is still in prison with Kerry Howley: podcast and transcript – NBC News

In the summer of 2017, a 25-year-old government contractor exposed detailed evidence of Russian interference in the 2016 election. Reality Winner printed out classified U.S. Intelligence documents, hid the papers in her pantyhose as she left work and then put them in the mail to The Intercept. The report they published was the first piece of concrete evidence shared with the public proving that the United States possessed tangible evidence that Russians hackers attacked American voting systems.

After The Intercept published the story complete with scans of the original papers authorities immediately traced the leak back to Reality Winner. She was arrested, denied bail and is now serving five years in a federal prison. Kerry Howley wrote an in-depth profile of Reality Winner for New York Magazine and joins to share the compelling story of who Winner is, why she did it and the severe treatment she's received at the hands of the United States government.

KERRY HOWLEY: It's about, in the wake of 9/11, this massive secret state that we build that's outside of democratic processes. It's not accountable to anyone. We don't even know what it costs necessarily. That's massively geographically distributed and involves 100,000 of our fellow Americans who go to work every day and can't tell their families what they do. And it's like, who are those people, right? And we picture 60-year-old white men who are grim in suits. But no, there are people like Reality Winner. There are young people, people who have been pulled into this world that's completely hidden.

CHRIS HAYES: Hello and welcome to Why Is This Happening? with me, your host, Chris Hayes.

So, there's basically three prongs to Russian interference in the 2016 election two of which we basically have comprehensive knowledge about (or a lot of knowledge about), and one of which remains somewhat murky and occluded.

The first is the hacking of emails, right? They hacked the DNC server, they hacked John Podesta's email who's the campaign chair, I think, for the Hillary Clinton campaign. Those emails then were distributed via WikiLeaks and they drove huge amounts of press coverage, were very damaging to the Clinton campaign. We know about that thanks to both forensic reports from private firms, from statements put up by the intelligence agencies, and also most comprehensively the Mueller indictments that walk through the hacking operation.

There's also the kind of bot network, the Internet Research Agency, which was doing all this stuff on social media, trolling and running Facebook ads, and even in some crazy cases organizing groups of demonstrators, like of Americans from their headquarters in St. Petersburg, I believe. So, that's one

And then the third is in some ways like the most ominous but also the one that's been the least transparently discussed and that is Russian hackers probing various U.S. elections systems. We have some information about that. Some has been made public, some has been made sort of half-public. There's this thing that keeps happening in which the government will say that [the Russians] attempted to penetrate certain election systems, and then not tell us which ones or to what extent.facet.

And the first time that we really learned about the attempts by Russian hackers to get into election software which, let's just keep in mind that this is real kind of apocalyptic stuff, right? I mean, a foreign intelligence apparatus penetrating the software upon which U.S. votes are registered is really scary stuff. I mean, you could imagine them deleting and mass voter registrations causing chaos. You could imagine them in the most extreme setting, changing vote tallies.

None of that happened as far as we know, evidence that any of that happened but they were rooting around those systems, and the degree to which they were able to penetrate them remains somewhat unclear. And in the summer of 2017, June 2017, there was an article about this effort. It was sort of the first big published article, and it appeared in a publication called The Intercept.

The Intercept was an interesting place for it to appear. The Intercept was founded in 2014. It was bankrolled by Pierre Omidyar, who is the billionaire who made a bunch of money in eBay, and its of first three big flagship founders were Laura Poitras, who's a filmmaker who documented Edward Snowden's time in that Hong Kong hotel room. If you've ever seen a movie about that, it's incredible. Glenn Greenwald, who was the person who got the Snowden documents. And Jeremy Scahill, longtime reporter and writer who worked for The Nation, among other places.

And the sort of editorial perspective of the publication has always been deeply skeptical of the intelligence apparatus, intelligence officials, the U.S. military industrial complex has championed whistleblowers folks like Edward Snowden. That term is obviously loaded when you're talking about Edward Snowden, but from their perspective, he's a whistleblower.

And there had also been, I think, sort of prominent editorial voices there: Greenwald chief among them, had been very skeptical of stories about Russian election interference and manipulation, that that should be taken with a grain of salt, that perhaps it was being overstated and manipulated. And so when this story appeared in The Intercept, it was both a huge scoop.

The story had actual U.S. intelligence documents that showed that Russian hackers had attempted this spear phishing which is the way they got into Podesta's email against a variety of American election software firms. Again, big deal, and it was the first, if I'm not mistaken, first time that we really had concrete evidence that there was tangible intelligence info that the U.S. government had possession of that showed the scope of the ambitions of what Russian hackers were doing in 2016.

That story was published. It was very notable and interesting. It appeared in The Intercept when what it demonstrated seemed to be in some tension with the kind of posture of some of the most prominent editorial voices there. And then a few days later, the person who leaked this information, a contractor with the NSA, a woman by the name Reality Winner, was arrested by the FBI. She was denied bail and ultimately sentenced to five years in federal prison.

Now, what she did was a violation of law. It was classified information that she leaked. That's illegal, but the treatment of her has been honestly insane. There is no credible evidence that the publishing of this information harm national security in any way. In fact, a lot of it hasn't been made public subsequently. In fact, there's a good case to be made it's information we should know as an informed public.

She is serving a five year sentence in federal prison and she is a really interesting case because she's the kind of person that you could imagine being kind of cause clbre as happens often with whistleblowers. People who come forward to distribute information they feel the government is hiding that the public should know about. But she's a strange case because she doesn't have a kind of natural ideological cohort backing her.

The folks on the left, who are very skeptical of intelligence agencies, and the so-called deep state, fit awkwardly with what she was trying to demonstrate in her leak, which was to convince the folks at The Intercept that the Russia thing is real. It's really happening. They really, really did do some gnarly stuff and you should take this seriously. So, there's not this sort of like built-in kind of base to support Reality Winner on the elements on the left ideological spectrum, that have been the sort of base for support of intelligence, whistleblowers and leakers.

And on the right, she was showing that Russia really was putting it some on the scale on behalf of Donald Trump. And there's no ideological appetite on that side either.

And so her case, I think, has been caught in this kind of shameful limbo. And what's been done to her is just to my mind, insane. I mean, what she did was rash. It was impulsive, it was a violation of both the law and what the oath she had taken in her job. All of that is unquestionably true, but five years in federal prison for what she did is just an unbelievable penalty.

And the government's treatment of her, as you'll hear in this conversation, has been just relentlessly punitive at every single turn. And the human story of who she is and why she did what she did is a super compelling one. I first kind of came upon the full human story in this fantastic profile that was written about her back in 2017 by a phenomenal nonfiction writer named Kerry Howley. It's called Who Is Reality Winner? And subsequently Kerry wrote a screenplay about Reality Winner that has now been acquired, and I think it's going to go into production. It can be an upcoming film called Winner.

And I had been wanting for a while to take a deep dive on Reality Winner's case, because it's stands at the nexus of so many of the issues that kind of run through our discourse right now about who to trust, about the so-called deep state, about the ways in which career government officials are wrestling with the Trump era and the Trump moment and when to go against their bosses and when to make information public and what we know and don't know and what secrets lurk out there. All of which kind of hangs over the entirety of our political discourse in the moment of Trump, particularly in the wake of the manipulation of the 2016 election and the criminal sabotage conducted by a foreign intelligence agency in Russia.

So, Kerry Howley very kindly agreed to come on the podcast and talk about who Reality Winner is, what happened to her, what her story is and I think it is both an incredible story about the moment we're in in this country and also just a really, I think, moving human story about the complex motives that go into a person who decides to take a risk like Reality Winner did.

I want to just start at the most basic level with the story because I think the details of it are not very well known despite the fact they are fascinating and unnerving in many ways. Maybe just tell me: Who is Reality Winner?

KERRY HOWLEY: Right. Reality Winner was a 25-year-old NSA contractor working in Iranian aerospace at NSA, Georgia in Augusta. One day she walked into her job and she had come across a document that detailed Russian election interference at a level of detail that we hadn't yet seen publicly at that point.

She prints it out, that document, folds it up, put it in her pantyhose and walked out, and sometime later mailed it to The Intercept, where it was subsequently published and she's currently serving a sentence of 63 months in a maximum security in Fort Worth for that crime.

CHRIS HAYES: That is a pretty long sentence.

KERRY HOWLEY: It's the longest sentence ever for a leak prosecution...

CHRIS HAYES: The longest ever?

KERRY HOWLEY: Yes.

CHRIS HAYES: Let's go back. I mean, the first thing when I heard about this story, and this is a dumb surface thing, but her name. The first thought was like, "Who is the kind of person who's named Reality and to which household does a baby come that then gets named Reality?"

KERRY HOWLEY: I think that has actually been a problem for raising awareness of Reality's case and the analysis does tend to stop there. Like, really? In this age in which everything seems so absurd we're going to add the name Reality Winner to the pile? But another hilarious aspect of this is that she has a sister named Brittany. Brittany and Reality. Her father gave her that name. Her parents had decided that her mother would get to name the first and her father would name the second.

The larger question of who is Reality Winner is a fascinating character study. I mean, as soon as I started researching this, I was hit with just how hilarious this person is. The legal documents that I was accessing just to begin the story, to begin the process of telling the story, involved her FBI interrogation. She's hilarious in her FBI interrogation. Her Facebook messages, which were brought up in court with her sister are very funny.

She's a vegan, she's a social justice activist. She is a gun rights supporter. She's just one of these millennials who crosses lines, right? She doesn't fit easily into any particular box. That made her really fun to write about.

CHRIS HAYES: How did she end up working as a contractor for the NSA?

KERRY HOWLEY: That's a really good question. And it's really the animating question, I think, of the profile and in some ways the film. How does this person who is so invested in social justice, thinks of herself as someone who raises awareness about all these causes, about what she has great anxiety, like global warming and Syrian War orphans and African elephants? How does this person end up, not just at the NSA, but a contractor for the NSA?

It's a very complicated question to answer. It starts with her joining up with the Air Force, which is something that I think she saw as a humanitarian act. She didn't see the goals of her idealistic humanitarianism and joining up with the military to be intention at all. And I don't think many people in Kingsville, Texas, where she's from necessarily do.

And so she signs up and she ends up actually in the drone program. She's trying to go abroad. She ends up a linguist. So, the Air Force trains her as a linguist. She's fluent in Farsi, Dari, and Pashto...

CHRIS HAYES: Wait, let me just stop you there. I mean, the armed services always need more people who speak languages like those. It's very hard to train people to speak them because those languages are difficult to learn if you're a native English speaker, and the world of people that can train and learn Dari and Pashto is fairly small. It's not like learning Spanish. She must have some considerable aptitude if she's able to acquire some level of mastery or competence in those.

KERRY HOWLEY: Absolutely. I mean, I think she was very good at her job. All of this is classified. It's very hard to get people to talk about their participation in the drone program. But those who would talk to me said things like, "She was excellent and very professional," and she clearly had an aptitude for languages and she had this job where all day long she's listening to communications and she knows she's eavesdropping on people in Pakistan, transcribing. And those translations were used for military actions, right? People, it seems, would have died due to her translations. It's a very serious, troubling job that I think caused her a lot of anxiety and guilt.

CHRIS HAYES: She goes into the air force with this kind of... She's someone who's very animated by social justice, really cares about global causes particularly, she goes into the Air Force with a kind of view that this would be a means to that end. She ends up training as a linguist and then she's surveilling folks in Pakistan and using the product of that surveillance to target people that will then be blown up by airstrikes.

KERRY HOWLEY: Yes, and I think her vision had been, "Okay, I'm going to go in for a little while. I'm going to learn these languages and then I'm not going to use these languages to eavesdrop. I'm going to use them to go over to Pakistan and work in a refugee camp," or some direct kind of helping.

CHRIS HAYES: She saw this as sort of a step on the way and then she has these language skills and she can go help these folks directly.

KERRY HOWLEY: I think so, and she's constantly trying to deploy. She's trying to go abroad, but there just isn't that opportunity. When she finally gets out, she's searching, and this later it comes up in her trial. When the DOJ attempts to characterize her as some nefarious terrorist sympathizer, she's searching for jobs in Afghanistan and Pakistan with nonprofits, but she doesn't have a college degree because she's gone straight into the Air Force.

KERRY HOWLEY: And there is this pipeline from the military into these contractor jobs because these military contractors are always desperate for people who have security clearance. When she cannot find a job that she wants, she ends up at this contractor, which was never, I don't think, the future she envisioned herself.

CHRIS HAYES: Wow. That's fascinating. She gets these language skills. She's on the drone program. She wants to go do nonprofit working. She ends up sort of through this kind of inertia.

KERRY HOWLEY: Right, this conveyor belt, this machine. Yeah.

CHRIS HAYES: Because they need people that are already... have clearance, and she finds herself doing... What is the work that she does for the NSA contractor?

KERRY HOWLEY: What we know is that she was working in the field of Iranian aerospace. I don't know more than that or really what even that means.

CHRIS HAYES: She's there. At this point, do we know what her sort of feelings are about, I don't know, the war on terror, the American state, the American military industrial complex, her role in all of it? Does she have kind of... in the case of, say, Edward Snowden, there's this kind of trajectory of a kind of dawning awareness in which he starts out thinking like, "I'm gung-ho about this," and then being, "There's serious abuses and this is too much." And kind of having this sort of crisis of conscience. Does she have an arc like that here?

KERRY HOWLEY: It's not so clear. I mean, I think it's complicated. I think that she was deeply troubled by atrocities that she was listening to and hearing about that were committed by ISIS. In some way she saw herself as protecting the vulnerable when she was at the NSA... or in the drone program, excuse me. But she also... she was no fan of Donald Trump. She mostly had very progressive politics. She has this compulsion to help. She's one of these people who is constantly trying to improve everywhere she is.

She's not great at compartmentalizing. She, like many 25-year-olds, believes very strongly in her own capacity to see right from wrong. And that is really... it's a great character to write because if you are determined to improve everyone you meet and every situation you find yourself in, that's a recipe for conflict. And it's like a disaster for the NSA, which depends on conformity and compartmentalization.

CHRIS HAYES: Yeah. The whole point is you do what you're told and you do it competently and quietly, but you're not like... no one's looking for Joan of Arc, right?

KERRY HOWLEY: Right.

CHRIS HAYES: ... in those situations, that's not what you're looking for.

KERRY HOWLEY: I think one of the things that attracted me to this story is ... I can remember being 25 and the intellectual rigidity of that time. It's a time, I think, of great intellectual fulfillment and certainty, and to confront a 25-year-old with a question of, "Are you going to respect the oath you made to this federal agency or an obligation you think you have to the American electorate?" I think that's a great burden to put on an intellectually engaged 25-year-old.

CHRIS HAYES: Why is that the question she faces?

KERRY HOWLEY: The document she came across detailed a spear phishing attack on a provider of election software which had been successful. The Russian intelligence had attained login credentials and was then able to email a bunch of state level election officials. And this was a time we forget that this ever happened but this was a time when people on the left and the right were saying things like, "There is no hard evidence that the Russians attempted to interfere in our election." She was hearing that on Fox News, which was played consistently at her job at NSA Augusta, to the point where she actually filed a formal complaint asking them to change the channel.

CHRIS HAYES: Are you serious?

KERRY HOWLEY: Yes. This is her, right? She gets to a place and she's like, "Things need to change."

CHRIS HAYES: Like, for instance, "You need to shut off the Trump TV on my television."

KERRY HOWLEY: Yeah. She's also hearing it at The Intercept, which is a publication that she was following. She asked for a transcript of a podcast that The Intercept had done in which someone states, "Literally there's no hard evidence that the Russians have attempted to interfere in our election." And so you can see one way to tell this story is that she was responding to that statement.

CHRIS HAYES: Around what time is this, that this is happening?

KERRY HOWLEY: This was May 2017.

CHRIS HAYES: Right. What's frustrating about that is that it had been pretty well established by May 2017. You've got the intelligence agencies saying back in 2016 that that's their determination, but I can understand people being skeptical of them. But you also have private security actors who say pretty quickly, "Look, we've done a forensic review and the Russians were in these systems, they were definitely in the DNC." There's a fair amount of evidence by May 2017, but it's an important point I just want to stay on, which is that there are lots of people denying that for a very long period of time, on the left and on the right.

KERRY HOWLEY: Right. And the Obama administration I think was... they were worried about being too loud about this, because they didn't want to be seen as sewing paranoia about the election in a way that looked like they were trying to rig things for Hillary Clinton. And so they would send out these very vague notices to state level election officials, "Be on high alert," the kind of thing where it's like you're getting a notification to change your password, but what really didn't came across was a level of specificity that was new.

And, in fact, after the document appeared, the Election Assistance Commission which is the federal agency whose job it is to communicate with state level election officials sent out an alert saying, Hey, look at this. This is new to us. State level election officials were upset, they said, No one told us about this attack and we would've like to have known about it.

CHRIS HAYES: So her specifically, you're saying she's watching Fox News and she's listening to The Intercept podcast, and The Intercept had some folks who are skeptical about Russian interference. She gets a transcript of a podcast in which someone is saying there is no hard evidence, and then she comes across this not just hard evidence, but truly astoundingly unnerving hard evidence which is like, they didn't just get into the inbox of a dude named John Podesta (which itself was massively destructive to the entire election) but a log in into an election software company. It's pretty scary stuff.

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KERRY HOWLEY: Yeah. The potential to change voter rolls is scary, and I think she felt... What she said during her FBI interrogation was, "I can't believe this wasn't already out there, that someone else hadn't already leaked it."

CHRIS HAYES: And it's funny because subsequently there's been reporting on precisely this, independent of her leak. Right? It has sort of come out through different reporting, that it's been the subject of tremendous controversy. You have a situation in Florida in which Bill Nelson was running for Senate and sort of said... mentioned offhandedly that their state election system had been penetrated, or at least attempted to be penetrated, and people were like, What are you talking about crazy old man? And then it turned out that he was right.

KERRY HOWLEY: Yeah. Yeah. If you talk to election security experts, they'll say, This is precisely the kind of thing we've been worrying about publicly for a long time, but nobody listens because who wants to talk about election... people get bored immediately when you say the words "election security." But this idea of the vulnerability of vendors apparently had been a weakness that people knew about, and now those experts can say, Look, it's actually happened, here's the evidence.

CHRIS HAYES: Is it an impulsive situation where she prints this thing out? Is it a plant? Is it, she's like, I'm going to set these people right ? Because what's so crazy to me about this leak is that she is trying to correct the false sense of media figures that she trusts. She's like, No, you guys, I like you and you're right about so many things, but you're wrong about this and I want to just show you that you're wrong.

KERRY HOWLEY: Yeah. My impression and something that she does say in a jailhouse phone call is that it was impulsive, but I think we can say it was impulsive and came from good intentions.

CHRIS HAYES: Right. I guess my point is that she's a strange sort of figure because this is not whistle blowing, in the sense she's not like, Oh, look at this abuse that's happening in the surveillance agency I live in. Or like, Look at these civilians that we the U.S. government killed. It's, No, actually the attack against the Americans by the Russians is a real thing, you skeptics of Russian interference.

KERRY HOWLEY: Right. And I think it's been really frustrating to her family that not only other leakers like say, Petraeus, or the president has also shared classified information, have not been punished in the same way.

CHRIS HAYES: Yeah. We should say the president is different constitutionally because all classification authority flows from him, so he can declassify anything he wants to.

KERRY HOWLEY: Sure. But take the example of Petraeus. He was charged with a misdemeanor and never did any jail time. Other people, like say, Michael Cohen or Maria Butina people who did not have the best of intentions have done less jail time or been sentenced to less jail time, and I think that's been of great frustration to her and her family.

CHRIS HAYES: I want to get into the chain of events that led to her arrest and sentencing and we'll do that after this break.

So she prints this out, she smuggles it out and what does she do with the printout?

KERRY HOWLEY: She snail mails it to The Intercept.

CHRIS HAYES: And they get it and they write a story based on it?

KERRY HOWLEY: They get it, and this becomes quite murky, we've never gotten a full accounting of what happened and why, but... I'm not an investigative reporter but my understanding is when you get a leaked document, you never share the image of that document with the agency from which it was leaked, because that has traceable information.

CHRIS HAYES: Right.

KERRY HOWLEY: That someone at The Intercept sent an image of the document to a contractor who was then legally obligated to show it to the NSA, which then immediately located Reality. Only a few people had printed this out. Only one of those people had downloaded a transcript from The Intercept. And...

CHRIS HAYES: She did that on her government account, on her contractor account?

KERRY HOWLEY: I believe so.

CHRIS HAYES: Oh, God. There's traceable information because there's actually... My understanding is there's a security system on the printer. That it's built in. That there's traceable signals embedded in the document that say who printed out the thing.

KERRY HOWLEY: Yeah, that's my impression too. So it's not entirely clear why that happened from a publication that prides itself on supporting whistleblowers, and of course was founded with the intention of disseminating information that Snowden had acquired, but she was basically immediately apprehended after that.

CHRIS HAYES: So in the course of reporting, they share the document; the document makes its way back to the NSA. The NSA does not have a very tough detective trail to trace down until they find that this contractor who's working for them in Augusta, Georgia printed this out and apparently leaked it. What's the timing between... from how long The Intercept gets it to her being arrested?

KERRY HOWLEY: I think it's a while before The Intercept publishes it because they think it's probably fake, because it's postmarked Augusta. I think it took them a while to trust that this was legitimate. But once they published it, it was a matter of hours before [the authorities] were at her house.

CHRIS HAYES: Oh wow. So it gets published and they're there in a matter of hours.

KERRY HOWLEY: I think so.

CHRIS HAYES: What is the government... what do they charge her with and what's the case like that they build against her?

KERRY HOWLEY: They charge her with willful retention and transmission of national defense information, which is under the Espionage Act which is, of course, an act intended to punish spies, but which really the Obama administration used very zealously to punish whistleblowers and leakers. And so she has almost no opportunity to mount a defense because, under this act, intention doesn't matter. She's already confessed in her laundry room to the FBI...

CHRIS HAYES: Wait

Kerry Howley and all they have to do is... She confessed.

CHRIS HAYES: Wait. OK, let's step back. She confesses in her laundry room? Take me through that.

KERRY HOWLEY: They show up at her door... It's a riveting transcript, which has actually been turned into a stage play in which she's really charming, and funny and intelligent and vulnerable, but she deflects for a while and then she says basically, I felt helpless. I wanted to know why this information hadn't already been leaked.

And so, when it comes time to mount a defense, there's very little available to her defense team. And every motion they made to kind of broaden the case to questions of the First Amendment was rejected, so she basically had to take a plea deal because they were seeking a full 10 years.

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Explaining why Reality Winner is still in prison with Kerry Howley: podcast and transcript - NBC News

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New Maryland Bill Will Make Possession of Ransomware Illegal – CryptoVibes

A new bill introduced in the Maryland Senate aims to make the possession of ransomware illegal in the state.

In May 2019, the city of Baltimore experienced its biggest run-in with ransomware. One of the largest municipalities in the city was attacked by ransomware and malicious actors asked for 13 Bitcoins to release their systems. They held the data of the city hostage for about 3 weeks after which the authorities had to pay the cryptocurrency amount and regain access to their systems. This was the second time in one year that the citys IT infrastructure was attacked.

Now, Democratic State Senator Susan Lee has introduced a new bill that would make the possession of ransomware a crime. However, to protect cybersecurity researchers who may have access to such software, Lee wrote that the crime would be applicable only when a person holds the ransomware with an intent to harm another computer, system or database. Though the bill isnt enough to stop cryptojacking, it gives legal backing to the prosecutors and law enforcement who get hold of such malicious actors.

Even though cryptojacking and ransomware are two of the biggest threats to computer systems these days, there are very few states in the US that have adequate legislation to deal with them. The growing number of criminal activities in these two sectors has created big problems IT infrastructure operators.

Cybersecurity research firm Proofpoint recently reported that about half of US organizations were victims of phishing and ransomware in 2019. Even though the FBI is trying to ramp up its preparedness to handle cybercrime, they is yet to catch up with the consistently increasing number of victims.

Security researchers pointed out a large number of malware that are being used to operate ransomware attacks. Even the NSA was attacked by hackers called Shadow Brokers who then sold the hacking tools used by the government agency on the dark web. A malware called Robinhood targeted Baltimore. Other prominent malicious software on the market are Wannacry, Ryuk, and Eternal Blue, the NSAs own tool.

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NYC Ferry’s a No-Go at the Staten Island Ferry Terminal – THE CITY

An NYC Ferry travels down the East River near Roosevelt Island, April, 24, 2019. Photo: Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY

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Safety concerns over big boats and smaller crafts sharing a dock facility appear destined to sink NYC Ferrys plans to expand to the Staten Island Ferry Terminal this year.

Revised documents from the citys Economic Development Corp. indicate that the long-awaited service from Staten Island to Manhattans West Side will instead likely depart from a waterfront esplanade behind the Richmond County Ballpark, on the other side of the Empire Outlets Mall.

The issue, according to EDCs recently released environmental impact statement: Officials realized operating relatively small crafts next to giant ones could present a major hazard.

The city Department of Transportation identified potential navigational safety issues related to vessels movements and lack of sight lines in docking the 86-foot NYC Ferries near the Staten Island Ferrys 310-foot behemoths.

The dock move would put the new service farther away from a direct connection with Staten Island Railway and bus service to the main St. George terminal.

The new outdoor location would require a walk the length of four football fields from the transit hub to the NYC Ferry, which is expected to stop at Vesey Street and Pier 79 in Manhattan.

Councilmember Debi Rose (D-Staten Island) Photo: Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY

While Im sorry that our ferry operations cannot all be under one roof, I understand the safety concerns, and I am pleased that it will be a sheltered location nearly adjacent to the Staten Island Ferry Terminal, Councilmember Debi Rose (D-Staten Island) told THE CITY in a statement.

Commuter Patricia Scalise put it this way: In Staten Island, you take what you can get. Itll be cold, but Ill take it.

Meanwhile, the EDC document also detailed changes along three routes connecting Brooklyn and Manhattan:

A new ferry stop is planned at the foot of 42nd Street in Sunset Park near Industry City, which has become a shopping and dining destination. The stop will be one terminus in an updated South Brooklyn route that hits Red Hook, Atlantic Avenue and Wall Street.

Bay Ridge, meanwhile, is getting a new direct route to Wall Street. The Brooklyn terminus of that line will be Coney Island.

The existing Rockaway Line will go to the Brooklyn Army Terminal in Sunset Park and then onto Wall Street.

A map of the new NYC Ferry routes. Photo: NYC Economic Development Corp.

City Council member Justin Brannan (D-Brooklyn) told THE CITY Wednesday that the changes in store will be a boon for commuters to Manhattan.

Weve always been pushing for the ferry from Bay Ridge to Wall Street because getting from Bay Ridge to Wall Street in 15 minutes is a game changer, said Brannan. I mean theres just no other way unless its 3 a.m. in the morning and youre doing 100 miles on the BQE.

The lawmaker conceded, however, that hes disappointed to see his neighborhood cut off from other parts of Brooklyn.

They never told us that If we give you the express ferry, were going to take away the local, said Brannan. And thats really frustrating because peoples work patterns have changed. Not everyone works in Lower Manhattan anymore. People work further into Brooklyn.

Councilmember Justin Brannan (D-Brooklyn) Photo: Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY

We want to make connections between neighborhoods in Brooklyn and we do that wherever possible, but were also a commuter focused service so we are excited about providing express service for Bay Ridge riders to Lower Manhattan, which they dont currently have on the South Brooklyn route, said Chris Singleton, an EDC spokesperson.

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Tales of the quake: Sister Islands shaken – Cayman Compass

Chanze Dawson

Chanze Dawson was walking to her daughters school when her body started swaying left and right. She ran under a doorway. After about a minute passed, she still couldnt gain her balance and felt dizzy and lightheaded.

The West End, Cayman Brac resident was experiencing her second earthquake. Her first was the one in December 2004.

When the magnitude 7.7 earthquake struck off the shores of the Cayman Islands on Tuesday, many residents of the Sister Islands didnt know was happening at first. After the shaking stopped, they made their way to shelters or higher ground.

Tate McFarlane, District Administrations district officer for Little Cayman, said he was in his office in Blossom Village when the earthquake hit.

The entire building was vibrating non-stop. It was a big hit we didnt feel no aftershocks though, McFarlane said. Afterwards, he was contacted by Hazard Management Cayman Islands about the threat of a tsunami. He said everyone was put on alert and either contacted by telephone or by the police knocking on doors for people to get to higher ground, which on Little Cayman is either a little bluff in the middle of the island or the shelter along Spot Bay Road.

There was no panicking from locals or visitors, and everything went well, he said, adding thatpeople stayed in the shelter for about two hours until the all-clear was given. No one received any injuries, there were no sink holes opening up or structural damages to report, McFarlane said.

Bracker Barry Morgan said the earthquake felt horrible.

I see the building moving the government 25-metre pool spilled about 10,000 gallons of water.

It looked like an ocean going across the road. I felt earthquakes before but this one [was] scary, he said.

Over in Watering Place, Channings Connor said that after 2pm he was sharpening his machete when he felt the ground shaking and the vibrations getting stronger every minute. His truck started moving, he was losing his balance. At first, he said, he didnt know was going on.

The first thing that came to mind was go get my daughter. It was a frightening experience, he said.

Pam Andrews, who vacations on Cayman Brac, said she was underwater when the earthquake struck, and it sounded like the biggest boat ever was coming her way. And it kept getting louder and louder.

It was scary because we had never heard a boat that loud and we just dived deeper; 24 feet of water is not a good depth to avoid that size of a boat, she said. Andrews said the water got silty. My ears started hurting and I kept trying to depressure my ears. We dove for another half hour and found out later it was an earthquake, she said.

Dacia Henriquez, 36, who has lived on Little Cayman since 2011, said she had just arrived at the school to pick up her daughters report card when the earthquake struck.

The building starting shaking. At first, I thought it was from the construction next door until the children started hollering Earthquake and dived under the desks. I went under the desks with all the kids too, Henriquez said.

She said they waited with the four children until the shaking stopped; then the phones started ringing from the Cayman Brac School. They told them to get to the shelter or higher ground.

She was also told to check the shoreline to see if the water was receding and to assist with evacuation if it was happening.

But where could we go? We were already at the highest point, she said.

She said people start filling the shelters, some driving, some walking there. Even the tourists that were staying at the resorts went to the shelters, she said. The tourists were scared because some said they had never experienced an earthquake before, she said.

Despite the threat of a tsunami, Henriquez said most people were calm and didnt panic.

Julia Hislop in Stake Bay was taking an afternoon nap on her couch when her husband shouted there was an earthquake.

The house was swaying, there was a huge roar like thunder, we ran in the garden and the gardener said all the trees were swaying and he was having a hard time standing up. We then realised we were having an earthquake. It was quite scary, Hislop said.

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Tales of the quake: Sister Islands shaken - Cayman Compass

MercerFest to celebrate 60 years of Mercer Island – Mercer Island Reporter

In the year 2020, the city of Mercer Island will celebrate its 60-year anniversary, and a new community-driven summer event called MercerFest will mark the occasion.

MercerFest will take place on July 11 at Luther Burbank Park, but leading community groups are calling on their fellow citizens, local organizations and businesses to make the event possible. They need donations and volunteers to help with planning and fundraising.

This event may be similar to, but is not a direct replacement for, the citys annual Summer Celebration event, which ran for more than 20 years but was canceled permanently due to the citys budget in 2019. Ross Freeman, city communications manager, said that MercerFest right now is only contemplated for 2020. But if it goes well, he said it could maybe continue in some form.

Freeman said at this point organizers have gathered a great deal of interest but need commitment from many more people for follow through and funding. Events of this scale take many months of planning.

The Parks and Recreation Department (P&R) is the main city department involved, but Freeman said the city views the community as leading the event. Diane Mortenson, P&R community engagement and program manager, said P&R is supporting the community vision, and that the two main community groups driving the effort at this point are the Mercer Island Community Fund (CF) and the Mercer Island Historical Society (HS).

Mortenson said the vision is for folks to gather with their family, friends and neighbors in the park to enjoy food, activities, entertainment and a fireworks show. She said at this point they are only calling for donations and volunteers, not vendors yet, as they are in the early stages.

The CF will be the organization accepting donations and sponsorships for the event. Mortenson said without knowing the full scope of work for the event yet, they do not yet have a target fundraising goal. She said it could be as much as $50,000 depending on the scale.

Debbie Hanson, CF grant chair, said the CF which raises money to award grants to nonprofits bettering Mercer Island each year is excited to be involved with the event for the whole community.

Mercer Island is blessed to have so many residents devoted to community service and MercerFest is bringing us all together. Ideas and excitement are bubbling over, Hanson said. As a board member of the Mercer Island Community Fund, I am excited to be collaborating with other community leaders to plan this very special day of fun and celebration.

Jane Brahm, HS co-chair, said the CF and HS started thinking about a way to celebrate Mercer Islands 60th birthday several months ago, as the milestone is important to both organizations. Ten (10) years ago, the two groups partnered on a party at Mercerdale Park for the Islands 50th birthday, and Brahm said theyve decided another party is now in order.

Whats exciting to me is the fact that Mercer Islands summer event will be getting back to the way it used to be many years ago smaller, friendlier, with volunteers coming together to make it happen for Islanders of all ages, Brahm said. And with the 60th anniversary of the citys incorporation this year, its a wonderful opportunity to celebrate Mercer Islands rich history.

Brahm said she and her co-chair Terry Moreman are both excited for the celebration.

As keepers of Mercer Island History, the Historical Society is looking forward to recognizing and celebrating this important event with all of our residents, Moreman said.

At the volunteer-organized event, the organizers hope to have old-fashioned games like three-legged races as well as face-painting and crafts. Plus, there will be cake, music and a fireworks show, so Brahm thinks there will be something for everyone.

Brahm said they view MercerFest as a fun all-Island event that will bring together people of all ages and all groups from the community. The organizers are hoping many citizens and groups will step up to help them with the dream.

She said, specifically, they are looking for people to help with marketing, fundraising, logistics, operations, volunteer coordination, food, and entertainment or activities. To get involved, people can send an email with contact information to MercerFest@gmail.com.

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MercerFest to celebrate 60 years of Mercer Island - Mercer Island Reporter

How Richmond’s Lulu Island got its name – Richmond News

The City of Richmond is a unique island city in Metro Vancouver, and what's more is that it is made up of 17 islands in total.

These islands include Lulu Island, Sea Island and 15 smaller islands that sit in the mouth of the Fraser River where it meets the Pacific Ocean.

Lulu Island is the most populated island in Richmond and stretches from Steveston to just before Queensborough. It was given its name in 1862 by Richard Moody, a British imperialist, after a popular showgirl called Lulu Sweet bought property on the island.

In the most southwestern corner of Lulu Island is Steveston - a fishing port and previously a cannery town. The area has rich history connected with Japanese-Canadians before their internment during World War Two.

Although unrelated to Lulu Island, Steveston Island (also known as Shady Island), is located south of Steveston Village where some visitors have travelled to, but is not recommended. due to the unpredictable tides. The tides can change quickly and have trapped people on the island before.

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Are you still watching Winter Love Island? | Television & radio – The Guardian

When a winter version of Love Island was announced last year, it promised to heat up an otherwise dark and dreary January and fill the reality TV hole left by the cancellation of Celebrity Big Brother.

But the show hasnt enraptured the nation as it once did. Viewing figures were down by 800,000 compared to the opening episode of the previous series, and the first episode of its spin-off show Unseen Bits was trumped by How the Victorians Built Britain on Channel 5.

Wed like to hear from people who are watching Winter Love Island. How does it compare to previous summer series of the programme?

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Rock Island elementary students celebrate 100th day of school by dressing like theyre 100 years old – WQAD Moline

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ROCK ISLAND, Illinois -- As a way to celebrate their 100th day in school for the year, students at Denkmann Elementary School dreamed up what life will be like when they're 100 years old.

On Wednesday, January 29, kids were invited to dress up like they were 100 years old; it was one of several activities they took part in relating to the number 100.

Students showed up to school with a variety of grey wigs, old-fashioned clothing, and drawn-on wrinkles.

"I might end up being a crazy dog lady," imagined fifth-grade student Alaina Bonja. "I really like dogs."

"I'd have to be on a cane and crutches maybe," thought fourth-grader Xavier Guldenzopf.

Back in November, the students celebrated the 50th day of school by dressing like it was the 1950s.

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Rock Island elementary students celebrate 100th day of school by dressing like theyre 100 years old - WQAD Moline

Amazon: New Staten Island facility will speed up deliveries – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Amazon says a new 450,000-square-foot warehouse leased in Bloomfield will be used as a delivery station that will help speed up deliveries to local residents.

The new building on Staten Islands West Shore in Matrix Global Logistics Park is located next to its existing $100 million, 855,000-square-foot Amazon fulfillment center, which opened in 2017. That facility employs more then 4,000 people who work alongside robots to pick, pack and ship customer orders that are delivered to various geographic areas.

We are excited to increase our investment in Staten Island with a new delivery station to speed up delivery times for customers, and provide hundreds of job opportunities for the talented local workforce," said an Amazon spokesperson.

The new warehouse will have a different use than the existing Staten Island Amazon facility. It will be for last mile deliveries," which means packages from the facility will go to a specific geographic area, likely within the five boroughs, a source told the Advance on Tuesday.

Delivery stations power the last mile of our order process and help speed up deliveries for customers, said the spokesperson. "Packages are shipped there from neighboring Amazon fulfillment and sortation centers and loaded into vehicles to get delivered to customers."

The spokesman said the new site will open sometime this year, but couldnt yet say how many people will be hired to work at the facility.

In addition to the two Amazon warehouses, Matrix Global Logistics Park houses an IKEA facility and a yet-to-be-complete 975,000-square-foot building.

RECENT RALLY

In November, more than 100 protesters rallied in front of Staten Islands Amazon fulfillment center for better working conditions amid reports of high rates of injuries at the Bloomfield facility.

The crowd -- made up of some Amazon workers, politicians, and members of the teamsters and other local unions, Make the Road New York and New York Communities for Change -- chanted such phrases as Amazon, Amazon you cant hide. We can see your greedy side.

The Advance also reported on a study by Make the Road New York and New York Communities for Change that claims that Staten Island workers are injured more often than coal miners, waste collection workers, and other laborers.

However, Rachael Lighty, an Amazon spokeswoman, issued the following statement immediately following the rally: Fewer than five Amazon associates participated in the event outside of the Staten Island fulfillment center this evening. It was obvious to the 4,500-full-time workforce that an outside organization used our building and the upcoming retail holidays to raise its own visibility and spread misinformation."

"The fact is that Amazon provides a safe, quality work environment in which associates are the heart and soul of the customer experience, and todays event, and the notable lack of Amazon employee participation, shows that associates know this to be true, she added.

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Staten Island man admits to duping Ohio senior in $376K investment scam – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Now comes the payback.

A Staten Island man who, authorities said, bilked a northern Ohio World War II veteran of $376,000 in an investment scam has pleaded guilty to fraud-related charges.

Brian K. Decker, 41, duped the victim, who served in the Navy, into giving him the cash between January 2016 and March 2017, said authorities.

Decker promised the senior citizen returns of between 12% and 20% on purported investments in construction projects, said the Ohio Department of Commerce in a statement.

However, the defendant pocketed the money instead of investing it, officials said.

Decker was indicted in August 2018 based on a joint probe by the Commerce Departments Division of Securities and the Wood County sheriffs office, said authorities.

Decker pleaded guilty Monday in Wood County Court to two counts of unlawful securities practices, and one count each of theft from a protected class and of telecommunications fraud, said officials.

He also pleaded guilty to failure to appear, for not showing up for his jury trial in July 2019.

Decker is being held in the Wood County jail pending sentencing scheduled for March 30, authorities said.

His lawyers name was not immediately available.

Authorities did not provide Deckers street address.

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Staten Island man admits to duping Ohio senior in $376K investment scam - SILive.com

After 20 years here, Brooklyn native says: Ill take Staten Island (letter to the editor) – SILive.com

I was born and raised in Brooklyn until the year 2000 when I moved to Staten Island. At that time friends of mine who resided on Staten Island told me that the Island was getting too crowded and they intended to move to another state. I didnt listen.

Too crowded? Brooklyn had close to 3 million souls, traffic congestion galore and more crime than Staten Island. Coming home at night trying to find a parking space near my Bay Ridge apartment was pure torture. Especially those cold winter months. Sometimes it would take me up to a half-hour to find a spot to park. And that was usually several blocks from my apartment. Weekends were the worst. Partygoers deluged the scads of bars and clubs in the area. Their cars took up all the few spots.

When I bought my home on the Island, it was an electrifying experience to find a parking spot every night in front of my home. I loved everything about the Island -- the sandy beaches, the libraries, the parks, the commercial shopping centers, its restaurants, its tree-lined streets and low crime rate. I never read a Brooklyn local publication when I lived there, but I devour the Staten Island Advance. I especially enjoy Tom Wrobleskis columns. His latest columns have griped about Staten Islands traffic congestion, especially when the Verrazzano bridge jams up, or when Hylan Boulevard becomes a parking lot. I get his angst.

But Tom never lived in Brooklyn, where if you parked your car overnight you hoped it was there in the morning, where on some blocks you never saw a tree. Im grateful to live in a borough with only 500,000 people. Im happy to live in a borough where I can zip over the Outerbridge and visit Wind Creek casino (Bethlehem, Pa.) in 75 minutes. I enjoy swimming at Great Kills Park. Im here 20 years already and sure Ive been frustrated with traffic and a plethora of red light video cameras. Wrobleski is a lifelong resident of the Island and Im sure he knows much more than I do about the negative aspects of the Island.

But in life everything is relative. And Im glad to be a relative of Staten Island.

(Joseph Valente is a South Beach resident.)

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After 20 years here, Brooklyn native says: Ill take Staten Island (letter to the editor) - SILive.com

Brooklyn Boulders Climbing Gym Coming To Former Treasure Island In Lincoln Park, Alderman Says – Block Club Chicago

LINCOLN PARK Brooklyn Boulders, an indoor rock climbing facility and event space, is coming to Lincoln Park.

The company, which has a location at 100 S. Morgan St. in the West Loop, plans to occupy the former Treasure Island grocery store at Market Square Shopping Center, 2121 N. Clybourn Ave, according to a letter to residents from Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd). The letter says the company intends to open the facility this year.

Treasure Island, the beloved local grocery chain that first opened in 1963, closed all of its locations in 2018.

The underlying zoning at Market Square allows for this concept to open without the need for a zoning change or special use applications, the letter said.

Hopkins has scheduled an informational meeting with the climbing company for 5:30 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 5 at Lakeshore Fitness, 1320 W. Fullerton Ave.

The company touts itself as more than just a climbing wall, saying they foster community by merging fitness with art, co-working, and events, according to its website.

Day passes cost $25. Monthly memberships are $125 plus a $100 activation fee. Classes are available for beginners, intermediates, and advanced climbers. The West Loop location also screens adventure films at the building.

In the letter, Hopkins said the facility will include climbing walls, plus event space, saunas, open fitness areas, youth programs, a cafe, and more.

Block Club previously reported the company could open a gym at 2418 N. Milwaukee Ave in Logan Square. The required zoning change for that location was passed by the full City Council in November, and could bring a 40,000 square-foot climbing facility to a renovated Hollander building.

Mitch Goltz of GW Properties, developer of the Logan Square site, told Block Club its possible the company could open a location in both Logan Square and Lincoln Park, saying GW Properties is proceeding with Brooklyn Boulders in their revamped building in the heart of Logan Square.

If both locations proceed, theyd only be about 2 miles from each other.

Brooklyn Boulders did not immediately respond to questions on either location.

In addition to the West Loop, the company has two locations in Brooklyn and another just outside Boston.

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Brooklyn Boulders Climbing Gym Coming To Former Treasure Island In Lincoln Park, Alderman Says - Block Club Chicago

Island Wing Company working on site in Bartram Market – Jacksonville Daily Record

Island Wing Company is working toward its second Northeast Florida restaurant.

JEA is reviewing a service availability request for Island Wing Company to build a 7,500-square-foot restaurant at Bartram Market in St. Johns County.

William Moore, president of Construction Solutions LLC in Tallahassee and director of planning and construction for Island Wing Company, said the team is discussing the timeline.

Jacksonville franchise owner Shane Powers opened the first Island Wing Company this month at 4409 Southside Blvd., converting a former TGI Fridays restaurant.

Bartram Market is under development along Race Track Road.

In February, Powers said he planned several more locations in Northeast Florida and anticipated the next two in Bartram Market and Beachwalk in St. Johns County.

Island Wing Company is a full-service restaurant and bar concept that focuses on baked and grilled food rather than fried.

Bartram Market is anchored by Publix Super Markets Inc. and under development along Race Track Road. England-Thims & Miller Inc. is the civil engineer for the Island Wing Company project.

The first Island Wing opened in August 2012 in Auburn, Alabama, by a husband-and-wife team. The franchise company is based in Destin.

Its website shows nine restaurants, comprising two in Alabama and seven in Florida, including the Jacksonville location.

In February, Powers said his restaurants employ 100 to 125 people, mostly part-time.

He estimated the Southside project at $2 million and the Bartram Market and Beachwalk locations at $3.5 million to $4 million.

Powers said he is the area developer and franchisee for Duval, St. Johns, Nassau and Clay counties.

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Island Wing Company working on site in Bartram Market - Jacksonville Daily Record

Staten Island fast ferry location chosen; service expected to start this year – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Staten Islands new fast ferry service will be situated between the base of the Richmond County Bank Ballpark and Empire Outlets in St. George, the Advance has learned.

The Economic Development Corp. (EDC) vowed to begin the new service to and from Midtown Manhattan before the end of this year, however, an exact date has yet to be determined. The city initially announced plans for the new fast ferry route more than a year ago.

I think well have a lot more schedule certainty around when we think well start after we get our permits, which were hoping is going to be spring or summer, said Seth Myers, the EDCs executive vice president, during a recent tour of the future ferry dock site.

Three boats currently under construction will service the route. Commuters are expected to pay $2.75 for the ride, which will take 18 minutes to get from St. George to Battery Park/Vesey Street, and then another 17 minutes to continue onto Midtown West at Pier 79/West 39th Street. Shuttle buses are expected to regularly pick up commuters from the West 39th Street stop.

The EDC said it anticipates the new route will be the second most popular in the NYC Ferry system after its East River route, and expects the Island to see 1.9 million annual trips.

As the city works to get the service up and running, Borough President James Oddo and Rep. Max Rose said they are working to turn the North Shore into a ferry mecca and secure an East Shore ferry, too.

A ROUTE TO BROOKLYN?

Oddo said he would like to see a route to Brooklyn that would connect the North Shore to Brooklyns existing South Brooklyn fast ferry route, which includes stops in Bay Ridge, Sunset Park, Red Hook, Atlantic Avenue and DUMBO.

He said he has been working with Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, a potential mayoral candidate, on the expansion. Adams said it would be a missed connection if the city does not look at additional ways to connect the boroughs.

Adams thinks connecting the two boroughs by ferry is something that could happen this year and he is open to where the connection, or multiple connections, could go.

It would take a substantial amount of decades to build a tunnel under the waterway. It would take a long period of time to add tracks onto the Verrazzano Bridge if that was feasible. Even to open and put bike lanes, all of this would take time. It would take little or no time to build out a dock, create a route for a ferry and to allow the system to be utilized, Borough President Adams said.

EAST SHORE FERRY SERVICE?

Oddo and Rose said they want to bring ferry service to the Islands East Shore. They hope the East Shore Seawalls construction will allow a fast ferry to be built along that shore, a plan currently being studied by consultants.

I want the EDC and the mayor to add us to an existing New York City ferry route, Oddo said.

Right now, lets get this [North Shore route] up and running, lets focus on adding us to the Brooklyn route. I think thats the most tangible next achievement we can get in terms of fast ferry, all the while we go over the consultants report, Oddo added.

WHAT ABOUT THE WEST AND SOUTH SHORES?

But Staten Islanders will likely not get fast ferry service routes along the West and South shores anytime soon.

When the fast ferry service expansion was announced last year, many South Shore residents were upset the city did not include the area in the plan. They were puzzled at why the city added a route already serviced by the Staten Island Ferry when they typically commute two hours or more to Midtown.

Asked if the South Shore was being considered for a future route, the EDC said it will continue to look at new locations, but noted its most recent study showed that the South Shore was not feasible due to low water depth and safety issues.

The mayors office declined to say whether de Blasio was considering fast ferry service to Brooklyn or the South Shore, only saying the administration is always looking for additional ways to optimize and expand the system.

The Coast Guard and EDC studied a potential West Shore fast ferry route, but concluded that ferry service there would be impossible due to the volume of tankers and shipping activity along the West Shore waterway.

Last year, the mayor said the door was still open to thinking about other fast ferry stops in the future and that come 2021, he would do another assessment to see if more fast ferry routes are needed around the city.

With this vision of the North Shore as a ferry mecca, you have points up and down where we can continue to add access points, so the skys the limit here, Rose said.

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Staten Island fast ferry location chosen; service expected to start this year - SILive.com

Love Island fans think Paige and Finn did bits last night – cosmopolitan.com

Last night's Winter Love Island [29 January] was undoubtedly the most dramatic one yet. As well as Leanne Amaning calling things off with Mike Boeteng and a recoupling seeing one Islander dumped from the villa, Paige Turley and Finn Tapley were the first couple to spend some time in The Hideaway.

Alongside Shaughna Phillips and Callum Jones, Paige and Finn are arguably one of the strongest couples in the villa right now (especially after Jess told Mike she and Luke M were "very different"), so it's no surprise the Islanders picked them for some alone time.

In The Hideaway, the pair joked around with a feather duster and flavoured body lotion, before having some intimate pillow talk. "How many days have you been in here? Paige asked Finn, who replied "12 days?"

Paige then continued, "And what part of that did you realise you fancied me?" before he replied, "When I said 'hello'."

He continued, "I know it is soppy, but now that we're so close, I couldn't imagine day to day in here without you, if that makes sense."

The footage then cut to clips of the rest of the Islanders sleeping, before returning to Paige and Finn with some major bed hair the next morning. And yeah, viewers took that as a sign that they'd done bits.

"Paige and Finn definitely had sex in the hideaway, she had the hair #Loveisland," one fan wrote on Twitter, while another added, "Did Finn & Paige have sex or no? #LoveIsland"

A third said, "Paige and Finn are the first Love Island couple to do bits!"

In the morning, Paige and Finn had their very own Danny and Sandy moment from Grease when the girls and guys gathered around to hear what happened. "I mean there was like kissing," Paige revealed, as Finn told the boys: "It was, I just told her like at the minute I would struggle to think of myself in here to not be in a couple with her. Its exciting Im really happy."

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Love Island fans think Paige and Finn did bits last night - cosmopolitan.com

Whakaari / White Island victim’s family call on tour operators to be better equipped – RNZ

The family of the 21st victim of the Whakaari / White Island eruption have urged tour operators to have proper safety equipment, saying such items would saved their relatives' lives.

Indian-American entrepreneur Pratap 'Paul' Singh and wife Mayuari 'Mary' Singh, both both died from injuries after the eruption. Photo: Supplied / NZ Police

Indian-American entrepreneur Pratap 'Paul' Singh suffered 55 percent burns in the volcano eruption on 9 December last year. He transferred from Whakatne Hospital on 10 December to the Critical Care Unit in Middlemore Hospital and died yesterday.

His wife Mayuari 'Mary' Singh was also admitted into the Middlemore ICU with 72 percent body burns and she died after 13 days on 22 December 2019. The couple leave behind an 11-year-old son and 6-year-old twin daughters.

In a statement released through New Zealand Police, the dead man's nephew, Bhupender 'Vick' Singh, said having the proper safety equipment on the island would have avoided his aunt and uncle's tragic and painful deaths.

"I visited Paul and Mary every day since December 10 while they were at the Middlemore Hospital, the last 50 days of my life were distressing, slow and agonising painful," he said.

"I seriously request and encourage volcano tourism in NZ and around the world to charter proper safety equipment, including appropriate heat resistant gear/clothing, safety glasses, helmets and face masks."

The family paid a moving tribute to the man they said doctors called a "fighter" after he put up the 50-day battle to survive throughout surgeries and treatment.

Vick Singh said the family's thoughts were with the remaining White Island survivors.

"Our family continues to pray for a healthy and fast recovery of the remaining survivors. We offer our sincere condolences and do share the pain and sorrow of the families who have lost their loved ones in this tragic incident," he said.

They commended medical staff at Middlemore Hospital for their efforts, as well as the emergencies services and authorities.

Vick Singh described his uncle as a spiritual, kind-hearted figure well known in the Indian-American community, who had been passionately involved in philanthropic and social service activities in his city of Atlanta, Georgia.

The family would be opening a Givealittle page to continue his efforts helping children in need.

"As the President of SEVA International Atlanta USA chapter, he led the Sponsor-A-Child initiative - a project that funds hundreds of under-privileged children for education and health care," he said.

"He also served as an organisational member/sponsor to many local temples including ISCKON, Hindu Temple, Shakti Mandir.

"For his volunteer work, he was honoured with the prestigious Bharat Gaurav (India's Pride) Award in 2012 for his outstanding contributions and numerous leadership roles. Additionally, as an Atlanta patron, he was an active contributor to the advisory boards and neighbourhood planning units."

He said Mary Singh would be remembered as a "supermum" who showed culinary expertise, kindness and who had been an ambitious professional.

"I'm sure that anyone who enjoyed any of her meticulously prepared handmade meals can certainly vouch for her. She was one of a kind - we love her, we miss her so much."

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Whakaari / White Island victim's family call on tour operators to be better equipped - RNZ