Trump says DeSantis running for president would be 'a great act of disloyalty’

Former President Trump said Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) running for president would be “a great act of disloyalty” as he kicked off his first two major campaign events as part of his own 2024 presidential run. 

Trump visited New Hampshire and South Carolina, two of the first states to vote in the primary calendar, on Saturday after a quieter-than-normal beginning to his reelection campaign. He launched his campaign in mid-November, but has yet to hold any major rallies that were consistent during his 2016 and 2020 runs. 

Trump announced the leaders of his New Hampshire and South Carolina campaigns during his speeches. After his South Carolina speech, he sat for an interview with The Associated Press and criticized DeSantis, who is rumored to be considering his own presidential run and who has consistently placed second in hypothetical Republican primary polls. 

Trump emphasized his own status leading in many of those polls and took credit for DeSantis’s first election as governor of Florida. 

“If he runs, that’s fine. I’m way up in the polls. He’s going to have to do what he wants to do, but he may run,” Trump said. “I do think it would be a great act of disloyalty because, you know, I got him in. He had no chance. His political life was over.”

Trump endorsed DeSantis ahead of the Republican primary for the gubernatorial race in 2018.

Trump faced criticism from many in his own party following the November midterm elections, in which Republicans underperformed their hopes and expectations. The president’s party has historically lost seats in Congress during the midterms, but Democrats were able to grow their majority in the Senate and only narrowly lost in the House. 

Many, including some allies of Trump, blamed the former president for endorsing GOP candidates in the primaries who were seen as less likely to win a general election but more loyal to him than their other challengers. 

Many of these candidates lost in key congressional and gubernatorial races. 

Polls began showing DeSantis, who has not publicly confirmed he a 2024 run, closing the gap with Trump or in some cases leading in hypothetical polls. But Trump led DeSantis by 17 points in a Morning Consult poll earlier this month. 

Trump told AP that he has not spoken to DeSantis in a long time. He expressed confidence about his own prospects with the possibility of DeSantis running in an interview with David Brody on “The Water Cooler” earlier this week, saying, “We’ll handle that the way I handle things.” 

Trump is the only major candidate who has officially launched their candidacy in the 2024 race, but many Republicans have indicated they are considering running, including former Vice President Mike Pence, former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

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What Is the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)? Definition & History

Photo of tax forms with text overlay that reads "What Is the Internal Revenue Service?"

The Internal Revenue Service has its own group of enforcers whose responsibility is to ensure that the tax code is upheld.

What Is the Internal Revenue Service?

The Internal Revenue Service, better known as the IRS, is the U.S. government agency responsible for collecting taxes from individuals and businesses, enforcing tax laws, and processing tax filings each year. It is also one of the oldest bureaus in operation, tracing its origins to the formative years of the republic.


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How Economic Data Is Impacting the Stock Market

Between earnings season and the ongoing discussion of recession probabilities, there’s a lot of factors contributing to the current market environment. 

And, let’s face it, that can cause a fair amount of anxiety. 

As Real Money’s Stephen Guilfoyle has pointed out, the macroeconomic data that the market has received  in the past month hasn’t helped to ease that anxiety. 

But perhaps the weekly initial jobless claims paired with the fourth quarter gross domestic product print will be enough to help ease at least some anxiety.


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L3Harris ‘optimistic’ Aerojet Rocketdyne acquisition will close in 2023

FTC regulators and DoD continue to review the proposed merger

WASHINGTON — Christopher Kubasik, CEO of L3Harris Technologies, said Jan. 27 regulators continue to review the company’s proposed $4.7 billion acquisition of Aerojet Rocketdyne and expects the merger to close in 2023.

L3Harris, headquartered in Melbourne, Florida, is a global defense and aerospace firm with more than $17 billion in annual revenue. In December it announced an agreement to buy Aerojet Rocketdyne, a Sacramento, California-based manufacturer of rocket engines and propulsion systems for space vehicles, ballistic missiles and military tactical weapons. 

During a fourth-quarter earnings call, Kubasik said the company has been answering questions from Federal Trade Commission antitrust regulators. He said L3Harris executives have met with Pentagon officials to address questions on the acquisition of Aerojet Rocketdyne and its potential impact on defense programs. 

Kubasik did not comment on a recent letter sent by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) to the Federal Trade Commission urging the agency to block the transaction. The FTC last year blocked Lockheed Martin’s proposed $4.4 billion bid for Aerojet Rocketdyne, arguing that the combination would give Lockheed — a major supplier of tactical missiles — the ability to “cut off other defense contractors from the critical components they need to build competing missiles.”

L3Harris said it does not expect to face these same challenges because the combination with Aerojet would be a “horizontal move” rather than a vertical integration of a missile manufacturer and a key supplier of propulsion systems. 

If the acquisition is approved, Kubasik said, there are no plans to close major facilities but he estimates about $50 million in overhead cost savings during the first year. “We both have offices in D.C. We both have offices in Huntsville. There’s some low hanging fruit there,” he said. 

This would be L3Harris’ second of two back-to-back acquisitions. Earlier this month the company closed a nearly $2 billion purchase of Viasat’s tactical data links business. 

“We got TDL done in 92 days, and the integration is already underway, so we can focus on getting Aerojet Rocketdyne approved, and then start the integration,” said Kubasik.

“I don’t foresee us doing any acquisitions for a couple of years, as you would imagine,” he told analysts. “There’s some non-core assets that we’re going to sell, and we’re going to use those proceeds to bring down our debt over the next few years.”

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How Does The 2024 BMW M3 CS Rank Against The Greatest Limited Edition M3s?

The 2023 BMW M3 CS borrows heavily from last year’s M4 CSL coupe to ensure that it’s lighter, stiffer and faster than the regular 2023 M3 sedan.

But, while it does get the CSL’s 553 hp (550 PS) engine, its carbon hood and sticky Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 tires, is it really the most extreme road car to wear the M3 badge since BMW first applied it to a trunk lid almost 38 years ago? We dug through the M3’s back-catalog to look at the previous hardcore M3s and see which one offered the biggest upgrade over the standard car.

1988 E30 M3 Evolution II – 501 produced

Related: 543-HP 2024 BMW M3 CS Is An Even Faster M4 CSL For The Family Guy

BMW created the original E30 M3 in 1985 to go racing, but to stay competitive though the late 1980s and beyond it needed to homologate upgrades that gave us the Evolution cars. The Evo I was only very slightly different, but the Evolution II’s changes included a wheel upgrade from 15- to 16-in, thinner glass, a lighter trunk lid, deeper front spoiler and an extra rear spoiler. The 2.3-liter, naturally-aspirated inline four also got a small 20 hp (20 PS) boost to 217 hp (220 PS).

Credit: Silverstone Auctions

1990 E30 M3 Sport Evolution – 600 produced

The Sport Evo might not be as rare as the earlier EVO II, but it’s by far the more desirable. It gained adjustable front and rear spoilers, even wider fenders, chunky Recaro seats and a more modern Alcantara-wrapped M-Technic II steering wheel. But the real jewel was the S14 inline four, which was opened up from 2.3- to 2.5 liters and even with a standard catalyst (not then required by law in all of Europe) it made 235 hp (238 PS).

1995 E36 M3 GT – 350 produced

The M3’s switch to six-cylinder power for the E36 had already yielded a big jump in output to 282 hp (286 PS), but BMW bumped that to 291 hp (295 PS) with the help of 264-degree cams for a short run of British Racing Green GTs produced to homologate racing upgrades. Other performance-focused changes included adjustable front and rear spoiler, a strut brace and lightweight aluminium doors.

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1995 E36 M3-R – 15 produced

The M3-R was even wilder than the GT, though these Australian-market cars were actually ordered as standard M3s before being dispatched to Frank Gardiner Racing in Oz for a comprehensive mechanical makeover legitimizing BMW Australia’s efforts in the Australian Super Production series. Each of the 15 cars received stiffer springs and shocks, AP Racing brakes and a 319 hp (324 PS) Schnitzer-modded S50 B30 motor mated to a heavy-duty 850Ci driveshaft and AP Racing clutch.

Credit: Dutton Garage

1995 E36 M3 Lightweight – 115 produced

America was sold a bit of a dummy when the E36 M3 first appeared. Instead of the 282 hp (286 PS) S50 B30 with its six throttle bodies that the rest of the world got, the U.S. cars were stuck with a 240 hp (243 PS) S50 fed through a single throttle body. 

But BMW North America did instigate the production of the rather special M3 Lightweight, which retained that anaemic six but made it feel much stouter by cleaving 225 lbs (102 kg) from the curb weight, fitting a short final drive, and applying chequered flag graphics to the Alpine White III paint (worth 20 hp alone). And for those who wanted to go further, dealers were primed to supply suspension and brake upgrades, plus a special oil pan for high-g cornering.

1994 E36 M3 GTR – 2 produced

The craziest of all road-going E36 M3’s though, is the GTR. Only two street cars were built to homologate the car for the 1994 ADAC German GT Cup Touring Car series, and with a totally stripped (but caged) interior, lightweight body panels stretched to accommodate 18-in track rubber and a 297 hp (300 PS) S50, even a trip to the store must have felt like the warm-up lap on the Nürburgring 24 Hours.

2003 E46 M3 CSL – 1,383 produced

BMW hadn’t used the Coupe Sport Lightweight name on a road car in almost 30 years when it applied it to a hardcore version of the critically acclaimed E46 M3 in 2003. The S54 3.2-liter six’s output was lifted from 338 hp (343 PS) to 355 hp (360 PS) and came only with the six-speed SMG paddle-shift transmission, and the lower, stiffer chassis featured wider front wheels, grippy Michelin Pilot Sport Cup tires, and a faster steering rack.

The CSL also gave us an M Track stability mode activated by a button on the Alcantara wheel that allowed more slip without completely removing the safety net. There were also subtle styling tweaks, including a carbon roof panel and composite front and rear bumpers and sculpted trunk lid, and the interior featured one-piece front buckets, special slimmed-down rear seats and minimalist door panels.

2005 E46 M3 CS – 3,011 produced

Related: New BMW 3.0 CSL Is A Re-Bodied M4 With 553 HP And A Manual Gearbox

Don’t remember the E46 CS? That’s probably because only BMW Great Britain used that name for what BMW internally referred to by the code ‘ZCP.’ Everywhere else, including in the U.S., the same confection was known as the Competition Package, and was designed to give the regular M3 a light dusting of CSL through the use of two-piece, cross-drilled brake discs, a quicker steering rack, CSL-style wheels and the CSL’s M Track stability mode. Not changed was the stock M3’s S54 3.2, which came mated to the same choice of manual or SMG transmission and was rated at 333 hp (337 PS) in the U.S. BMW would revisit the Competition Package idea in 2010 on the E92 M3.

Credit: Matt Woods/Collecting Cars

2002 E46 M3 GTR – 3 produced

 How Does The 2024 BMW M3 CS Rank Against The Greatest Limited Edition M3s?


Like the original E9 CSL coupe of the 1970s, but unlike the 2003 M3 CSL or the 2022 M4 CSL, which are simply tasty marketing exercises, the E46 M3 GTR was a proper homologation special. Only three cars are believed to have been built to allow BMW to race a radically different M3 in the American Le Mans Series. How radical? Try an M3 powered not by the S54 inline six fitted to the regular M3 road cars, but a 4.0-liter V8 that produced 375 hp (380 PS).

2011 E90 M3 GTS – 138 produced

The M3 GTS wasn’t a homologation special, but it did a solid job of tricking a few people into thinking it was. It featured proper coil-over suspension, upgraded brakes, thinner glass, polycarbonate rear- and rear side windows, two buckets in the front and no back seats to help chop 154 lbs (70 kg) of flab. But the best bit was under the hood.

The E90 M3 road car had taken its lead from the old M3 GTR and stepped up to a 4.0-liter V8 for its 2008 debut, but the GTS got a 4.4-liter version of the same S65. Power swelled from 416 hp (420 PS) to 444 hp (450 PS) and was channeled to the road through BMW’s seven-speed M-DCT dual-clutch transmission.

2012 E92 M3 CRT – 67 produced

The 2012 M3 CRT is to the 2011 M3 GTS what today’s M3 CS is to last year’s M4 CSL. Not that BMW made it hugely obvious to anyone passing by a CRT on the street. This thing was seriously stealthy. While the GTS came only in bright orange, the CRTs were all painted Frozen Polar Silver with just a smattering of red details to draw your attention.

That name stood for Carbon Racing Technology, by the way, and highlighted BMW’s use of composite materials. The CRT’s hood, front seats and spoilers were all fashioned from carbon left over from the production of the i3 and i8 passenger cells. The 4.4-liter S65 V8 was carried over from the GTS coupe, but the sensible glass and fairly luxurious specification made clear this was made to be a more useable machine, much like the new all-wheel drive M3 CS.

2016 F80 M3 Competition Package – 14,969 produced

BMW had offered its first four-door M3 back in 1995, but 20 years later the M3 became a sedan-only model as BMW created a new M4 badge for coupes and convertibles using the same turbo’d six-cylinder drivetrain. They all made 425 hp (431 PS), but 2016’s optional Competition Package for both the M3 and M4 (pictured here) bumped that to 444 hp (450 PS). It was so successful that 14,969 people chose to tick the box, while only 10,851 decided to take the M3 in base form.

2018 F80 M3 CS – 1,263 produced

The Competition Package was a hit, but for a small number of BMW fans who wanted even more, BMW created an even tougher global CS model in 2018. Weight was down by around 22 lbs (10 kg) thanks to a carbon hood, there was a carbon splitter and rear lip spoiler, and the suspension was retuned to suit the track-ready Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 tires. And let’s not forget the extra punch: there was no E90 M3 CRT-style capacity increase for the CS, but it did get a power hike from 444 hp to 454 hp (460 PS), and torque increased from 406 to 443 lb-ft (550-600 Nm).

2023 G80 M3 CS 

Related: BMW M EV Prototype Blends i4 And M4 Looks With A Quad Motor Setup

The CS returns for 2023, but with one very specific skill it didn’t have in 2018, and we’re not talking about that fancy new curved iDrive dashboard screen. For the first time the CS comes only with an all-wheel drive transmission, though this being BMW M’s clever xDrive system, you can switch it to rear-wheel drive mode when you want to play hooligan. The M4 CSL coupe, by way of contrast, is rear-wheel drive, and so substantially lighter (by 275 lbs / 125 kg), but both cars get the same 543 hp (550 PS) inline six and the CS’s all-wheel drive bite hauls it to 62 mph in 3.2 seconds, or 0.6 seconds faster than the CSL coupe.

Looking at this family tree we can see that the latest CS is the most powerful M3 yet, and the first to deliver all-wheel drive traction which might make it the best all-rounder of the lot. But it’s definitely not the craziest or the most driver-focused. Which would you park at the front of your garage and which would you bury at the back?

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Florida police chief issues warning to criminals after homeowner shoots burglars: 'Most people are armed'

A Florida police chief issued a warning to criminals in the state after saving a burglar who was shot by a homeowner.

“One should expect that if you are brazen enough to enter into someone’s residence and it is not yours, with intent to commit an unlawful act, there may be repercussions,” Haines City Police Chief Gregory Goreck said in a Friday press conference.

“We live in Florida, and more so, we live in Polk County, and most people are armed,” he said.

Goreck was responding to an incident on Friday where a Florida man with a concealed weapon permit arrived home and found two intruders burglarizing his residence.

FLORIDA MAN WHO ALLEGEDLY BEAT SHARK ON BEACH SHOULD BE CHARGED, ACCORDING TO WILDLIFE COMMISSION

Haines City Police Chief Gregory Goreck speaks at press conference

Haines City Police Chief Gregory Goreck speaks at press conference
(Haines City Police Department)

The homeowner fired his gun and struck one of the suspects before they both fled the scene.

Officers from the Haines City Police Department were able to catch up with the injured suspect at a nearby park using a canine police officer.

ARMED FLORIDA GOOD SAMARITANS DETAIN MAN WHO ALLEGEDLY ASSAULTED, SHOT AT 2 WOMEN

Tyriek Tramaine Washington has been charged with burglary

Tyriek Tramaine Washington has been charged with burglary
(Polk County Jail via WTVT-TV)

“Immediately at that point the officers, even though this was a felon who had been illegally inside someone’s house, immediately changed focus and changed gears and went from a search and locate and apprehend to saving this individual’s life,” Goreck explained.

The injured suspect was identified as 27-year-old Tyriek Tramaine Washington and he was hospitalized with multiple gunshots wounds that are not believed to be life-threatening. 

Washington has been charged with burglary and is being held at the Polk County Jail.

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Haines City Police Department building

Haines City Police Department building
(Google Earth)

Authorities are still investigating the incident and attempting to locate the second suspect.

Police say the homeowner fully complied with police and answered all questions before officers determined he had legally defended his home.

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The names and places that define America's week of 'tragedy upon tragedy'



CNN
 — 

Tyre Nichols. Monterey Park. Half Moon Bay.

Three new entries in America’s roster of tragedy burst from obscurity to their haunting moment in the media spotlight and exemplified societal undercurrents of violence, injustice and grief.

A week that began with the nation reeling from more mass shootings ended with the release of a video capturing the beating of yet another Black man pulled over for a police traffic stop who ended up dead.

Nichols, a 29-year-old from Memphis, became the latest victim suddenly introduced to millions of Americans after his death. A grand jury Thursday returned murder indictments against five since-fired police officers involved in his arrest. With tensions rising in Tennessee and further afield, the city of Memphis released body camera and surveillance video of the arrest on Friday evening. The footage drew stunned reaction from law enforcement experts and outrage from officials, including President Joe Biden.

In California, meanwhile, grieving families are processing the horror that suddenly pitches a town or city into the public eye and epitomizes an epidemic of lone gunmen unleashing massacres in everyday places where people trusted they were safe.

At a dance studio on Saturday night in Monterey Park, 11 people between the ages of 57 and 76 were killed celebrating Lunar New Year. Unbelievably, on Monday, it happened again. Seven innocent people died in a mass shooting that unfolded at a mushroom farm and near a trucking facility. The community’s sense of peace was “destroyed by senseless death,” California Assemblymember Marc Berman said.

Aside from the brutal, sudden arrival of needless death, this week’s shootings and the aftermath of the loss of another young man are not linked. But there is a sense that the rituals of anger and mourning after such horrors are familiar. A fresh batch of relatives is thrust into the gauntlet of interviews and news conferences as well as the political melees often stirred by tragic incidents. They are like new characters reciting the same lines of anger and disbelief in an endless cycle of loss.

The trauma afflicting California and Memphis this week also touches on areas in which a polarized political system has failed, repeatedly, to make progress to stop such tragedies from happening. The rituals after mass shootings – of politicians expressing condolences, liberals demanding gun reform and conservatives deflecting blame from lax firearms laws – lead almost always to not much being done.

A similarly politicized debate over police reform delivers futility after almost every incident of apparent brutality. After a spate of deaths of young Black men at police hands, a bipartisan attempt to address officer conduct foundered in 2021 and has little chance of a revival in now-divided Washington. Caricatured arguments over whether Democrats want to “defund” the police – many do not – and the amped-up politics around guns effectively paralyze any hope of change.

The tragedy of Tyre Nichols is deepened by its familiarity. He was taken to the hospital after his arrest on January 7 and died three days later from injuries sustained when he was taken into custody. After his family and attorneys met with police and viewed videos of his arrest, momentum steadily built for accountability as the story generated local and then national headlines. It all led up to Thursday’s indictments.

The face of Nichols is now smiling out from a photo on every television station or news website. His name has joined those of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Daunte Wright and countless others who in death rose to prominence and became examples of America’s struggles against police brutality. Others like Ahmaud Arbery and Trayvon Martin, more broadly, have become casualties of societal and individual racism.

It’s important that these names are remembered – given both the individuals they were and the unresolved national pain they represent. Prominent civil rights and wrongful death attorneys Ben Crump and Antonio Romanucci made this point in a statement issued on behalf of the Nichols family on Thursday.

“This young man lost his life in a particularly disgusting manner that points to the desperate need for change and reform to ensure this violence stops occurring during low-threat procedures, like in this case, a traffic stop,” they wrote.

“This tragedy meets the absolute definition of a needless and unnecessary death. Tyre’s loved ones’ lives were forever changed when he was beaten to death, and we will keep saying his name until justice is served.”

Yet it’s haunting that millions of Americans who never met Nichols only now know him in death. It’s a dehumanizing trend that victims become metaphors for a social blight or political failures and their lifetimes are fitted into established narratives when they can no longer write their own stories. That’s why an anecdote about Nichols – like how he loved to rush out in the evenings to take snapshots of sunsets – is so important to restoring a piece of his humanity.

The release of the video on Friday, which had officials from Biden on downwards warning against a violent reaction, offered new insight into Nichols’ death. As will the prosecution of the five former officers. A trial will also likely feature context about a challenging public order and crime situation in Memphis, intensive police tactics and how conditions set off a chain of events where a routine traffic stop could end so awfully.

Unlike many recent incidents where young Black men have been disproportionately impacted in encounters with White police officers, the case in Memphis involved five Black officers.

But CNN political analyst Bakari Sellers said that the incident nevertheless underscored a criminal justice system that was failing.

“For many of us, we haven’t been critical necessarily of the race of the officer whether or not they are White, Black, Hispanic or otherwise, but it’s the system. And what you are seeing over and over, again and again, is a system that perpetuates violence against people of color,” Sellers said on CNN’s “The Situation Room.”

Each of the five police officers has been charged with second-degree murder, aggravated assault, two charges of aggravated kidnapping, two charges of official misconduct and one charge of official oppression. While each played a different role in the incident, Shelby County District Attorney Steve Mulroy said, “The actions of all of them resulted in the death of Tyre Nichols, and they are all responsible.”

But lawyers for two of the men cautioned that the full facts of the case are yet to emerge. “No one out there that night intended for Tyre Nichols to die,” said William Massey, who is representing Emmitt Martin, one of the former officers. “Justice means following the law and the law says that no one is guilty until a jury says they’re guilty.”

Monterey Park and Half Moon Bay in California now join the roll call of cities whose notoriety is burned into America’s consciousness by mass shootings, including Columbine, Newtown, Uvalde, Parkland, San Bernardino and others too numerous to count.

Everyone who died represents a crushing individual tragedy, a family severed and future memories obliterated by an assailant armed with a gun.

Valentino Marcos Alvero, 68, hoped to retire in a year and return home to the Philippines, but in the meantime loved to “dance around the house,” his son Val Anthony Alvero said. Mymy Nhan, 65, also loved to dance and for years went to the studio in Monterey Park where she died, a family statement said.

While the mass shootings left a pall of fear and loss over the Golden State, there was one ray of light epitomized by 26-year-old Brandon Tsay, who wrestled with the Monterey Bay shooter in another dance studio in Alhambra, eventually disarming him and potentially averting even greater carnage. Biden called Tsay on Thursday to thank him for “taking such incredible action in the face of danger.”

“I don’t think you understand just how much you’ve done for so many people who are never going to even know you,” the president told a modest Tsay, according to a transcript.

“You are America, pal. You are who we are. … America’s never backed down, we’ve always stepped up, because of people like you.”

Overall, though, it was a harrowing week in which the grief never seemed to stop, best summed up in a tweet by California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom.

“Tragedy upon tragedy.”

This story has been updated with additional developments.

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JCPenney partners with shelters to help senior dogs like Kofi of Texas find a home

JCPenney is partnering with local shelters around the country to help adoptable senior dogs find their forever homes. 

The large retailer is taking its well-known JCPenney-style portraits of the dogs — so that interested adopters can step forward to help animals in need. 

Kofi is a spaniel mix at the Dallas Pets Alive organization in Dallas, Texas — and he desperately needs a home.

AFTER 14 FAILED ADOPTIONS, NORTH CAROLINA PUP WITH ‘UNLUCKY’ HISTORY GOES VIRAL, FINALLY FINDS A HOME

Kofi is looking for a forever home where he could spend the last chapter of his life. 

He is well-behaved and considered docile — fully content with just sitting quieting next to his new owner, according to the organization.

Kofi is a senior spaniel mix who weighs about 35 pounds. He needs a forever home.

Kofi is a senior spaniel mix who weighs about 35 pounds. He needs a forever home.
(JCPenney Portraits by Lifetouch)

Kofi has a black-and-gold coloring and his fur is said to be silky soft — making him an easy dog to keep petting. 

He weighs roughly 35 pounds and enjoys going on walks, Fox News Digital is told.

“We’re excited to give the senior dogs in these shelters their chance to shine.”

He also gets along well with others — so having other pets or children in the house could be good for him. 

VAN GOGH, A ONE-EARED DOG IN DESPERATE NEED OF A NEW HOME, ‘PAINTS’ HIS WAY TO ADOPTION

Kofi is spayed, neutered, microchipped and up-to-date on all vaccines. 

JCPenney is partnering with local shelters around the country to help adoptable senior dogs find their forever homes. 

JCPenney is partnering with local shelters around the country to help adoptable senior dogs find their forever homes. 
(JCPenney Portraits by Lifetouch)

He is just one of the many dogs featured in JCPenney’s new campaign about shelter dogs and JCPenney Portraits by Lifetouch. 

Bill Cunningham, JCPenney’s vice president of marketing strategy, said the occasion is special for many reasons. 

WHITE SHEPHERD DOG IN HAMPTONS LOOKING FOR HER FOREVER HOME: ‘GIVE HER A CHANCE’

“We’re excited to give the senior dogs in these shelters, who are often less likely to be adopted, their chance to shine and encourage customers to get involved with their local communities to change a pet’s life for the better,” Cunningham said in a media statement. 

Kofi is located at Dallas Pets Alive, an organization in Dallas, Texas. 

Kofi is located at Dallas Pets Alive, an organization in Dallas, Texas. 
(JCPenney Portraits by Lifetouch)

The partnership runs from Jan. 24 through Feb. 28. 

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER

Those interested can visit JCP.com to see new adoptable pets … and some adorable portraits. 

JCPenney is partnering with local shelters across the country to try to help senior adoptable dogs find homes. 

JCPenney is partnering with local shelters across the country to try to help senior adoptable dogs find homes. 
(JCPenney Portraits by Lifetouch)

JCPenney will also be donating $1,000 to each of the 10 shelters it’s partnered with to help animals find homes.

The shelters are located in 10 different cities around the country: Atlanta, Austin, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Louisville, Miami, Orlando, Philadelphia and Phoenix. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

For more information on Kofi, anyone interested can visit dallaspetsalive.org or email [email protected].

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A brutal beating. Cries for his mom. 23-minute delay in aid. Here are the key takeaways from the Tyre Nichols police videos

Editor’s Note: This article contains graphic videos and descriptions of violence.



CNN
 — 

The newly released videos of Tyre Nichols’ police beating captured the brutality that his family and authorities had already foreshadowed: He was punched and kicked while being restrained. He pleaded to go home and repeatedly yelled for his mom.

And after the beating, while Nichols lay slumped and motionless against a car, officers walking around on scene ignored the 29-year-old Black man.

The videos consist of three shorter body camera clips and one roughly 31-minute video taken from a utility pole camera, which appears to capture most of the violence that unfolded just steps from Nichols’ home in Memphis.

The videos show portions of both the initial traffic stop on the night of January 7 and a second altercation just minutes later, after Nichols fled the first location on foot. Nichols required hospitalization after the encounter and died on January 10.

“What you’re seeing is a fairly significant number of officers who are failing at arrest and control tactics and making up for it with brutality,” said CNN Chief Law Enforcement and Intelligence Analyst John Miller.

Law enforcement analysts who viewed the clips were troubled by a range of actions – and inactions – during the encounter, from the beating by a group of officers to the length of time it took for someone to render aid to a motionless Nichols.

The videos leave many questions unanswered, including the reason for the stop, which the officers do not explain in the clips. Memphis police initially said Nichols was pulled over for suspected reckless driving, but police chief Cerelyn “CJ” Davis told CNN on Friday authorities have not been able to “substantiate that” claim.

The clips also do not answer why authorities used such force on Nichols, who did not appear to fight back, and why they felt compelled to confront him twice.

But the videos do shed light on just how violent the fatal confrontation was. Here are some key revelations:

Videos from the encounters capture multiple officers threatening Nichols with violence while he appears to comply with their commands or is already on the ground.

A body camera video that captures the initial encounter between Nichols and police shows the officer getting out of his car with his gun drawn and captures an officer yelling for Nichols to “Get the fuck out of the car.”

Nichols is heard saying, “I didn’t do anything,” and later, as he gets on the ground, “All right, I’m on the ground.”

An officer yells at him, “Bitch, put your hands behind your back before I… I’m going to knock your ass the fuck out.”

Nichols says, “I’m just trying to go home.”

While officers yell commands, Nichols repeatedly responds that he is on the ground and is heard saying he didn’t do anything, before running away as an officer deploys his Taser.

At the second encounter, where the beating occurs, a body camera captures an officer yelling at Nichols, “I’m going to baton the fuck out of you,” while Nichols is on the ground and not fighting back. An officer is also heard asking “Do you want to be sprayed again,” while Nichols is on the ground and yelling for his mom.

In this still from video released by the city, officers attempt to detain Tyre Nichols during a traffic stop.

The video taken from a remotely controlled camera on a neighborhood utility pole shows Memphis officers continuously hitting Nichols at least nine times, without visible provocation.

“The pole cam video is the one that really justifies the charges,” said former Philadelphia police commissioner Charles Ramsey, a CNN law enforcement analyst. “Nobody trains for that. These guys are acting so far outside of bounds that … you really can’t explain it. … One officer kicked him so hard and so much that he’s limping around.”

In the pole video, an officer is seen shoving Nichols on the pavement with what appears to be his leg or knee. Nichols is then pulled up by his shoulders and kicked in the face twice, then later is hit in the back with what appears to be a nightstick. Seconds later, he’s hit again.

Once he’s pulled to his feet, officers are seen hitting Nichols in the face multiple times while other officers are restraining his hands behind his body.

Nichols is seen falling to his knees – and less than a minute later, an officer appears to kick him.

In this still from video, officers beat Tyre Nichols on a street corner.

When officers let go of Nichols, he rolls on his back and is then dragged along the pavement and propped up in a sitting position against the side of a car, where he remains largely ignored by the officers on scene.

According to one of the body camera videos released, while Nichols is slumped next to the car unattended, officers appear to say at least two officers pepper sprayed him and another tased Nichols.

“No one is doing anything to help him. It goes back to the failure to act, the failure to care and the overall obliviousness of the officers that are just standing around,” said former New York police Lt. Darrin Porcher.

Paramedics appear to show up on scene about 10 minutes into the video.

Roughly 23 minutes pass from the time Nichols appeared to be subdued after the beating before a stretcher arrives on scene.

“It’s horrific to watch,” said CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta. “There’s all sorts of different injuries he may have suffered. So many of the injuries to the head, you saw kicks to the head, you saw these blows to the head, punches to the head, that’s obviously very concerning.”

What could happen in situations like that, Gupta added, is that the brain could begin to swell and there could be internal bleeding.

“That’s why this timing is so critical because if the brain is swelling – he still seemed like he was talking at some point but he was obviously getting worse – the brain starts to swell when you’re not getting enough oxygenated blood to the brain anymore and that’s what causes the big problem and what can lead to death.”

“He’s just laying there, obviously in critical condition at this point.”

And paramedics aren’t particularly equipped to help someone with those kinds of internal injuries, said Dr. Kendall Von Crowns, chief medical examiner in Tarrant County, Texas. The focus should have been on getting Nichols to the hospital for emergency surgery or a transfusion as soon as possible.

“We’re talking minutes,” he said. “He really needs to be treated right away.”

In this still from video released by the City of Memphis, Tyre Nichols lies on the ground after being beaten by Memphis Police officers.

Besides the excessive violence, what troubled Porcher was that “no officer was willing to intervene and say stop,” he told CNN on Friday night.

“There’s a point where you have to intercede and say either ‘Stop’ or physically step between the officer that’s assaulting the person and that actual individual. And that didn’t happen,” Porcher said.

According to Memphis Police Department policies, officers have a duty to intervene.

“Any member who directly observes another member engaged in dangerous or criminal conduct or abuse of a subject shall take reasonable action to intervene,” according to a policy page of the department.

In this still from video, officers appear to spray Tyre Nichols with pepper spray.

Five Memphis officers, who are also Black, were fired earlier this month for violating police policies and were each charged with second-degree murder, among other charges.

Two fire department employees who were part of Nichols’ “initial patient care” were relieved of duty “while an internal investigation is being conducted,” department public information officer Qwanesha Ward told CNN’s Nadia Romero.

After the video release, Shelby County Sheriff Floyd Bonner Jr. said he launched an internal investigation into the conduct of two deputies “who appeared on the scene following the physical confrontation.” Both deputies “have been relieved of duty” pending the investigation’s outcome, the sheriff said.


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