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Subject: FW: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Public Affairs News Briefing Wednesday, May 26, 2021
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Subject: FW: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Public Affairs News Briefing Wednesday, May 26, 2021
Good morning -
New York To Convene Special Grand Jury Over Investigation Into Former President Trump.
ABC World News TonightVi (5/25, story 3, 1:15, Muir, 6.58M) reported that that the Manhattan District
Attorney's Office is "convening a special grand jury to decide whether to bring criminal charges" against
former President Trump and his business associates. The investigation "has been going on for more than
two years now," and the latest update "is a clear sign tonight it's entering a new stage."
NBC Nightly NewsVi (5/25, story 6, 0:45, Holt, 5.16M) reported that while the announcement "is
the next step that prosecutors would take in pursuing possible criminal charges," it "doesn't mean
charges will be filed." CBS Evening NewsVi (5/25, story 5, 0:25, O'Donnell, 3.84M) reported that,
according to sources, the investigation "centers on whether the Trump Organization manipulated its real
estate portfolio to defraud banks or obtain illegal tax benefits."
The Washington Post (5/25, 10.52M) reports, "Manhattan's district attorney has convened the
grand jury that is expected to decide whether to indict former president Donald Trump, other executives
at his company or the business itself, should prosecutors present the panel with criminal charges,
according to two people familiar with the development," and "the move indicates that District Attorney
Cyrus R. Vance Jr.'s investigation of the former president and his business has reached an advanced
stage after more than two years. It suggests, too, that Vance thinks he has found evidence of a crime -
if not by Trump, by someone potentially close to him or by his company." The Post adds, "Vance's
investigation is expansive, according to people familiar with the probe and public disclosures made
during related litigation."
Judge Dismisses Fraud Case Against Bannon.
The Washington Post (5/25, 10.52M) reports US District Judge Analisa Torres on Monday "formally
dismissed the fraud case against Stephen K. Bannon, the conservative provocateur and ex-adviser to
President Donald Trump, ending months of litigation over how the court system should handle his pardon
while related criminal cases remain unresolved." The Post says that in "citing examples of other cases
being dismissed following a presidential reprieve," Torres "granted Bannon's application — saying in a
seven-page ruling that Trump's pardon was valid and that 'dismissal of the Indictment is the proper
course." According to Bloomberg (5/25, Voris, 3.57M), "Bannon and three others were charged last year
with defrauding donors to a foundation that was privately funding construction of a wall on the U.S.-
Mexico border."
Former Wisconsin Financial Adviser Sentenced For Fraud Scheme.
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The AP (5/25) reports from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, "A former financial adviser has been sentenced in
Milwaukee to more than five years in federal prison for scamming $2.6 million from 27 victims, including
his own parents." The AP adds, "According to court records, Edward Matthes, 51, persuaded family,
friends and community members in Oconomowoc to invest in fictitious Mutual of Omaha accounts.
Matthes put the funds into his own bank account from 2013 to 2019 and used the money for home
improvements, vacations, child support and other things, prosecutors said. Matthes pleaded guilty to
three counts of wire fraud in November 2020, the Journal Sentinel reported. The U.S. Department of
Justice recently announced that Matthes was sentenced to 63 months in prison. FBI Special Agent in
Charge Robert Hughes said Matthes took advantage of vulnerable people. 'Most of his victims were
elderly, and he spent years gaining their trust, only to wipe out a lifetime of their savings,' Hughes said."
Connecticut Lawmaker Pleads Guilty To Campaign Fraud.
The AP (5/25, Eaton-Robb) reports, "A Connecticut state senator and his former campaign treasurer
pleaded not guilty Tuesday to federal fraud charges alleging they lied to obtain public money to run a
2018 state legislative campaign." The AP adds, "Bridgeport Democratic Sen. Dennis Bradley and former
school board Chairperson Jessica Martinez pleaded not guilty to wire fraud and conspiracy charges
Tuesday afternoon. Bond was set at $300,000 for Bradley and $250,000 for Martinez. Prosecutors allege
that in order to qualify for the state's public campaign financing system, the pair lied about a March
2018 campaign event and the amount of campaign contributions they had received, according to a
federal indictment. They improperly received $84,140 from the Connecticut Citizen's Election Fund for
the 2018 Democratic primary and improperly sought to obtain another $95,710 for the general election,
prosecutors said."
Thanks,
FCS/SMAPA
(Desk)
(Cell)
From: Bulletin Intelligence
Sent: Wednesday, May 26, 2021 6:27 AM
To:
Subject: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Public Affairs News Briefing Wednesday, May 26, 2021
Mobile version and searchable archives available at fbi.bulletinintelligrnenom.
4FBI News Briefing
TO: THE DIRECTOR AND SENIOR STAFF
DATE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 2021 6:30 AM EDT
TODAY'S TABLE OF CONTENTS
LEADING THE NEWS
• Biden, Harris Meet With Floyd Family As Deadline For Police Reform Bill Passes.
• 1)O3 Fights To Keep Secret Memo Clearifigirump In Russia Prahe
• In Wake Of Cease-Fire, Blinken Looks To Restore Relations With Palestinian Authority, Rebuild Gaza.
CAPITOL VIOLENCE NEWS
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• Pennsylvania Couple Charged In Capitol Siege Probe Seek Plea Deal.
• Texas Man Charged In Capitol Siege Probe.
• Filing: Man Charged With Bringing Bombs To Capitol Had Called Cruz Office About Election Fraud.
• Senate Seeks Compromise On Jan. 6 Commission Bill
PROTESTS
• North Carolina Woman Charged After Allegedly Driving Into Protestors.
COUNTER-TERRORISM
• FBI Probing Suspicious Package Sent To Sen Paul's Kentucky Home.
• Attorneys For Three Men Charged In Whitmer Kidnap Plot Plan Entrapment Defense.
• probe Of Wtgming_Bgnik:Making Srheme Continues,
COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE
• US Proserutors Obtained Data On Former Ukrainian Offirials During Giuliani Probe
• NCSC Head To Speak To "CNBC Evolve."
• psaki: ODNI "Actively Working" On Unidentified Aircraft Report.
• US Intelligence Agencies Still Looking Into Wuhan Lab Rumors.
• Senate, House Intelligence Committees "Also Probing COVID-19 Origins."
• Democrats And Republicans Unite Behind Senate Bill Targeting China,
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
• JudgeSpproves Deal To Allow Frkstein's Jail Guards Avoid Prison
• Roof Appeals Death Sentence In Charleston Church Mass Shooting.
• police Investigator Accused Officers Of Underphyjna Risk Of Breonna Taylor Search
• Two Louisiana State Police Officers Reportedly Face Dismissal In Greene Case.
• Eight Charged In Multistate Burglary Ring That Allegedly Targeted Asian-Americans.
• I'S rhargesjapIpaSngples Airport Cargo Handlers With_StealingGgialAts,
• Former Montana Police Chief Charged With Distributing Child Pornography.
• FBI Assisting Ohio Bomb Squad In Raid.
• FBI Leads Law Fnforrement Operation In Arkansas
FINANCIAL CRIME & CORPORATE SCANDALS
• New York To Convene Special Grand Jury Over Investigation Into Former President Trump.
• Judge Dismisses Fraud Case Against Bannon.
• former Wisconsin Finanrial Adviser Sentenred Fnr Fraud Scheme
• Connecticut Lawmaker Pleads Guilty To Campaign Fraud.
CYBER DIVISION
• TSA Set To Release New Pipeline Cybersecurity Rules.
• CISA Official: Cryptocurrency Regulation Will Not Halt Ransomware Attacks.
• Irish Health System "Struggling" Ten Days After Ransomware Attack.
• Bose Suffered Ransomware Attack In March.
LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES
• ATF Nominee To Face Congressional Grilling Over Gun Control Lobbying.
• Biden To Mark 100th Anniversary Of Tulsa Race Massacre In Oklahoma.
• Jewish Groups Urge Biden To Name Special Envoy To Address Anti-Semitism.
• Texas Lawmakers Remove Handgun Restrictions.
• Data Shows Suicides Dropped At Height Of Pandemic.
• Surge In Opioid Deaths Reportedly Not Getting Enough Attention During Pandemic.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
• DEA, FBI Involved With Operation That Led To Arrest Of Fugitive Wanted In Italy.
OTHER FBI NEWS
• Senate Confirms Kristen Clarke As Head Of DOJ Civil Rights Division.
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
• Moderna Announces COVID Vaccine Is Effective For Teenagers.
• CDC: 50% Of Adults In The US Have Been Fully Vaccinated.
• Indian American Community Looks To Harris For Leadership As India Becomes COVID Epicenter.
• far Rockaway_aeighborhood In Queens Has Low COVID-19 Vaccination Rate Despite High Number Of
Deaths.
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• Trump Backers Continue Push For 2020 Flection Audits,
• Brooks-LaSure Confirmed As CMS Administrator.
• AP: Tom Nides Is Biden's Pick For Ambassador To Israel.
• White House Asks Four Trurrip_appointees To Resign From Arts Commission
• Republicans Promise Infrastructure Counteroffer By ThursdaL
• D.C. Files Antitrust-Suit Aaainst Amazon
• Roberts Tells Georgetown Law Graduates They Will Serve "Higher Purpose" As Attorneys.
• CBP To Build "Central Processing" Facility In El Paso To House Migrant Families, Children.
• Administration Curbs ICE Enforcement Actions
• DHS Proposes Changes To USCIS Meant To Ease Citizenship Process.
• GOP Leaders Condemn Greene's Comparison Of Mask Requirements To Treatment Of Jews During
Holocaust
• Coons Prioritizes Efforts To Help Administration Secure Bipartisanship.
• Senate DemocratseuabloraCits pite Lack Of Votes.
• Military Investigators Investigating Fighter Jet Crash.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
• Pan American Health Organization Announces Deaths Have Topped 1M For Latin America, Caribbean.
• Canada To Airlift Critical COVID Patients Out Of Manitoba.
• 1OC Refuses To Suspend 'Japan Olympics FollowingMalLeUcillay,
• Bacon: Biden Should Accept That Progressives Are "Right" On Foreign Policy.
• Maoist Terrorists Kill 16, Including Children, Ahead Of Peruvian Presidential Election,
• With Terrorism Designation, Administration Signals Break With Obama Policy On Cuba.
• NYTimes Analysis: US Troops Will Leave Afghanistan Ahead Of Deadline, But Security Issues Remain.
• Burma Poets Face Arrest Death For Opposing Junta
• Actor Apologizes For Referring To Taiwan As A Country.
• White House Setting Expectations Low Ahead Of Meeting With Putin Next Month.
• Birlen• New Sanctions On Relams "In Play'
• Iran Nuclear Talks Resume In Vienna.
• US Envoy ForYemen In Saudi_Arabia For Talks.
• Increased Chinese Ties Imperil US Arms Sales To UAE.
• Top Qatari Diplomat Meets With Egypt's Foreign Minister In Cairo.
• Caup Leader Again Takes Control Of Mali
• Somali Leader Say Deal Reached On Elections.
THE BIG PICTURE
• Headlines From Today's Front Pages.
WASHINGTON'S SCHEDULE
• Today's Events In Washington.
LEADING THE NEWS
Biden, Harris Meet With Floyd Family As Deadline For Police Reform Bill Passes.
CNN (5/25, Sullivan, 89.21M) reports on its website that President Biden and Vice President Harris
"met on Tuesday with the family of George Floyd exactly one year after he was killed by a
Minneapolis police officer, sparking nationwide protests against racism and police brutality." Floyd's
brother, Philonise Floyd, "told reporters the family had a `great' meeting with the President and
vice president and said: 'He's a genuine guy. They always speak from the heart." He continued,
"We're just thankful for what's going on and we just want the George Floyd Policing Act to be
passed." The New York Times (5/25, Kami, 20.6M) reports that after the meeting, Floyd's family
"said the president was still committed to passing a police reform bill, even as he missed his own
self-imposed deadline of getting it signed on the one-year anniversary of Mr. Floyd's death."
The AP (5/25, Jaffe, Fram) reports that according to Floyd's nephew Brandon Williams, the
President told them he "wants the bill to be meaningful and that it holds George's legacy intact."
Williams also "said Biden showed 'genuine concern' for how the family is doing." In addition,
according to the AP, "Biden took time during the meeting to play with George Floyd's young
daughter Gianna, who enjoyed some ice cream and Cheetos, the president said, after she told him
she was hungry."
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The Washington Post (5/25, Alemany, 10.52M) says that the President "joked to reporters
that his wife, first lady Jill Biden, is not going to pleased [that] he gave snacks to George Floyd's
7-year-old daughter, Gianna, during her visit to the White House." ABC World News TonigtaVi
(5/25, story 10, 0:10, Muir, 6.58M) reported Biden "revealing first thing she did when she ran in is
'she threw her arms gave up and gave me a big hug.' Like his own grandchildren. He said, 'She
was hungry, we gave her ice cream.—
Meanwhile, Politico (5/25, Niedzwiadek, 6.73M) says Biden "told the family that 'he doesn't
want to sign a bill that doesn't have substance and meaning," according to their attorney Ben
Crump, who added the President "is going to be patient to make sure it's the right bill, not a
rushed bill." The J os Angtlec Times (5/25, Stokols, 3.37M) reports that Biden "issued a statement
promising to keep pushing for legislation, saying, 'We face an inflection point,— and Reuters (5/25)
reports the President "said...he is hopeful an agreement will be reached on the George Floyd
police reform legislation after the May 31 Memorial Day holiday."
On MSNBC's Morning JoeVi (5/25, 937K), Susan Rice, the Director of the White House
Domestic Policy Council, said that while the legislation is "not a cure-all," it is "a very important
step. And the House passed version was robust, obviously in the Senate there needs to be
bipartisan compromise. We need 60 votes which is why we're encouraged to see" Sens. Cory
Booker (D-NJ) and Tim Scott (R-SC) and Rep. Karen Bass (D-CA) "and others negotiating seriously
and in good faith to see if we could get a meaningful reform bill out of the Senate that will move
the ball forward as far as we possibly can."
Elloomberg (5/25, Litvan, Parker, 3.57M) reports Biden "dispatched administration officials
including Rice, senior adviser Cedric Richmond and director of legislative affairs Louisa Terrell to
stay in regular contact with lawmakers, according to an official familiar with the situation," and
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said the President "is still very much hopeful that he will be
able to sign the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act into law, and we are of course very closely
engaged with the negotiators while also leaving them room to work."
On CBS This MorningVi (5/25, 2.2M), Booker said, "We want to get this deal right and not
quick. I'm very encouraged there's been hours and hours every day of talks. And I'm really
hopeful that we can get something done in the weeks ahead, not months." Axios (5/25, Knutson,
1.26M) reports the legislation is "stalled in the Senate due to Republican opposition to certain
provisions, including curbing qualified immunity for police officers," which Reuters (5/25, Mason)
reports Scott on Tuesday identified as "a main point of contention" while speaking with reporters.
Scott added that compromise on the legislation faces "a long way to go still, but it's starting to
take form."
On the CBS Evening NewsVi (5/25, story 2, 1:40, O'Donnell, 3.84M), Weijia Jiang reported
Bass "said she wants the final bill to address" qualified immunity. Bass: "We want the killings, we
want the brutality to end. And so the only way that happens is through accountability." On NIC
World News TonightVi (5/25, story 2, 2:30, Muir, 6.58M), Senior White House Correspondent Mary
Bruce said there are "real hurdles, though, like that question of protections for officers, but one
thing that both sides definitely do agree on, this legislation will be named in George Floyd's honor."
However, the Washington Post (5/25, 10.52M) reports Floyd's younger sister Bridgett did not
join her family in DC and instead attended "a memorial event in downtown Minneapolis,
expressing her frustration over the lack of progress." Bridgett decided not to visit the White House,
"she said, because Biden had not reached his goal of signing the legislation by the anniversary of
her brother's death." She stated, "I think Biden needs to make it right." She continued that the
President "broke his promise, but I'm going to give him a couple more weeks to see what he
comes up with. It don't take that long to hold these police accountable for what they do. There's
been a lot of names added to the list after my brother's death. And still nothing is being done."
According to the Post, "The different approaches within the family reflect the broader public
feelings of optimism that systemic change is possible, and dimming hopes, given it hasn't come a
full year after the uprising spurred by Floyd's death."
The New York Times (5/25, Shear, Fandos, 20.6M) states that despite optimism that a deal
"may still be possible in the weeks ahead, the stalemate is a reminder for Mr. Biden of the limits of
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presidential power, and of the deepening lack of any real bipartisanship in the nation's capital,
even in the face of the largest racial justice protests in generations."
Despite Police Reform At State Level, More Than 1K People Died During Police
Encounters Since Floyd. On ABC World News TonightVi (5/25, lead story, 4:50, Muir, 6.58M),
Alex Perez said that "memorials" on Tuesday "stretching from coast to coast honor[ed] the life and
legacy of George Floyd, one year after his death. From Los Angeles, to right here in Minneapolis,
Americans marking the somber day, remembering the 46-year-old father killed one year ago today
while in Minneapolis police custody."
Likewise, Gabe Gutierrez reported on NBC Nightly NewsVi (5/25, lead story, 1:40, Holt,
5.16M) that on Tuesday, "across the country, moments of silence commemorating the agonizing
nine minutes and 29 seconds a police officer knelt on George Floyd's neck." Gutierrez added on
NBC Nightly NewsVi (5/25, story 2, 1:40, Holt, 5.16M) that states have enacted police reforms,
with "at least 3,000 policing-related bills have been introduced in legislatures." According to
Gutierrez, "More than 30 states have enacted new police oversight and reform laws. But more
than 1,000 people in the US have died following police encounters since Floyd's death." Gutierrez
also "sat down with three women who now share an unwanted bond" of losing loved ones to
police.
On the CBS Evening NewsVi (5/25, lead story, 4:05, O'Donnell, 3.84M), Jeff Pegues reported
Minneapolis "paused to remember the man that friends and family call a 'gentle giant," but "amid
the debate about police reform, crime in Minneapolis is rising. Today, just feet away from the
square dedicated to George Floyd, about 30 gunshots rang out. A barrage of gunfire was captured
on camera during a reporter's live shot. The shooting was apparently unrelated to the Floyd
events. Police say one person was injured."
On NBC Nightly NewsVi (5/25, story 14, 1:50, Holt, 5.16M), Lester Holt said Floyd's death
"is still jarring and shaping this country. What happened one year ago was shocking in its
brazenness: the knee, the seeming indifference both to George Floyd's suffering and the cameras
and citizens who bore witness. In that roughly ten minutes of video, we saw a legacy of abuse
suffered by Blacks at the hands of police officers. A shock to some who saw it. A reality to others.
Hardly no one could be unaffected, and it demanded change. And we've seen it in some of those
police reform and accountability bills and laws passed since then." However, Holt added, "The roots
of behavioral change, how we see and treat each other, are not so easily legislated. The ignorance
that has fueled a wave of anti-Asian violence and anti-Semitic attacks in the months after George
Floyd's murder show just how far we must travel to act better, to be better. We've also seen more
violent encounters between police and Black individuals"
Politico Analysis: Garland Targeting More Police Departments Than Anticipated.
Politico (5/25, Booker, Gerstein, 6.73M) reports that Attorney General Garland is "overseeing the
vexing task of providing federal oversight of law enforcement agencies with troubled policing
practices at a time when many Americans feel an urgent need for dramatic change." According to
Politico, "In effect, the Biden administration [is) revoking a moratorium put in place by the Donald
Trump-era DO) that all but eliminated the use of consent decrees, a court-binding agreement that
lays out an action plan to implement specific reforms. It's the department's main tool to help root
out racist or unlawful practices within law enforcement agencies, and Trump's attorneys general
had throttled back the practice, arguing they were bad for officer morale and led to spikes in
crime." Politico adds, "Taken in its totality, the tempo of Garland's actions is eye-popping, even for
those who expected the DO) to return to its pre-Trump assertiveness on policing issues."
WPost: Police Reform Remains Urgent. A Washington Post (5/25, 10.52M) editorial says
that when it comes to the fatal shooting of Ronald Greene, the AP revealed "there is far more -
horrifyingly more - to the story of how this 49-year-old Black man died. And once again, troubling
questions are raised about the conduct, character and credibility of police that underscore the
need for reform." The Post concludes, "The system is broken, and it is time to fix it so that the
people who need protection get it."
DO) Fights To Keep Secret Memo Clearing Trump In Russia Probe.
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The New York TiMPi (5/25, Savage, 20.6M) reports the Administration is fighting "a legal battle to
keep secret most of a Trump-era Justice Department memo related to Attorney General William P.
Barr's much-disputed declaration in 2019 that cleared President Donald J. Trump of illegally
obstructing justice in the Russia investigation." In a filing Monday, the Justice Department
"appealed part of a scathing district court ruling that ordered it to make public the entire memo."
The Times says while "the decision to keep hiding that analysis from public scrutiny puts the Biden
administration in the politically awkward position of trying to cover up a record that would shed
new light on an act by Mr. Barr that Democrats consider notorious," it "also enables the
department to defend two institutional interests: its ability to keep internal legal analysis secret
and the actions of career officials whom a judge accused of misleading the court."
Judge: Barr's DOJ Got "A Jump On Public Relations" On Release Of Mueller Report.
CNN (5/25, Polantz, 89.21M) reports on its website that in a "scathing analysis" revealed Tuesday,
federal Judge Amy Berman Jackson "slammed the Department of Justice for 'getting a jump on
public relations' when its leaders in 2019 discussed a public rollout that would blunt the Mueller
investigation's damaging findings about then-President Donald Trump, according to a newly
released opinion from the judge." Jackson's analysis was included "in a newly unsealed portion of a
court opinion she wrote about an internal memo to former Attorney General Bill Barr at the close
of the Mueller investigation, and her rejection of the department's efforts to keep almost all of the
memo secret."
WSJournal Lauds Garland For Appealing Decision Faulting Predecessor's Handling
Of Mueller Report. In an editorial, the Wall Street Journal (5/25, Subscription Publication,
8.41M) credits Garland for the Justice Department decision to appeal Berman Jackson's order to
release an internal memo critical of his predecessor's handling of the release of Mueller's
investigation. The Journal concludes Garland's response shows Jackson's order as partisan judicial
overreach.
In Wake Of Cease-Fire, Blinken Looks To Restore Relations With Palestinian Authority,
Rebuild Gaza.
NBC Nightly NewsVi (5/25, story 8, 1:45, Holt, 5.16M) reported, "In the Middle East, Secretary of
State Blinken met with Israeli and Palestinian leaders, trying to make sure an Egyptian brokered
cease-fire holds." NBC (Mitchell) added, that Blinken is "pledging $112 million in emergency aid to
rebuild Gaza and meeting with Palestinian authority President Mahmoud Abbas, sidelined by the
Trump Administration." The CBS Evening NewsVi (5/25, story 9, 1:45, O'Donnell, 3.84M) reported
Blinken is "hoping to solidify the peace after the deadliest fighting in years left Gaza in ruins. CBS'
Holly Williams is there." CBS (Holly Williams) added, "The US wants to make the cease-fire stick."
Blinken was shown saying, "Palestinians and Israelis equally deserve to live safely and securely to
enjoy equal measures of freedom, opportunity, and democracy, to be treated with dignity."
The Los Angeles Times (5/25, Wilkinson, 3.37M) reports that after "receiving praise for
helping broker" the cease-fire, the Biden Administration "is now looking to build toward the next
phase: a deeper and more complex resolution to decades of conflict." However, Blinken "has a
more modest goal: making sure the cease-fire holds and humanitarian aid can be delivered to the
battered Gaza Strip." Reuters (5/25) reports Blinken "said the [US] would provide an additional
$75 million in...aid to the Palestinians...$5.5 million in immediate disaster relief for Gaza and $32
million to the U.N. Palestinian aid agency based there." However, according to Reuters, Blinken
"reiterated that Washington intended to ensure that Hamas, which it regards as a terrorist
organisation, did not benefit...a potentially difficult task in an enclave over which it has a strong
grip."
The AP (5/25) reports that Blinken "announced Tuesday that the U.S. would reopen its
consulate in Jerusalem — a move that restores ties with Palestinians that had been downgraded by
the Trump administration." The consulate "long served as an autonomous office in charge of
diplomatic relations with the Palestinians," but former President Trump "downgraded its
operations," placing it under the aegis of his ambassador to Israel when he moved the embassy to
Jerusalem, which "infuriated the Palestinians."
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The Wall Street Journal (5/25, Lieber, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports that Blinken
said alongside Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, "We know that to prevent a return to violence, we
have to use the space created to address a larger set of underlying issues and challenges" and
"that begins with tackling the great humanitarian situation in Gaza." However, the New York Times
(5/25, lakes, 20.6M) reports that Netanyahu warned that his nation will launch a "very powerful"
response if Hamas launches new attacks, while "thanking the United States for bolstering his
country's air defenses." The Times says that "in brief but blunt comments after" meeting with
Blinken, Netanyahu "said he and Mr. Blinken had discussed how to curb Hamas...and how to help
rebuild and otherwise improve the lives of the two million Palestinians who live there." The Times
adds, "For his part, Mr. Blinken sought to keep the conversation focused on reducing tensions and
meeting what he described as 'urgent, humanitarian reconstruction assistance for Gaza."
Meanwhile, Charles Lane writes in the Washington Post (5/25, 10.52M), "Israeli wrongdoing"
in the conflict with Mamas, "if any, occurred in the context of a generally professional military
operation that was carried out in response to Hamas's rocket attacks. Hamas's campaign against
Israel and its civilian population, by contrast, consisted of nothing but war crimes, from beginning
to end."
Sanders Drops Efforts To Block Weapons Sales To Israel. The Wall Street Journal
(5/25, Collins, Subscription Publication, 8.41M) reports that according to an aide, Sen. Bernie
Sanders (I-VT) said that the senator will no longer attempt to force a vote aimed at stopping a
$735 million sale of weapons to Israel. The aide said Sanders found out last Friday that the State
Department had already approved the sale, and it was not clear that it could be blocked.
Friedman: Biden Needs To Make Push For Two-State Solution. Thomas Friedman
writes in his column for the New York Times (5/25, 20.6M) that the fighting between Israel and
Hamas "made something crystal clear to me: Unless we preserve at least the potential of a two-
state solution, the one-state reality that would emerge in its place won't just blow up Israel, the
West Bank and Gaza; it could very well blow up the Democratic Party and every Jewish
organization and synagogue in America." It is "vital," Friedman writes, that Biden "urgently take
steps to re-energize the possibility of a two-state solution and give it at least some concrete
diplomatic manifestation on the ground."
Pro-Palestinian Activists Building "Broad Progressive Coalition"In US. The Los
Angeles Times (5/25, Parvini, 3.37M) reports a shared purpose "and political perspective has
revealed itself in larger and more diverse pro-Palestinian demonstrations across the country,
mounting pressure from progressive politicians on the Biden administration, and a shift in
American political discourse about Israel in Washington, the U.S. media and other institutions." As
pro-Palestinian posts have "spread across social media in recent days, Black, Armenian, liberal
Jewish and other social justice organizers have helped Palestinians push their message both online
and in the streets." That merger of groups "and causes has reached a critical mass, its supporters
say, in a way that differs from past episodes in the long-running Mideast conflict."
Israel's Iron Dome Accidentally Downed Friendly Drone. Insider (5/25, Pickrell,
2.74M) reports Israel's Iron Dome accidentally "shot down an Israeli military drone during recent
fighting with Mamas in the Gaza Strip, the Israel Defense Forces told local media." An IDF
spokesperson told Haartez, "As part of the round of fighting in Gaza and as part of the defense of
the country's skies, an IDF Skylark drone was hit by Iron Dome." Haaretz also "reported that the
IDF is 'worried' about the friendly-fire incident because it calls into question whether the IDF is
able 'to conduct a long period of fighting without harming its own forces."
CAPITOL VIOLENCE NEWS
Pennsylvania Couple Charged In Capitol Siege Probe Seek Plea Deal.
The New Castle (PA) News (5/25, Sirianni, 11K) reports, "A New Castle couple charged with
criminal acts during the U.S. Capitol insurrection on Jan. 6. are seeking an exclusion from the
Speedy Trial Act in hopes of reaching a plea deal without a jury trial." Federal prosecutors
"charged and Debra J. Maimone on March 12 with theft of property ($1,000 or less); knowingly
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entering or remaining in any restricted building or grounds without lawful authority; and violent
entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds. On Monday, the government and attorneys for
both Vogel and Maimone jointly asked for a 90-day continuance, until Aug. 24, 'to be able to
continue plea negotiations,' according to U.S. District Court documents." The FBI "identified the
duo after finding a video posted to Maimone's Parler social media account that showed them inside
the Capitol."
Texas Man Charged In Capitol Siege Probe.
The Houston Chronicle (5/25, Dellinger, 982K) reports that a Katy, Texas man "was arrested
Tuesday for his alleged role in the U.S. Capitol riot, according to the FBI." Adam Weibling "was
taken into custody by FBI Bryan agents. He was charged with violent entry and disorderly conduct
on Capitol grounds as well as knowingly entering or remaining in restricted grounds without lawful
authority. He is the seventh Houston-area resident to be arrested in connection to the Capitol
insurrection on Jan. 6."
Filing: Man Charged With Bringing Bombs To Capitol Had Called Cruz Office About
Election Fraud.
CNN (5/25, Polantz, 89.21M) reports, "A Vietnam veteran who allegedly brought Mason jar bombs
to Capitol Hill on January 6 had scoped out the Capitol Building in December by driving around it,
and had called Texas Sen. Ted Cruz's office and tried to visit the Republican at home, a court filing
revealed on Monday." The filing "provides new details about a right-wing follower's response to the
election fraud myth in one of the most serious Capitol riot criminal cases." Lonnie Leroy Coffman of
Alabama "had also participated in a paramilitary patrol on the southern border seven years ago,
and on January 6, carried information about border enforcement paramilitary groups, the court
filing said."
Senate Seeks Compromise On Jan. 6 Commission Bill.
The AP (5/25, Jalonick) reports Senators "labored Tuesday to find a path forward for legislation
creating a commission on the Jan. 6 insurrection, debating potential changes in a long-shot
attempt to overcome growing GOP opposition." Sources told the AP that Sens. Susan Collins (R-
ME) and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) "are leading the informal talks," which "are, for now, focused
on two issues that Republican senators have cited for their opposition to the House-passed
legislation to create the commission - ensuring that the panel's staff is evenly split between the
parties and making sure the commission's work does not spill over into the midterm election year."
Meanwhile, Reuters (5/25) reports Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) "called on
Republicans to work with them to reach agreement on a bill to investigate the events leading up to
and on Jan. 6, when President Donald Trump's supporters stormed the building while Congress
was certifying Democrat Joe Biden's November election victory, leaving five dead," but CNN (5/25,
Raju, Barrett, 89.21M) reports on its website that Manchin "bluntly said he wouldn't support any
effort to gut the filibuster if Republicans succeed in blocking the measure."
Although The Hilt (5/25, Bolton, 5.69M) reports Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) on Tuesday
followed Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) to become "the second Senate Republican to say she will
support a House-passed bill to establish a bipartisan commission on the Jan. 6 attack on the
Capitol, which could come to the floor for a vote this week," Bloomberg (5/25, Dennis, 3.57M)
reports Senate Minority Leader McConnell on Tuesday "dismissed bipartisan efforts to set up an
independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection, setting up a showdown with
Democrats that could reverberate in the 2022 campaigns for Congress." Bloomberg adds
McConnell "accused Democrats of trying to drag out a debate about former President Donald
Trump's role in the siege staged by his supporters as they try to hold control of the House and
Senate in next year's election."
However, the New York Times (5/25, Feuer, Fandos, 20.6M) reports McConnell is arguing the
commission is "redundant, noting that the Justice Department and congressional committees are
already looking into the assault," but he "failed to mention...that the criminal investigation into the
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riot, despite being one of the largest in American history, was narrowly bounded by federal law
and would not - indeed could not - seek the answers to several crucial questions about Jan. 6.
The same can be said about the major congressional effort to investigate the assault, a tightly
focused inquiry into the broad government response to the violence that day."
Trump Denies Responsibility For Capitol Riot. Bloomberg (5/25, Yaffe-Bellany, 3.57M)
reports Trump in a court filing on Monday "asked a judge in Washington to throw out a lawsuit that
accuses him of inciting the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol, arguing that he can't be held legally
liable for a speech he gave to supporters shortly before they stormed the building." Bloomberg
says Trump argued Rep. Eric Swalwell's (D-CA) lawsuit "unfairly seeks to hold him responsible 'for
the unlawful acts of others," and he "argued his comments to the crowd that day constituted a
type of official act for which presidents are immune from civil litigation, based on established legal
precedent." CNN (5/25, Polantz, 89.21M) reports on its website that the argument marks "the first
time Trump has formally defended his actions in court since the insurrection, and reflects his
continued push to his supporters that he did nothing wrong and was robbed of a second term in
office."
PROTESTS
North Carolina Woman Charged After Allegedly Driving Into Protestors.
The AP (5/25, Finley) reports, "A white woman has been charged with striking two Black women
protesters with her car during a march against last month's police shooting of an unarmed Black
man in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, authorities said Tuesday." Lisa O'Quinn, 41, of Greenville,
North Carolina "faces two counts of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill by the use of a
motor vehicle and related charges, the Elizabeth City Police Department said in a statement.
Investigators said they're also looking into the possibility of deeming O'Quinn's actions a hate
crime." The AP adds, "The women who were struck, both 42, were treated at a hospital and
released, police said. They were part of a small march on Monday evening that was against the
April 21 shooting by sheriff's deputies of Andrew Brown Jr., while he was in his car."
The Daily Beast (5/25, Boryga, 933K) reports, "Valerie Lindsey was protesting with a small
crowd in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, on Monday evening when a white sedan rolled up to an
intersection partly blocked by activists enraged by the police killing of a local Black man. Lindsey,
who is Black, told The Daily Beast that the driver of that vehicle, 41-year-old Lisa Michelle
O'Quinn, rolled down her window and said that if members of the Elizabeth City Police
Department, who were guarding the procession, were not present, the protesters 'would not be
safe.' Lindsey added that, when she and two other protesters came closer to O'Quinn's car to
confront her, O'Quinn, who is white, uttered racial slurs, including the n-word. Two other witnesses
to the incident confirmed that slurs were uttered." Police say O'Quinn "drove her car into
protesters, sending two of them - including Lindsey - to the hospital."
COUNTER-TERRORISM
FBI Probing Suspicious Package Sent To Sen Paul's Kentucky Home.
CBS News (5/25, Siese, 5.39M) reports, "The FBI is investigating a suspicious package delivered
to Senator Rand Paul's Bowling Green, Kentucky home, reports CBS Louisville affiliate WLKY. A
large envelope containing what appeared to be a white powder arrived Monday. Authorities are
attempting to determine whether the envelope's contents are hazardous."
The AP (5/25, Schreiner) reports, "A suspicious package sent to the Kentucky home of
Republican U.S. Sen. Rand Paul appears to contain a non-toxic substance, the local sheriff's office
said." The FBI "is providing forensic and technical assistance in working with the Warren County
Sheriff's Office and Capitol Police, Tim Beam, a spokesman for the FBI's Louisville office, said
Tuesday. The Warren County Sheriff's Office said in a social media post that it was contacted by
Capitol Police on Monday regarding a suspicious package delivered to Paul's home in Bowling
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Green. The package was taken to the Bowling Green Fire Department and a preliminary analysis
identified the substance as non-toxic, the sheriff's office said. It did not identify the substance."
The Hill (5/25, Schnell, 5.69M) reports, "Preliminary analysis, according to a Facebook post
from the Warren County Sheriff's Office, identified the substance as nontoxic. Additional analysis,
however, will be conducted on the substance and package, the sheriff's office said. The U.S.
Capitol Police (USCP) confirmed these developments in a statement to The Hill, writing that an
initial test determined that the powdery substance in the package was not dangerous. The
contents were taken to an FBI lab for further testing 'as a precaution,' according to USCP."
Attorneys For Three Men Charged In Whitmer Kidnap Plot Plan Entrapment Defense.
WDIV-TV Detroit (5/25, Ley, Clarke, 568K) reports, "Attorneys for the three men charged in the
alleged plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer laid out how they plan to present their
defense." WDIV-TV adds, "Three members of the Wolverine Watchmen were back in court on
Tuesday for a video hearing. Pete Musico, Joseph Morrison and Paul Bellar are all charged with
supporting the plot. The defense is going to argue that the FBI entrapped the men, led the training
and pushed the plot. 'We will file an entrapment motion,' Nicholas Somberg, the attorney for
Joseph Morrison, said."
Probe Of Wyoming Bomb-Making Scheme Continues.
KTWO-AM Casper, WY (5/25) reports, "An investigation into a bomb-making scheme in Rock
Springs is continuing. Rock Springs Police made the announcement on Tuesday." Police said
"investigators have found a total of four confirmed pipe bombs in connection to the investigation.
All have been disarmed by the Sweetwater County Bomb Squad. Two suspects, Spencer Cottrell
and Bryan Foster, were arrested for felony possession, manufacture and sale of explosives with
intent to unlawfully endanger. An additional defendant, Gage Mercer, was indicted earlier this
month. 'FBI Denver is grateful for the opportunity to have assisted the Rock Springs Police
Department in investigating this serious threat,' FBI Denver Special Agent Michael Schneider said."
COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE
US Prosecutors Obtained Data On Former Ukrainian Officials During Giuliani Probe.
Reuters (5/25) reports US prosecutors "investigating Rudolph Giuliani's ties to Ukraine have seized
materials from that country's former chief prosecutor, who was involved in efforts to uncover dirt
about current U.S. President Joe Biden, according to a Tuesday court filing," which the AP (5/25,
Neumeister) reports was "accidentally revealed." According to the AP, the filing "said federal
prosecutors in New York had informed defense lawyers that the seized communications included
an email account believed to belong to the former prosecutor general of Ukraine, Yuriy Lutsenko,"
and "said prosecutors accessed Lutsenko's account around the same time that investigators also
got access to Giuliani's Apple iCloud account." The AP describes Lutsenko as "a key figure in
Giuliani's efforts to press Ukraine for an investigation into then-presidential candidate Joe Biden
and his son, Hunter."
NCSC Head To Speak To "CNBC Evolve."
CNBC (5/25, 7.34M) reports on May 26, the "CNBC Evolve: Innovations in Cybersecurity will
dissect efforts to protect our nation's cyber infrastructure and identify threats, with actionable
advice on ways the government and private enterprise can work together to anticipate threats
before they happen in conversations led by CNBC's Eamon Javers." Featured speakers include:
"John Demers, Department of Justice's National Security Division Assistant Attorney General,
Michael Orlando, National Counterintelligence and Security Center Acting Director, Elena Kvochko,
SAP Chief Trust Officer and Suresh Venkatarayalu, Honeywell Chief Technology Officer."
Psaki: ODNI "Actively Working" On Unidentified Aircraft Report.
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The Washington Fxaminer (5/25, Doyle, 888K) reports ODNI is "actively working" on a report
"about UFOs, an effort backed by President Joe Biden, the White House said Tuesday." White
House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters, "We take reports of incursions into our air base by
any aircraft, identified or unidentified, very seriously," adding, "Certainly the president supports
ODNI putting together a report." Asked whether the "White House would commit to disclosing the
report's findings in full, Psaki pointed to the intelligence department leading the investigation."
Psaki said, "In terms of disclosure, that would be up to them."
Podesta Urges Biden To Create Dedicated UFO Office In OSTP. Politico Play_basik (5/25,
Thompson, Meyer, 6.75M) reports former White House Chief of Staff John Podesta "has been
pushing the federal government to be more transparent on all things UFO...for over two decades."
Podesta thinks President Biden should create "a dedicated UFO office inside the White House's
Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP)." Podesta said, "They're more used to dealing in an
open-source environment, used to dealing with scientific information disclosed to the public, and
having a conversation with the scientific community than, you know, black programs at the
Pentagon." Politico says, "Biden's director of national intelligence is mandated to produce a public
report to Congress documenting 'unidentified aerial phenomena' or 'anomalous aerial vehicles,' per
legislation signed during the Trump administration." White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki "told
reporters [Tuesday] that the White House was 'aware of the report requirement and our team at
the office of the director of national intelligence (ODNI) is of course actively working on that
report."
US Intelligence Agencies Still Looking Into Wuhan Lab Rumors.
Reuters (5/25, Hosenball) reports, US intelligence agencies are "examining reports that
researchers at a Chinese virology laboratory were seriously ill in 2019 a month before the first
cases of COVID-19 were reported, according to US government sources who cautioned that there
is still no proof the disease originated at the lab." A "still-classified U.S. intelligence report
circulated during former President Donald Trump's administration alleged that three Wuhan
Institute of Virology (WIV) researchers became so ill in November 2019 that they sought hospital
care, sources familiar with U.S. intelligence reporting and analysis said, speaking on condition of
anonymity." The State Department published a fact sheet on "COVID-19 and the Wuhan lab on
Jan. 15, 2021, five days before Trump left office, based in part on information in the classified
report, sources said." The CIA, NSA, and "defense intelligence components contributed to both the
public fact sheet and classified report, the sources said." Both were assembled by ODNI, and the
"classified report is regarded as valid by current U.S. government agencies, experts investigating
the origins of COVID-19 and by officials in President Joe Biden's administration."
Biden Administration Concerned About Quality Of State Department Wuhan
Investiation. CNN (5/25, Atwood, 89.21M) reports the Biden Administration "shut down a
closely-held State Department effort launched late in the Trump administration to prove the
coronavirus originated in a Chinese lab over concerns about the quality of its work, according to
three sources familiar with the decision." mThe existence of the "State Department inquiry and its
termination this spring by the Biden administration - neither of which has been previously
reported - comes to light amid renewed interest in whether the virus could have leaked out of a
Wuhan lab with links to the Chinese military." However, Biden officials "remain skeptical of Beijing's
role in limiting investigators from accessing information that may be pertinent to the origins of the
virus." US intelligence agencies continue "to examine the question of whether the virus emerged
naturally from human contact with infected animals or if it could have been the result of a
laboratory accident."
Fauci Defends "Modest Collaboration" With Wuhan Institute Of Virology During
House Panel Meeting. Fox News (5/25, Olson, 23.99M) reports NIAID Director Anthony Fauci
"on Tuesday defended 'modest' collaboration with scientists in Wuhan, China on studying bat
coronaviruses while asserting that the agency did not allocate the money to do 'gain of function'
research." These "comments came during a House Appropriations Committee subcommittee
hearing on the National Institutes of Health (NIH) fiscal year 2022 budget request. Fauci was
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pressed by Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Wis., on a $600,000 grant from NIAID that went to a group called
EcoHealth Alliance, which then paid the Wuhan Institute of Virology to study the risk that
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