📄 Extracted Text (22,249 words)
From: Bulletin Intelligence
Subject: (EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Public Affairs News Briefing Friday, October 23, 2020
To: [email protected]
Sent: October 23, 2020 6:26 AM (UTC-04:00)
Mobile version and searchable archives available at tbi.bulletinintellioence.com.
TO : THE DIRECTOR AND SENIOR STAFF
DATE : FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2020 6 : 30 AM EDT
TODAY'S TABLE OF CONTENTS
LEADING THE NEWS
• Intelligence Officials Warn Of Russian And Iranian Interference In US Election.
• State Officials Working With FBI On Election Security.
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PROTESTS
• "Anarchist" Cities Sue Trump Administration Over Designation.
• Judge Dismisses Third-Degree Murder Charge In Floyd Case.
• Protests In Illinois After Police Shooting Of Black Teens.
COUNTER-TERRORISM
• Report: Far-Right Groups Responsible For Two-Thirds Of Domestic Terrorist Attacks.
• Ninth Circuit Orders Resentencing Of California Man Who Pleaded Guilty To Terrorism Charges.
• White Supremacist Group Talked Of Paramilitary Training In Secret Vetting Calls.
• Man Who Supplied Weapons To San Bernardino Terrorists Faces Sentencing.
• Texas Man Pleads Guilty To Planting Fake Bomb On Railroad Tracks.
• French Officials Confirm Teacher's Killer Was In Contact With A Jihadist In Syria.
• US Military Quietly Helping Taliban Fight Isis In Afghanistan.
COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE
• Schumer, Wyden Urge FBI Not To Probe Biden Family Prior To Election.
• Ex-Hunter Biden Partner Says Joe Biden Was Set To Get Cut Of Business Deal.
• Trump, Ratcliffe Reportedly Seeking Declassification Of Russia Inquiry Document.
• John Brennan Discusses DNI Ratcliffe's "Credibility," Trump's Relationship With Intelligence
Community.
• Reports Suggest Sonic Attacks Targeting Americans Are Widespread.
• Intelligence Officials Warning About Election Interference Earlier Than In 2016.
• Opinion: Both Parties Contributing To Lack Of Faith In Elections.
• Russia Will Be Blamed For Either Outcome Of US Election, Ambassador Says.
• NYTimes: US Intelligence Officials Believe Russia Is Greater Threat To Election.
• Clapper: Foreign Actors Aim To Exploit, Amplify Divisiveness In US.
• Opinion: Iran's Election Interference Aims Also To Discredit Democracy.
• States Increase IT Support For Elections Organizers As Systems Move Online.
• Wisconsin Officials Urge Voters To Ignore "Noise" About Election Interference And Vote.
• India, US To Negotiate Deal For Access To Satellite Data During Pompeo Visit.
• Filing: Garrison Courtney Almost Won Legal Immunity.
• Lawyer: Snowden Has Won Permanent Residency In Russia.
• Treasury Department Sanctioning Iran's Ambassador To Iraq Over Qods Force Agenda.
• Bosnian Prosecutors Charge Intelligence Chief With Abuse Of Office.
• Declassified Polish Documents Spark Debate Over Potential Spy Activity.
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
• Man Arrested In North Carolina With Guns, Explosives Planned To Assassinate Biden.
• Kentucky Governor: Release "Everything" From Breonna Taylor Grand Jury.
• White Teen Sentenced For Planning To Attack Black Churchgoers.
• Massachusetts Gang Member Pleads Guilty To Drug Conspiracy Charges.
• Montana Man Sentenced For Meth Possession.
• Missouri Man Arrested On Child Pornography Charges.
• Continuing Coverage: Florida Attorney Arrested On Serial Bank Robbery Charges.
• Philadelphia Mob Member Sentenced For Racketeering.
• FBI Searching For Missouri Man.
• FBI Searched California Home.
• Oregon Man Charged After Threatening Police, Courthouse With Firearms.
• FBI, DC Police Arrest Two For Child Sex Trafficking.
• Texas Court Delays Bribery Trial Until 2021.
• California Gang Members Indicted On Racketeering Charges.
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• North Carolina Man Sentenced For Sex Trafficking.
• North Carolina Man Sentenced On Drug, Firearms Charges.
• Attorney Seeks Documents in Michigan Triple Murder; MGM Grand Mentioned.
FINANCIAL CRIME & CORPORATE SCANDALS
• Judge In Mangano Case Orders Hearing On Alleged Perjury.
• Florida Woman Pleads Guilty To Embezzlement.
• Athens, Alabama City Schools To Dismiss Superintendent Under FBI Probe.
• New York Court Upholds Dismissal Of State Mortgage Fraud Charges Against Manafort.
• Goldman To Pay Nearly $36, Take Millions From Executives To Settle 1MDB Probe.
• FTC Nearing Decision On A Facebook Antitrust Case.
• California Court Refuses To Hear Bayer's Appeal Of Roundup Verdict.
CYBER DIVISION
• EU, UK To Enforce Sanctions On GRU Officers Over 2015 Cyberattack On Germany.
• Security Researcher Says He Accessed Trump's Twitter Account.
LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES
• DO) Effort Would Link Federal Police Grants To Use-Of-Force Standards.
• FBI Agents Visit South Dakota Winter Housing Camp.
• Walmart Sues Federal Government Over Opioid Crisis.
• WPost: Judgment Against Purdue Pharma Is "Modest."
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
• US Congressman Seeks To Designate CCP As Criminal Organization.
OTHER FBI NEWS
• Sources: Trump Weighing Firing Of Wray After Election.
• Professional Gambler Sues Bharara, DO) Claiming Misconduct In Insider Trading Case.
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
• Senate Judiciary Committee Advances Barrett Nomination As Democrats Boycott Vote.
• Biden Says He Would Create Commission To Consider Court Reforms.
• Pelosi Says Negotiators Are "Just About There" On Stimulus Deal.
• FDA Officially Approves Remdesivir As Cases Spike.
• Azar Dismisses Report Of Tensions With Hahn.
• Azar: New CDC Guidelines On Close Contact A "Call To Action."
• FDA Advisory Committee Debates Safety, Efficacy Standards For Vaccine.
• Palantir System To Help Track Manufacture, Distribution Of COVID Vaccines.
• Consensus Emerges COVID Rarely Transmitted By Contact With Contaminated Surfaces.
• Chicago Imposes Curfew As Cases Spike.
• Iowa's Economy Suffering Despite No Lockdown.
• Three Cases Reported At Los Angeles Megachurch That Defied Public Health Orders.
• Southwest Will No Longer Block Middle Seat Starting In December.
• USA Today Criticizes Administration's Consideration Of Herd Immunity Strategy.
• Court Bars Census Bureau From Giving Administration Data On Migrants.
• Trump Says He Is Looking Forward To Supreme Court Overturning ACA.
• Cotton, Loeffler Ask DO) To Investigate Racial Segregation On College Campuses.
• Sources: Kushner Floating Launch Of Trump-Branded Media Outlet.
• Trump Issues Order Removing Protections For Federal Workers.
• USPS IG: Mail Service Deteriorated Under DeJoy.
• Colorado Wildfire Grows By More Than 100,000 Acres, Forcing Evacuation.
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INTERNATIONAL NEWS
• Europe Imposes More Restrictions As Hospitals Prepare For Second Wave.
• Report: Bombing Kills Syrian Cleric Key To Deals With Rebels.
• US Provided Air Cover For Taliban As It Battled ISIS.
• Afghan Airstrike Targeting Taliban Kills 12 Children.
• Radical Cleric Seeks To Reimpose Islamic Law In Afghanistan.
• Twenty NATO Members Not Forecast To Meet 2% Of GDP Defense Spending Target By 2024.
• Putin Hints At Russia-China Military Alliance.
• Hopes For Armenia-Azerbaijan Deal Fade Despite Upcoming Pompeo Meeting.
• Sudanese Government Prepared To Normalize Relations With Israel As Part Of US Deal.
• Hariri Named Lebanon's Prime Minister For Fourth Time.
• Nigeria's Buhari Does Not Mention Shooting Of Protesters In Speech On Unrest.
• Guinean President Easily Wins Third Term.
• Polish Court Bans One Of Country's Only Forms Of Legal Abortion.
• WPost Analysis: Bolivia Returns To Morales After Year Of Turmoil.
• Vatican Dismisses US Concerns, Extends Agreement With China On Bishops.
THE BIG PICTURE
• Headlines From Today's Front Pages.
WASHINGTON'S SCHEDULE
• Today's Events In Washington.
LEADING THE NEWS
Intelligence Officials Warn Of Russian And Iranian Interference In US Election.
All three broadcast news networks covered what David Muir of ABC World News Tonight (10/22,
story 3, 2:35, 6.71M) called a "new warning about election interference. US authorities say Russia
and Iran have obtained voter registration information, and that Iran has used that information to
send threatening messages to voters." ABC's Pierre Thomas reported on the "new details about
alleged covert efforts by Russia and Iran to weaponize illegally obtained information about
American voters." FBI Director Wray: "We are not going to tolerate any criminal activity that
threatens the sanctity of your vote." Thomas: "Two of America's primary adversaries successfully
penetrated voter registration databases at the local level along with gleaning voter data from
publicly available sources." DNI Ratcliffe: "We have already seen Iran sending spoofed emails
designed to intimidate voters, incite social unrest." Pete Williams reported on NBC Nightly News
(10/22, story 3, 1:55, Holt, 5.51M), "Voters in Florida and a few other states began receiving
emails this week appearing to come from the Proud Boys known to support President Trump,
especially after he fleetingly referred to them in the first presidential debate." Ratcliffe: "We have
already seen Iran sending spoofed emails designed to intimidate voters, incite social unrest, and
damage President Trump."
National Security Advisor O'Brien said on Fox News' The Story (10/22), "The Iranians are the
most recent to have engaged in this activity that was exposed by Director Wray and Director
Ratcliffe and I commend our intelligence services for uncovering it quickly. We think transparency
is the best deterrent for this sort of activity in the future. The Iranians understand that we are very
unhappy with this and there will be consequences as a result of it." O'Brien added, "We are
confident in what we can do to protect the American people and protect our elections."
Asked on WIND-AM Chicago (10/22, 8K) about the remarks by Ratcliffe and Wray, White
House Senior Communications Advisor Ben Williamson said. "We're on top of this. This is an
Administration that has spent and invested millions, if not billions, of dollars in election security,
making sure our systems are secure, making sure we're holding foreign actors accountable for any
evidence we see of foreign interference."
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NBC NPWc (10/22, Dilanian, 6.14M) reports that a pair of US intelligence officials told them
that the Administration "has known for weeks that Iran and Russia had successfully hacked local
governments and obtained voter registration and other personal data." The officials "said Iran's
intent wasn't entirely clear, but that one goal is sowing chaos and undermining confidence in the
election. Both officials said it would hurt the Trump campaign if a white nationalist group was
exposed as having sought to bully Democrats."
Meanwhile, CBS News (10/22, Quinn, 3.68M) reports that officials in the three states targeted
by Iran - Florida, Alaska, and Arizona - "say their voter databases have not been compromised."
The Miami Herald (10/22, Gross, Ceballos) reports that after the FBI accused Iran of ending the
emails, they "appeared to have come to a halt." However, "two Florida members of Congress are
now requesting an FBI briefing for the Florida delegation and at least seven local election officials
say they have not been given any information from authorities on the scope of the issue other than
what has been publidy reported."
The Hill. (10/22, Klar, Miller, 2.98M) reports looks at the takeaways from the incident,
induding the idea that Iran "should not be underestimated," and also highlighted the differences in
tone of Wray and Ratdiffe.
Meanwhile, filnnmherg (10/22, Tarabay, Mehrotra, 4.73M) reports that Ratcliffe "said the
Iranian operation was meant to hurt the president, which is far from clear based on the contents of
the video and emails. Cyber-researchers are also wondering what sort of intelligence Ratdiffe
unearthed to accuse Iran of meddling within just hours of the spoofing operation. Attributing
malicious operations to nation-states typically takes months and years, not hours."
Mistakes In Video Enabled Analysts To Attribute Purported Proud Boys EmaHs To
Iran Reuters (10/22, Bing, Stubbs) reports government analysts and private sector
investigators quickly attributed "to Iranian hackers a wave of thousands of threatening emails
aimed at U.S. voters because of mistakes made in a video attached to some of the messages,
according to four people familiar with the matter." The emails which "demanded that voters
change their party affiliation to the Republican Party and vote for President Donald Trump or 'we
will come after you,' appeared to come from an official-looking Proud Boys email address," but
"the address was inauthentic, security analysts said." While the hackers attempted "to blur aspects
of the video to hide their identity," they "were unable to obfuscate all of the incriminating
information, the sources said. ... Analysts then cross-referenced those clues left in the video with
data from other intelligence streams, including communications interceptions."
Google Reports "Inauthentic Emails" This Week From Iran. In its election news blog,
NBC News (10/22, Shabad, 6.14M) reports that Google "said in a statement Thursday that the tech
company and others have seen evidence that an operation linked to Iran `sent inauthentic emails
to people in the U.S. over the past 24 hours." Google added, "We referred the matter to the FBI
and will continue to work with law enforcement and others in the industry to identify and remove
any related content." ftucinecc Insider (10/22, 3.67M) says Google's statement "tallies closely with
parts of a statement from" Ratcliffe "given at a press conference on Wednesday."
Russia, Iran Deny Accusations. Reuters (10/22) reports that an Iranian Foreign Ministry
spokesman on Thursday said, "Iran's strong rejection of American officials' repetitive, baseless and
false claims was conveyed to the Swiss ambassador...As we have said before, it makes no
difference for Iran who wins the U.S. election." Switzerland "represents U.S. interests in Iran
because Washington and Tehran have no diplomatic ties." Similarly Reuterc (10/22) reports that
Russia "on Thursday denied allegations from the United States that it had tried to interfere with
the 2020 presidential election, calling accusations of hacking unfounded."
US Officials Remain More Concerned About Russia Than Iran. The New Ynrk Times
(10/22, Barnes, Perlroth, Sanger, 18.61M) reports that "while senior Trump administration officials
said this week that Iran has been actively interfering in the presidential election, many intelligence
officials said they remained far more concerned about Russia, which in recent days has hacked into
state and local computer networks in breaches that could allow Moscow broader access to
American voting infrastructure." The Washington Post (10/22, Nakashima, Harris, Barrett, 14.2M)
similarly says that while the Administration "has highlighted the threat Iran poses to the U.S.
election, a different foe - Russia - remains the more potent adversary, and has in recent months
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stolen data from at least two county systems in California and Indiana, according to U.S. officials."
Newsweek (10/22, Lemon, 1.53M) reports that Democratic Lawmakers "have criticized
President Donald Trump's administration," particularly Ratcliffe, "over what they see as conflating
Iranian election interference with Russian efforts, which they argue are far more serious and pose
a significantly greater threat." CQ Roll Call. (10/22, Ratnam, 154K) reports that Ratdiffe's warning
on Wednesday "mmediately drew skeptical reactions from Democratic lawmakers, some of whom
had been briefed in private about the interference. They specifically disputed that the actions by
Iran were intended to harm Trump." Instead of listening to Ratcliffe, "the House Homeland
Security Committee said in its Twitter feed that Americans should listen" Wray and Krebs.
The Hilt (10/22, Klar, 2.98M) reports that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, for her part, on
Thursday "said Iran is a 'bad actor' but not on par with Russia in terms of seeking to influence the
U.S. election." Pelosi and other Democrats "sought to draw attention on Russian interference after"
Ratcliffe "warned Wednesday both countries are behind efforts to sway public opinion related to
the presidential election." ABC News (10/22, 2.97M) reports that Pelosi said, "I think we have to
be very careful about any statements coming out about the election from the intelligence
community at this time."
CNN (10/22, Herb, Fung, Hansler, Cohen, 83.16M) reports that an ODNI spokesperson "on
Thursday responded to the criticism of Ratdiffe, arguing that his comments were consistent with
the intelligence community's previous assessments about Tehran's intentions when it comes to
interference in the 2020 race." Amanda Schoch said in a statement to CNN, "As NCSC Director Bill
Evanina said on August 7th, the IC assesses 'that Iran seeks to undermine U.S. democratic
institutions, President Trump, and to divide the country in advance of the 2020 elections." CNN
adds that "not all Democrats were critical of Ratcliffe," with SSCI Vice Chairman Mark Warner
telling "reporters Thursday that he understood why Ratcliffe made the comments he did about the
effort being intended to hurt Trump."
New Alert: Russians Targeting Government, Aviation Computer Networks. Jeff
Pegues of the CBS Evening NPWq (10/22, story 3, 2:00, O'Donnell, 3.96M) reported, "The cyber
security alert says the Russian hacks began last month, targeting dozens of government and
aviation computer networks in the United States, successfully obtaining data from at least two
victim servers. Since 2016, Russian hackers posed the greatest threat to US election systems. In
that election, it is widely assumed that they scanned and probed voter databases in all 50 states.
Today's alert proves they haven't stopped."
Axios (10/22, Rummler, 521K) reports that Energetic Bear, a Russian state-sponsored
hacking organization, "has stolen data from two servers after targeting state and federal
government networks in the U.S. since at least September," the FBI and CISA announced.
However, the FBI and CISA "said Thursday they do not have evidence that Energetic Bear
compromised elections data or government operations." Politico (10/22, Geller, 4.29M) reports
that while "hackers have 'exfiltrated data from at least two victim servers,' the agencies said they
saw no indication that the intruders had 'intentionally disrupted any aviation, education, elections,
or government operations." Energetic Bear "is best known among security researchers for its
intrusions into European energy companies, including firms in the oil, gas and electric sectors."
USA Today (10/22, 10.31M) reports that CISA Director Christopher Krebs "described the activity
Thursday has a 'broad scanning' effort by the Russians that had not interfered with actual voting."
Bloomberg (10/22, Mehrotra, 4.73M) reports that while the FBI and CISA "don't have any
evidence that attacks have disrupted victims in aviation, education, elections or government, they
raise concerns that the successful compromises could open the door to more malicious attacks in
the near future." Reuters (10/22, Satter) reports that the names of the targeted governments
"were not disclosed. DHS did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The FBI provided
no further details but said in a statement that it was 'shining a spotlight on Russia's nefarious
behavior."
The AE (10/22, Tucker, Bajak) reports that US officials "have repeatedly said it would be
extremely difficult for hackers to alter vote tallies in a meaningful way, but they have warned
about other methods of interference that could disrupt the election, including cyberattacks on
networks meant to impede the voting process." Still, NPR (10/22, Ewing, 3.12M) reports that the
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"agencies involved have been warning for months, induding with similar bulletins about cyber-
risks confronting U.S. elections infrastructure, which they have suggested likely would focus on
systems adjacent to core operations — such as a website that shows results — as opposed to the
casting and counting of ballots themselves." CNN (10/22, Herb, Fung, Hansler, Cohen, 83.16M)
says that the "warnings issued Thursday indicate the heightened security posture of the US
government days ahead of the presidential election."
The Wall Street Journal (10/22, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) also briefly reports on the
new alert, as does CyberScoop (10/22, Lyngaas), CNFT News (10/22, Hautala, 1.99M), The Hill
(10/22, 2.98M), among others.
Senate Intelligence Committee Leaders Warn Iran, Russia Not To Interfere In
Election. The Washington Times (10/22, Blake, 492K) reports that "leaders of the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence warned foreign adversaries Thursday not to meddle in next month's
elections while urging Americans to stay vigilant." Sens. Marco Rubio (R-FL), acting Chairman, and
Mark Warner (D-VA), Vice Chairman, "were responding to the government disdosing attempts by
Iran and Russia to interfere in the race." DNI Ratcliffe "said Wednesday that Iran and Russia have
accessed voter information and taken 'specific actions to influence public opinion' about the
elections." A statement from the Senate leaders said, "To our adversaries, we reiterate DNI
Ratcliffe's warning against interfering in America's electoral process. ... Republicans and
Democrats are united when we say that continued attempts to sow dissent, cast doubt on election
results, or disrupt our election systems and infrastructure will necessitate a severe response."
The Hill (10/22, Kelly, 2.98M) reports that DNI Ratcliffe had "said Iranian actors had sent
'spoofed' emails to intimidate voters, 'incite social unrest and damage President Trump.'" Rubio
and Warner "urged Americans and the media 'to be skeptical of sensationalist, last-minute claims
about election infrastructure' and made a bipartisan show of force as a warning against any foreign
actors aiming to interfere in the U.S. elections."
State Officials Working With FBI On Election Security.
WDTV-TV Bridgeport, WV (10/22) reports that while "U.S. intelligence officials say foreign
governments are once again trying to influence voters," West Virginia "isn't one of the four states
involved in the interference, according to Secretary of State Mac Warner." The West Virginia
official is "working closely with federal authorities to ensure a secure election, induding the FBI's
Pittsburgh Field Office. Michael Christman is the Special Agent In Charge." Christman said,
"Cybersecurity is typically the greatest threat we're concerned with. ... We want to make sure that
every citizen has the ability to vote in an unimpeded manner." Warner commented, "We can't stop
somebody from attacking us. All we can do is react to it in a fashion that says we have a training
plan in place, we will be transparent with the public as to what we know and when we know it."
Also reporting is the Charleston (WV) Gazette-Mail (10/22, 121K).
The AP (10/22) reports, "The U.S. attorney's office in Birmingham says Assistant U.S.
Attorney Jason Cheek will serve as the region's elections officer" during the upcoming election.
U.S. Attorney Prim Escalona "says anyone with information about fraud or discrimination should
notify Justice Department officials," such as "intimidating voters at polling places, buying votes or
stuffing ballot boxes are all prohibited." FBI agents will be "available nationwide to receive
allegations of election fraud and other election abuses on Nov. 3."
KRNV-TV Reno, NV (10/22) reports that Nevada has a "heightened risk of voter fraud due to
the increase in mail in ballots." The state's Election Integrity Task Force in Nevada "is made up of
Attorney General Aaron Ford, the Secretary of State's office and other local governing bodies."
Special agent Aaron Rouse "says that voter fraud claims will be taken seriously and will be
investigated thoroughly and quickly throughout the state."
The Idaho Falls (ID) Post Register (10/22) reports, "Bart Davis, U.S. Attorney for Idaho,
announced Thursday that his office," the FBI, and DO) "will be standing by to field complaints of
voter intimidation or election interference." Davis said the DOJ "must act to protect the integrity of
the election process." DO) has "a longstanding Election Day program to monitor these issues, and
that it is a federal crime to intimidate or bribe voters, buy or sell votes, impersonate voters, alter
vote tallies, or mark ballots for other voters against their wishes." Davis has "appointed three
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assistant U.S. attorneys, in three regions of the state, to serve as elections officers for the district
and field complaints," and all "will be on duty while polls are open."
WJAR-TV Providence, RI (10/22, 144K) reports that on Thursday, Rhode Island Secretary of
State Nellie Gorbea was joined at a press briefing "by the FBI, Rhode Island State Police, Board of
Elections and the Attorney General to discuss the upcoming election." The Rhode Island official
"estimates about half of all voters in the state will cast their ballots before Election Day," and
"early voting numbers won't be added to the total votes until 10 p.m. on election night." FBI
Boston Special Agent in Charge Joseph Bonavolonta said, "As far as these disinformation
campaigns, the reason why they're so powerful is because you look at everybody's reliance these
days on social media platforms."
PROTESTS
"Anarchist" Cities Sue Trump Administration Over Designation.
The AP (10/22, Johnson, Matthews) reports, "New York, Seattle and Portland - three cities
recently labeled 'anarchist jurisdictions' by the U.S. Justice Department - filed a lawsuit Thursday
to invalidate the designation and fight off the Trump Administration's efforts to withhold federal
dollars." The suit "ridiculed the designation, calling the President's action 'offensive to both the
Constitution and common sense," and "noted that the consequences of withholding federal money
during a pandemic are 'deadly serious." The cities argue that "the President can't add conditions to
money Congress has appropriated," and claims "the Administration violated due process rights and
the 10th Amendment."
The New Ynrk limec (10/22, Fitzsimmons, 18.61M) reports that the Administration's "attempt
to strip New York City of federal funds...could cost the city as much as $12 billion - money for the
cash-starved subway, for the Police Department and for the city's efforts to treat coronavirus
patients, city officials said on Thursday." According to the Times, "although the city was granted
$2.65 billion in Covid-related funding from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, only
$199.6 million of it has been doled out."
The Oregonian (10/22, 1M) reports that Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler (D) "said the money at
risk is 'critical to protecting vulnerable residents," including "federal funds for coronavirus relief,
funds for HIV treatment, and funds for newborn screenings." New York City Corporation Counsel
Jim Johnson "said the cities are acting now because the federal government has begun taking
concrete steps to withhold funds."
Judge Dismisses Third-Degree Murder Charge In Floyd Case.
ABC World News Tonight (10/22, story 7, 0:20, Muir, 6.71M) reported, "A Minnesota judge
tonight has upheld eight of nine charges against the former police officers in the George Floyd
case. Derek Chauvin, seen with his knee on Floyd's neck, still facing second degree unintentional
murder and manslaughter charges, though a lesser charge was dropped. The other three officers
had all charges upheld, each facing aiding and abetting murder and manslaughter. The trial for all
four is set for March."
The AE (10/22, Forliti) reports that Hennepin County District Judge Peter Cahill "dismissed a
third-degree murder charge filed against the former Minneapolis police officer who pressed his
knee against George Floyd's neck, saying there was not enough probable cause for that count to
proceed to trial." Gov. Tim Walz (D) "activated the Minnesota National Guard in anticipation of
protests" after similar demonstrations broke out "after Chauvin was released on bail earlier this
month, resulting in dozens of arrests." Cahill "said Chauvin's decision to continue kneeling on
Floyd's neck after he went silent and motionless 'is strong evidence of Chauvin's intent to inflict
bodily harm," but that "nothing about the manner in which Chauvin pressed his knee down on
Floyd's neck...was eminently dangerous to anyone other than Floyd," making the third-degree
murder charge inappropriate in this case.
Reuters (10/22, Layne) reports Walz "announced that he had activated the Minnesota
National Guard as a 'precautionary step' following the ruling, which he said marked 'a positive step
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in the path toward justice for George Floyd." Cahill also "upheld a manslaughter charge against
Chauvin and all six charges against three other officers - Thomas Lane, J. Alexander Kueng and
Tou Thao - for allegedly aiding and abetting Chauvin in the murder. Kueng and Lane helped hold
Floyd down by restraining his back and legs, Cahill noted, while Thao kept a group of bystanders at
bay."
The New York Times (10/22, Ismay, 18.61M) reports that the ruling "came in response to a
motion by lawyers representing Mr. Chauvin and three other former officers to dismiss all charges
against them for lack of probable cause." Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said in a
statement, "This is an important, positive step forward in the path toward justice for George Floyd,
his family, our community, and Minnesota." Prosecutors also "announced charges against a truck
driver who drove a fuel truck through a protest on a bridge in Minneapolis six days after Mr. Floyd
was killed" on Thursday. Bogdan Vechirko "was charged with a felony count of threats of violence
and a gross misdemeanor count of criminal vehicular operation."
The Washington Post (10/22, Bailey, 14.2M) reports that the Floyd ruling is the first "in a
series of major decisions expected in the case," as Cahill considers "whether the men will be tried
together, as prosecutors have requested, or separately, as the former officers want. Defense
attorneys have also requested to move the trial out of Hennepin County, questioning whether it is
possible to seat an impartial jury in Minneapolis and citing security concerns in a city that was
rocked by days of civil unrest after Floyd's death and remains deeply on edge." The Post says Walz
acted "on a request from Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey" in the activation of "100 Minnesota
National Guard troops" and state patrol officers.
The Minneapolis Star Tribune (10/22, 1.04M) reports "Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey
requested support from the guard 'out of an abundance of caution and for the sake of
preparedness,' spokesman Mychal Vlatkovich said." The Tribune says "Cahill's rulings Thursday are
his most significant pretrial decisions since he was assigned the case this past summer," resolving
"issues that had some activists worried Floyd's death would go unheard in the court system like
many previous cases of police killing Black civilians. And they quelled some fears that Minneapolis
would once again erupt in protest, arson and looting if the former officers were to avoid criminal
prosecution."
Protests In Illinois After Police Shooting Of Black Teens.
The C.F3S Fvening News (10/22, story 7, 0:25, O'Donnell, 3.96M) reported that Waukegan Mayor
Sam Cunningham "is calling for calm after the deadly police shooting of a Black teenager.
Protesters took to the streets today over the killing of 19-year-old Marcellis Stinnette and the
wounding of 20-year-old Tafarra Williams. Investigators say the officer, who is Hispanic, opened
fire, as the couple's car rolled in reverse towards him, and that the couple had fled from another
officer earlier Tuesday night. No weapons were found in the car."
COUNTER-TERRORISM
Report: Far-Right Groups Responsible For Two-Thirds Of Domestic Terrorist Attacks.
The Wall Street Journal (10/22, Strobel, Levy, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports white
supremacists and other right-wing groups accounted for two-thirds of domestic terrorist attacks
and plots so far in 2020, but the threat posed by antifascist and other leftist groups is rising,
according to a new report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Ninth Circuit Orders Resentencing Of California Man Who Pleaded Guilty To Terrorism
Charges.
The San Francisco Chronicle (10/22, Egelko, 2.67M) reports, "A federal appeals court ordered a
reduction Thursday in the 15-year, 8-month prison sentence of an Oakland man who talked online
of planning to kill thousands of people in the Bay Area, saying the evidence failed to show Amer
Alhaggagi was seriously planning or promoting terrorism." Alhaggagi, "a Berkeley High graduate,
pleaded guilty in July 2018 to attempting to provide material support or resources to a foreign
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terrorist organization, the Islamic State." US District Judge Charles Breyer "imposed a 188-month
sentence in February 2019, saying Alhaggagi had taken actions, such as opening the social media
and email accounts, that were intended as 'intimidation or coercion' of the U.S. government," but
"on Thursday, a divided panel of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco rejected
the terrorism finding and ordered Alhaggagi resentenced."
White Supremacist Group Talked Of Paramilitary Training In Secret Vetting Calls.
CNN (10/22, Sidner, Simon, 83.16M) reports, "Young men hoping to join a White supremacist
group spoke about hosting paramilitary trainings and how to legally bring firearms to those
events, according to secret recordings of vetting calls published by the Southern Poverty Law
Center Thursday." CNN adds, "Some 83 hours of calls with more than 100 participants linked to
The Base group were analyzed by the SPLC, which monitors hate, for a new podcast, 'Sounds Like
Hate.' Military training or knowledge of firearms was an important asset, according to the released
calls. So was having a place to train." According to CNN, "The SPLC's release of parts of the calls
comes at a time when US intelligence services say domestic violent extremists, specifically White
supremacist groups are the 'the most persistent and lethal threat in the Homeland."
Man Who Supplied Weapons To San Bernardino Terrorists Faces Sentencing.
The Oranae County (CA) Register (10/22, Rokos, 546K) reports, "Attorneys will argue for
significantly different prison terms Friday, Oct. 23, when Enrique Marquez Jr. is sentenced for
supplying the weapons used in the Dec. 2, 2015, terrorist shooting in San Bernardino that killed 14
people and wounded 22 others." According to the OCR, "The ruling by U.S. District Court Judge
Jesus G. Bernal in Riverside could mean a 19-year difference in Marquez's prison term. Marquez,
28, pleaded guilty in February 2017, but his sentencing has been delayed by attorney motions and
Marquez's unsuccessful attempt to withdraw his plea to one of the charges." The OCR adds,
"Marquez was convicted of providing material support to terrorists and making a false statement
on federal firearms-purchase forms on which Marquez said the firearms he was buying in 2011 and
2012 were for his use. Instead, he sold them to Syed Rizwan Farook as part of an aborted plan to
wage attacks on motorists."
Texas Man Pleads Guilty To Planting Fake Bomb On Railroad Tracks.
WFAA-TV Dallas (10/22, Harris, 307K) reports from Dallas, Texas, "A Dallas man pleaded guilty
Thursday to one count of misinformation and hoaxes related to a Dec. 2018 case where he planted
a fake bomb in the middle of a Kansas City Rail Line railroad track in Dallas, according to the U.S.
Department of Justice." Mark Ashley Robert, 37, "put the device on the railroad track in the early
morning hours of Dec. 21, 2018, according to court documents. A railroad conductor was the one
who spotted it." The Dallas Police Department Bomb Squad "was called to the scene, and after
determining that it was not a real explosive device, turned the fake bomb over to the FBI for
fingerprint examination."
French Officials Confirm Teacher's Killer Was In Contact With A Jihadist In Syria.
The Guardian (UK). (10/22, 4.19M) reports, "The killer of Samuel Paty, the teacher decapitated
outside his school last week after showing his class two cartoons of the prophet Muhammad, was in
contact with an Islamist fighter in Syria," according to French media. France "confirmed on
Thursday that seven people, including two schoolchildren, had been charged with terrorism
offences after Abdullakh Anzorov, 18, killed the teacher with a 30cm knife on Friday." Anzorov
"had contact with an as yet unidentified Russian-speaking jihadist in Syria who was located through
an IP address that had been traced back to Idlib." He "had been granted asylum and a residence
permit until 2030, had first established contact with the jihadist in September this year via
Instagram."
US Military Quietly Helping Taliban Fight Isis In Afghanistan.
The Washington Pest (10/22, 14.2M) reports that "the U.S. military has been quietly helping the
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Taliban to weaken the Islamic State in its Konar stronghold and keep more of the country from
falling into the hands" of ISIS, according to various sources. Unlike the Taliban, the US views ISIS
"as an international terrorist organization with aspirations to strike America and Europe." The US
coordinates with the Taliban merely "by observing battle conditions and listening in on the group."
The Konar operations reflect the "outsourcing of what has long been a core U.S. military mission -
fighting the Islamic State and al-Qaeda - to the uneasily coordinated forces of the Afghan
government and the Taliban, with U.S. counterterrorism forces in some cases helping both."
COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE
Schumer, Wyden Urge FBI Not To Probe Biden Family Prior To Election.
Fox News (10/22, 27.59M) reports, "Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. wrote
a letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray demanding the FBI `reject pressure' to investigate the
Biden family after the Hunter Biden email story from the New York Post. `The FBI must reject
pressure from Donald Trump to announce investigations of Joe Biden or his family to influence the
presidential election, or else it risks doing lasting harm to our democracy and national security,' a
news release of the letter read. `We are deeply concerned about the possibility that in response to
these reports the Trump Administration will take actions before Election Day that would seek to
damage the Democratic presidential candidate and undermine the rule of law,' Wyden and
Schumer wrote in their letter. `In carrying out this critical national security mission, law
enforcement's handling of this matter must be above politics and beyond reproach,' the lawmakers
wrote."
NBC Newc (10/22, 6.14M) reports, "They referred in a press release to `a widely questioned
article in the New York Post, that alleged to have obtained stolen Hunter Biden emails from the
president's lawyer Rudy Giuliani' and noted that Trump has called on the Justice Department to
investigate. They are urging Wray `to resist pressure from President Trump and other partisan
actors to take any actions intended to benefit President Trump politically on the eve of the
election. Succumbing to such pressure would deeply undermine our national security interests and
the credibility of law enforcement, and could have devastating consequences for the resiliency of
our democracy."
Ex-Hunter Biden Partner Says Joe Biden Was Set To Get Cut Of Business Deal.
The Washington Times (10/22, 492K) reports that a former business partner of Hunter Biden's "has
come forward to confirm" that Joe Biden "was involved in a deal and got a cut of the action from
China. Tony Bobulinski, who was the CEO of a firm with Hunter Biden, said in a statement that the
elder Mr. Biden is the `Big Guy' reference in his son's emails and was set to get a 10% cut of the
deal." Bobulinski said in a statement, "It wasn't just Hunter's business, they said they were putting
the Biden family name and its legacy on the line."
White House Deputy Press Secretary Brian Morgenstern said on Newsmax TV (10/22), "We
know a lot more today than we did over the last several days. We now have another Hunter Biden
business partner coming out and basically saying they were trading on the family name with
foreign entities, with foreign powers, and that we may have Chinese energy deals here with the
Biden family participating in them. That's something they'll have to explain." Morgenstern said on
Fox Business' Fvening Fdit, "If we're looking to elect a president for the American people, not our
foreign adversaries, this is something the...people definitely need to know immediately. This is
absolutely groundbreaking news for our nation."
Areithart (10/22, 673K) reports Biden's campaign called reports of Hunter Biden's "overseas
business dealings...'Russian misinformation' just hours before Thursday evening's final presidential
debate." Fox News (10/22, Wulfsohn, 27.59M) reports on its website that Bobulinski had been
scheduled to attend the debate "as a special guest of President Trump." The New Ynrk Times
(10/22, Goldman, 18.61M) runs a piece titled "What We Know And Don't About Hunter Biden And A
Laptop."
Senate Judiciary Committee To Move Forward On Facebook, Twitter Subpoenas.
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The Wall Street Journal (10/22, Hughes, Needleman, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports the
Senate Judiciary Committee has authorized Chairman Lindsey Graham to issue subpoenas to
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey. The Washington Times (10/22,
Lovelace, 492K) says "the forthcoming subpoenas will request the CEO's testimony on the
"suppression and/or censorship" of two New York Post articles involving the former vice president's
son on information about the company's content moderation practices and on other instances of
Facebook and Twitter limiting the visibility of material online." Roll Call (10/22, DeChiaro, 154K)
reports Graham "said Democrats on the committee had asked him to delay voting on the
subpoena authorization but that he decided to move forward because of bipartisan interest in
Zuckerberg and Dorsey."
Trump, Ratcliffe Reportedly Seeking Declassification Of Russia Inquiry Document.
Reuters (10/22, Hosenball, Bing, Landay) reports President Trump and DNI Ratcliffe "have pushed
for quick declassification of a document disputing the 2017 intelligence community finding that
Russia acted to help Trump get elected in 2016," according to three officials familiar with the
matter. Two of the source said the "effort faces strong objections from inside the intelligence
agencies," in part because the presidential election is so soon.
The Daily Caller (10/22, 716K) reports that Trump and Ratcliffe are requesting the
declassification "at the request of California Republican Rep. Devin Nunes." The intelligence
community concluded "that Russia's meddling in the 2016 election broke in favor of Trump,
regardless of the later finding that Trump's campaign had not colluded with nation."
The Hill (10/22, Coleman, 2.98M) reports that Ratcliffe said, "I have requested that the
document undergo a formal declassification review in response to a request" from Nunes. A former
intelligence official told Reuters the CIA and NSA "were attempting to prevent the document's
declassification 'because it would damage national security assets and jeopardize sources and
methods."
John Brennan Discusses DNI Ratcliffe's "Credibility," Trump's Relationship With
Intelligence Community.
In an interview clipped three times on the Washington Post website (1, 2, and 3), former CIA
Director John Brennan "says he wishes John Ratcliffe had more 'credibility." DNI Ratcliffe this
week "warned that both Iran and Russia had obtained voter data that could be used to endanger
the upcoming election," but, in the interview, Brennan "said Ratcliffe was not specific about what
Russia has done." Brennan said, "I think there are questions about whether or not what he said is
being motivated by his political interests." Brennan also "said he thinks one day we'll know more
about President Trump's relationship with Russia." Moreover, Trump's "attacks on the intelligence
community will have long-lasting effects, but he has confidence the agencies will be resilient and
respond positively to a Biden administration, if he is elected." Brennan said, "I have confidence
that the communities are going to be resilient and they're going to respond very positively to the
words of encouragement they're going to be hearing from President Biden and the rest of his
national security team."
Ignatius: Ratcliffe Facing "Moment Of Truth." In a column for the Washington Pnst
(10/22, 14.2M) entitled, "Can Trump's Spy Chief Be Trusted?," David Ignatius writes that DNI
Ratcliffe's performance "has often seemed to emphasize...serving the political interests of the man
who appointed him, President Trump." The President "is desperately seeking a silver bullet to fire
at former vice president Joe Biden — some nugget from the intelligence world that would justify
his wild accusations of 'hoaxes' and 'criminals.' Sources tell me Trump has been raging inside the
White House for Ratcliffe to deliver the goods." Ratcliffe, Ignatius writes, "is facing a moment of
truth: Will he serve the intelligence community that he heads" or "will he join Trump in an assault
on the very agencies he leads."
Reports Suggest Sonic Attacks Targeting Americans Are Widespread.
According to the New York Post (10/22, McKay, News, 4.57M), "reports emerged this week
suggesting that" potential sonic attacks first reported four years ago "might be far more pervasive
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than what was publicly known." Russia is increasingly seen "as being behind the global barrage of
possible sonic attacks." Former CIA Moscow bureau chief Dan Hoffman said, "There are a number
of Americans who have fallen ill now, and we need to know why and who is behind it. ... This is
something worthy of a congressional hearing." A US government probed is complicated by "the
vast array of differing prognostics and experiences." For instance, some "have pointed to
individuals in either homes or hotels hearing high-pitched tones or jarring thuds from one direction
or all around," others "endure a kind of tremoring or a wind-like pressure," and "some hear
nothing at all." Secretary of State Pompeo "said Wednesday that the mysterious maladies are still
under review and dismissed claims that American workers were not adequately protected." Also
reporting is fax News (10/22, McKay, 27.59M).
Intelligence Officials Warning About Election Interference Earlier Than In 2016.
Carrie Cordero, a "senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security," writes in the
Washington Post (10/22, 14.2M) that "Wednesday's joint news appearance during television prime
time by top intelligence and law enforcement officials was the latest and most dramatic step yet to
warn Americans in real time about foreign governments' efforts to influence the election." Their
"coordinated news appearance also had the effect of letting adversaries know in a very public way
that the U.S. government knows what they're up to." In 2016, a joint assessment by the ODNI and
DHS "came late in the election cycle and was overshadowed by competing events and
distractions." This year, it "took days, not weeks or months," for that determination to be made.
Before Wednesday's announcement, the FBI and CISA "had released information about threats to
election infrastructure." Cordero says "NCSC's Evanina's recent participation in a nine-minute
video alongside Wray, Krebs and NSA Director Paul Nakasone warning the public about foreign
influence activities and committing to protecting the country, was important."
Opinion: Both Parties Contributing To Lack Of Faith In Elections.
Opinion columnist Eli Lake writes in an op-ed in Bloomberg View (10/22, 4.73M) that DNI Ratcliffe
and FBI Director Christopher Wray "were right to knock down Iran's Proud Boy fakery before it
spread." Wray was further "right to make clear that the U.S. government would not tolerate
'foreign interference in our elections or criminal activity that threatens the sanctity of your vote or
unde
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