LA officers fatally shoot man armed with foot-long sharp object

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Los Angeles police officers shot and killed a man who approached them with a sharp object, officials said.

The officers responded Tuesday in South LA and encountered the man clutching a metal object about a foot long, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

“After telling the suspect to drop the metal object several times, he did not and approached the officers, at which time an officer involved shooting occurred,” the department said in a statement.

IDAHO MURDER SUSPECT: WHO IS BRYAN CHRISTOPHER KOHBERGER

The unidentified man was struck by gunfire and taken to a hospital, where he later died, the statement said.

No officers were hurt.

The shooting is under investigation.

 

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Wells Fargo upgrades these clean energy names, says climate bill benefits have yet to materialize

US Top News and Analysis 

Wells Fargo is getting more bullish on shares of First Solar , Sunnova Energy and Sunrun , expecting margins to improve as supply chains ease and raw material costs decline. Analyst Michael Blum upgraded all three clean energy stocks to overweight in a note to clients Friday, citing tailwinds from growing demand for solar amid Europe’s energy crisis and recently passed Inflation Reduction Act in the U.S. “While continued Fed tightening in early 2023 will likely act as a near-term headwind, the fundamental and regulatory backdrop is much improved in 2023 and beyond,” he wrote. “With most regulatory overhangs in the rearview mirror, strong underlying demand (especially in Europe), and legislative support from IRA, we turn more bullish.” Shares of all three stocks gained more than 1% before the bell. An easing of regulatory headwinds, and improving margins and supply chains should also benefit these stocks in the months — and years — ahead, Blum said. Benefits from the legislation have also yet to materialize in stock prices, he added. Shares of First Solar posted a solid run in 2022, surging nearly 72% and benefitting from a shift toward alternative energy amid nonstop oil market volatility. Many have also come to view the solar stock as a major beneficiary of tax credits from the government’s climate bill. “While the low-hanging fruit tied to IRA is likely discounted in the stock at this point, the potential for continued capacity expansions over the coming years could drive further upside,” Blum wrote, while upping his price target on shares to $188, reflecting 29% upside from Thursday’s close. Blum expects Sunnova and Sunrun, meanwhile, to benefit from their power purchase agreement models poised to gain in the next year. “Various adders (e.g. low-income projects, domestic content, and energy community) are only available to solar financing deals structured as lease/PPAs,” Blum said. This should allow both companies to capture more tax credits and beat out smaller residential solar providers. Blum raised his price target on Sunrun to $32 a share, while trimming expectations for Sunnova to $24. That implies a 44% and 40% upside from Thursday’s close for each stock. — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed reporting

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Damar Hamlin has made 'substantial improvement' following in-game cardiac arrest, medical team says, but his road to recovery could be long



CNN
 — 

Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin has made “substantial improvement” in the hospital following his mid-game cardiac arrest on Monday, doctors said, and is now awake and moving his hands and feet.

Hamlin is able to communicate by shaking his head, nodding or writing brief notes, said Dr. Timothy Pritts, part of the player’s medical team. Upon awakening, Pritts said, Hamlin’s mind was still on the game as he scribbled his first question on a clipboard: “Did we win?”

“So, we know that it’s not only that the lights are on, we know that he’s home. And that it appears all cylinders are firing within his brain,” said Pritts, who is vice chair for clinical operations at University of Cincinnati Health where Hamlin is being treated.

Yet the medical team cautioned that many phases of Hamlin’s recovery lie ahead. Hamlin – who had to be sedated and intubated following his collapse – is still critically ill and remains on a ventilator, Pritts said. Physicians did not say precisely when he started waking up.

The 24-year-old player collapsed Monday during the first quarter of the Bills game against the Cincinnati Bengals and was rushed from the field in an ambulance, stunning a packed stadium and leaving his teammates visibly emotional, crying and embracing one another.

The NFL announced Thursday that the game – which was initially postponed Monday night – has been canceled. The league is working on plans to honor Hamlin ahead of every matchup scheduled for this upcoming weekend, two people familiar with the matter told CNN’s Oliver Darcy.

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell informed all clubs of his decision Thursday after contacting the Bills, Bengals and NFL Players Association leadership, according to a release from the league.

“This has been a very difficult week,” Goodell said. “We continue to focus on the recovery of Damar Hamlin and are encouraged by the improvements in his condition as well as the tremendous outpouring of support and care for Damar and his family from across the country. We are also incredibly appreciative of the amazing work of the medical personnel and commend each and every one of them.”

Here are the latest developments:

• Hamlin has made “a fairly remarkable recovery,” medical team says: Though Hamlin remains in intensive care, he is demonstrating “good neurologic recovery” and is awake and holding hands with family in the hospital, Pritts said Thursday.

• Tests to determine cause are ongoing: “This marks a really good turning point in his ongoing care,” Pritts said, but “there are many, many steps still ahead of him.” Hamlin’s next big milestone will be breathing on his own without a ventilator, said Dr. William Knight, director of emergency medicine. Tests are still underway to determine the cause of his cardiac arrest, Knight said.

Hamlin lost pulse on the field: While surrounded by medical teams on the field, Hamlin lost his pulse and had to be administered CPR and defibrillation as fans and teammates looked on, Knight said. He was then intubated in the ambulance and arrived at the hospital about 30 to 45 minutes after he collapsed, the doctor added.

Bills are back to work: The team met Wednesday and held their first full practice of the week Thursday in preparation for hosting the New England Patriots on Sunday. The team has been receiving “incremental updates” from medical staff as well as from Bills general manager Brandon Beane and head athletic trainer Nate Breske who stayed behind in Cincinnati, head coach Sean McDermott said. “I think the fact that we just keep hearing good news about Damar, it just keeps pushing us forward,” quarterback Josh Allen told reporters Thursday.

“People are going to be changed forever”: Allen said the players have had “some very open and honest and deep talks” since their teammate was hospitalized Monday. “I think putting that helmet back on was a really good thing for our team,” he said of returning to practice, adding, “But I would be lying to you if I didn’t say, some people are going to be changed forever after being on the field and witnessing that and feeling those emotions.”

News of Hamlin awakening was met with a rush of messages of support and relief from players across the NFL. Since his collapse, supporters have honored the player, donating more than $7 million to his charity fundraiser and making his jersey the most purchased athletes’ jersey at the sports apparel store Fanatics, a company spokesperson said.

Hamlin’s family and Allen have also dismissed online criticisms of Cincinnati Bengals receiver Tee Higgins, who had collided with Hamlin just moments before his collapse. The family’s spokesperson has said Higgins has reached out and “has been supportive.”

“I hope that he got some relief today,” Allen said of Higgins while speaking to reporters Thursday. He added, “That’s a football play, and I hope that he doesn’t hold that upon himself, because there is nothing else that he could have done in that situation.”

Doctors and Bills team members have repeatedly applauded the immediate action of medical personnel who rushed to Hamlin just seconds after his collapse.

Bills offensive lineman Dion Dawkins tweeted Thursday that assistant athletic trainer Denny Kellington performed CPR on Hamlin as he lay on the field. Coach McDermott also praised the trainer Thursday, saying he saved Hamlin’s life.

“As they say, practice pays off and it did in this case,” McDermott said at a post-practice news conference devoted to Hamlin. “But again, the context of it, for an assistant to find himself at that position and needing to take the action that he did and step up and take charge like he did – and there were others on the field as well – is nothing short of amazing and (the) courage that took, you talk about a real leader, a real hero, in saving Damar’s life.”

In audio obtained by CNN of medical personnel that were working on the sidelines when Hamlin collapsed, personnel can be heard calling for all hands to assist, saying, “I don’t like how he went down” and “We’re going to need everybody.”

NFL chief medical officer Dr. Allen Sills attributed the rapid medical response to a “60-minute meeting” that is held among medical teams and NFL officials before every game to identify the location of medical equipment and nearby medical centers, and establish a chain of command in case of an emergency, among other things.

In its announcement of the official cancellation of the Bills-Bengals game that was suspended after Hamlin’s collapse, the NFL detailed parts of its decision-making, including that the outcome of the game would have no impact on teams qualifying for the playoffs.

The Bills and Bengals have already clinched playoff spots but are jockeying for higher seeds in the American Football Conference postseason.

Deciding to play the game would also have forced the league to postpone the start of the playoffs by one week, the NFL release explained, a move that would affect all 14 clubs that qualify.

Lastly, the league said making the decision before Week 18 still allows all clubs to know the playoff possibilities before their final game of the regular season.

source

Explainer: How the House of Representatives Elects a Speaker

USA – Voice of America 

Here’s what you need to know about how the House elects a speaker:

No House without a speaker

Choosing a speaker will be the first vote the House will take before new and returning lawmakers are even sworn into office on Tuesday. As set out under the Constitution, the session will begin at noon on Jan. 3, with all the lawmakers seated on the House floor and members from both parties joining in the vote for speaker.

The chamber cannot organize until it has a speaker since that person effectively serves as the House’s presiding officer and the institution’s administrative head. The House can elect a new speaker at any time if the person occupying that role dies, resigns or is removed from office. Barring that, a speaker is normally elected at the start of a new Congress.

Lawmakers call out the name of their choice for speaker from the floor, a rare and time-consuming roll call that heightens the drama on the floor. Members often liven up the proceedings by shouting or standing when casting their vote.

Who can be nominated?

In the weeks after an election, the Republican conference and the Democratic caucus hold an informal vote among their members to decide who they want to nominate to lead their party in January. Rep. Kevin McCarthy won the majority of the Republican vote in a closed-door November meeting. Weeks later, Democrats unanimously chose Rep. Hakeem Jeffries to become their leader as the party transitions into the minority.

But members are not obligated to vote for the party’s chosen candidate. While it has been the tradition for the speaker candidate to be a member of the House, it is not required. In past years, President Joe Biden, former President Donald Trump and even a senator, Republican Rand Paul of Kentucky, have received votes for House speaker.

To be sure, none of them received the majority of the vote.

Let the voting begin

Once the House is in a quorum — meaning the minimum number of members are present to proceed — the speaker nominee from each party will be read aloud by the respective leaders before a roll call vote to elect a new speaker. The clerk then appoints lawmakers from each party as tellers to tally the votes.

The candidate to become speaker needs a majority of the votes from House members who are present and voting.

Historically, the magical number has been 218 out of the 435 members of the House. But many previous speakers, including outgoing Speaker Nancy Pelosi, have ascended to the dais with fewer votes than that, as some members voted present instead of calling out a name. Every lawmaker voting “present” lowers the overall tally needed to reach a majority.

Passing of the gavel

Once a speaker candidate won a majority of the vote, the clerk will announce the results of the election.

A bipartisan committee, usually consisting of members from the home state of the chosen candidate, will then escort the speaker-elect to the chair on the dais where the oath of office is administered. The oath is identical to the one new members will take once a speaker is chosen.

The outgoing speaker will usually join the successor at the speaker’s chair, where they will pass the gavel as a nod to the peaceful transition of power from one party leader to another. This time around, that will be Pelosi, the California Democrat who held the gavel for the last four years.

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Elon Musk reacts to woke Harry Potter-themed story: ‘Twitter has at least 10 million Wokeys’

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Elon Musk responded to an AI-generated Harry Potter story about “Wokey the house elf,” joking that Twitter has its fair share of woke users. 

Mosaic web browser co-author Marc Andreessen fed ChatGPT — a popular new artificial intelligence service — a prompt to write a “Broadway stage play” set in the Harry Potter universe. 

The cast included the wizard Harry and his friends Ron and Hermione. But the fourth character, “Wokey the house elf,” attracted the most attention on Twitter. 

“Wokey” was a seeming play on “Dobby,” a house elf from the book and movie phenomenon “Harry Potter” who likewise befriends Harry and his companions, Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley. 

ELON MUSK TWEETS SUPPORT FOR KEVIN MCCARTHY, AS SPEAKER VOTE HEADS INTO THIRD DAY

Wokey interrupted a conversation between the three friends to lecture them on social justice issues. “When you say ‘up all night,’ Harry, that phrase is ableist,” Wokey said. 

“It suggests that people who don’t stay up late are not as productive or capable, which is simply not true.” 

Musk joked in return that “Twitter has at least 10 million Wokeys.”

Crypto currency influencer and Final Stand founder Matt Wallace told Musk that he wished more woke Twitter users left the platform. “Too bad the Wokeys did not follow through on their threats to leave Twitter if Elon Musk took over,” Wallace wrote. 

But political commentator Ian Miles Cheong concluded that Musk’s takeover of Twitter actually motivated a number of Twitter “Wokeys” to exit the platform. “You’ve been edgy enough to get them to peace out.” 

TWITTER FILES: REP. ADAM SCHIFF’S OFFICE REQUESTED TECH GIANT TO SUSPEND ACCOUNTS

A number of other Twitter users praised ChatGPT for creating an entertaining script. 

“I’m dying,” VR startup founder and Forbes’ 30 Under 30 list member William Mason wrote. 

BARSTOOL’S DAVE PORTNOY WARNS THE LEFT IS ‘FAR MORE SAVVY’ ABOUT CENSORING POLITICAL OPPONENTS ON SOCIAL MEDIA

Actor Jim Carrey, a vocal opponent of former President Donald Trump and much of the Republican Party, announced to his over 18 million followers in November that his days on Twitter were numbered. 

“The View” co-host Whoopi Goldberg also told her fans that she was “done with Twitter” early that same month, seemingly deactivating her account. 

Andreessen, who boasts over 1.1 million followers on Twitter, has posted multiple screenshots of his experiences with AI ChatGPT. 

Early in the morning, he posted a story of another Broadway stage play, this time about a Siri-like AI lecturing a man named John about “how he is sexist and racist.” 

“I feel like a freaking sorcerer,” Andreessen tweeted.

After he posted the Harry Potter-themed ChatGPT story, he declared: “I AM a sorcerer!”

 

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House Republicans Enter Day 4 of Negotiations on House Speaker

USA – Voice of America 

Congressional Republicans will try for a fourth day Friday to choose a new speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.

A band of 20 right-wing lawmakers has successfully blocked California Congressman Kevin McCarthy for three days from becoming speaker because they believe he is not beholden enough to the conservative cause.

The third day of balloting to pick a new leader of the 435-member lower chamber of Congress looked much like the first two days, with McCarthy, a 16-year lawmaker and the current House Republican leader, falling well short of the majority of 218 he needs to win the job.

A total of 201 Republicans supported him on the seventh and eighth rounds of voting, the same total he had on some of the earlier six ballots on Tuesday and Wednesday, even though he offered new concessions on rules governing House operations to the dissident group in a futile attempt to win them over. On the ninth, 10th and 11th rounds of voting, McCarthy garnered 200 votes because Republican Rep. Ken Buck was absent for a medical appointment.

After the 11th round, the House voted to adjourn until noon on Friday.

McCarthy has given no indication that he would drop out of the contest to lead the House, which would also, under a provision of the U.S. Constitution, make him second in the line of succession to the U.S. presidency.

Republicans hold a slim 222-212 margin over Democrats in the new session of the 118th Congress, with one current vacancy, meaning McCarthy can lose the support of no more than four Republicans and still be able to reach a majority of 218.

McCarthy has acceded to several of the right-wing lawmakers’ demands, including allowing a single member to call for a snap internal House election to vacate the speakership if they don’t approve of his legislative policies or the way he is overseeing the chamber.

He has also promised them key committee assignments and full House votes on some of their legislative priorities, such as imposing term limits on lawmakers and stronger border controls to curb undocumented migrants from entering the U.S. across the southwestern border with Mexico.

It has been 100 years since neither a Republican nor a Democrat won the House speakership on the first round of voting.

Electing a speaker in the House is the chamber’s first order of business as a new session of Congress opens. Without a speaker, the lawmakers, all newly elected or reelected in last November’s nationwide congressional elections, have not been sworn in.

As such, the new Republican majority cannot form House committees to begin to consider legislation, start promised investigations of the Democratic administration of President Joe Biden, or provide constituent services for voters in their congressional districts.

Three would-be leaders of House national security committees, Congressmen Michael McCaul on Foreign Affairs, Mike Rogers on Armed Services and Mike Turner on Intelligence, are all McCarthy supporters and suggested the delay in selecting a House speaker could endanger U.S. national security.

“We cannot let personal politics place the safety and security of the United States at risk,” the three lawmakers said in a statement.

The fourth vote on Wednesday trying to end the stalemate came hours after former President Donald Trump publicly called for McCarthy’s election as House speaker, a lawmaker he has described as “My Kevin.”

Trump warned the slim Republican majority to “not turn a great triumph into a giant & embarrassing defeat. It’s time to celebrate, you deserve it. Kevin McCarthy will do a good job, and maybe even a great job — just watch!”

But Trump’s new statement, following calls in recent days to some of the dissidents opposing McCarthy, had no effect, switching not a single vote to favor McCarthy.

Republican Representative Lauren Boebert, part of the anti-McCarthy bloc, said on the House floor Wednesday that Trump “needs to tell Kevin McCarthy that, ‘Sir, you do not have the votes, and it’s time to withdraw.'”

Biden said the Republican infighting in the House was “not my problem,” but added, “I just think it’s a little embarrassing that it’s taking so long … and the rest of the world is looking. They’re looking at, you know, we need to get our act together.”

Whether McCarthy will be able to persuade enough of the dissidents to eventually support him is unclear. The 20 dissidents on Wednesday voted for Congressman Byron Donalds, a Florida lawmaker starting his second term in Congress, and 19 of them also did the same in the seventh round of voting, with one vote going to Trump. On the eighth round, Donalds collected 17 votes, with other lawmakers getting three votes.

The 57-year-old McCarthy has sought for years to lead the House. Over the past several weeks, he has met repeatedly with his Republican foes to secure their support, to no avail.

Whoever the Republicans eventually elect will replace outgoing Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who remains a House member and cast her votes for Congressman Hakeem Jeffries, the new Democratic minority leader in the House. All 212 Democrats have voted for Jeffries on all 13 speakership ballots, but he has no chance of winning because no Republicans plan to vote for him to help him reach the 218 majority.

Democrats, who have been locked in a 50-50 split with Republicans in the Senate the past two years, gained an edge in the nationwide congressional elections nearly two months ago and will hold a 50-49 majority in the upper chamber, even after onetime Democratic Senator Kyrsten Sinema announced she is now an independent but would not change her voting philosophy. She usually has voted with the Democratic lawmakers and Biden.

New senators were sworn in on Tuesday.

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Idaho murders: Bryan Kohberger applied for internship at Pullman Police Department in fall 2022

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Brian Kohberger, the criminology Ph.D. student accused of stabbing four University of Idaho students to death in November, applied for an internship in the fall with the local police department in Pullman, Washington, according to a newly released probable cause affidavit. 

Kohberger worked as a teaching assistant at Washington State University and lived in Pullman, a college town just miles from the crime scene in Moscow, Idaho. 

He submitted his application to the police department at some point during the fall semester, when he took his first semester of classes at WSU after graduating from DeSales University with a master’s degree in psychology and cloud-based forensics in June 2022. 

“Kohberger wrote in his essay he had interest in assisting rural law enforcement agencies with how to better collect and analyze technological data in public safety operations,” an arrest affidavit states. 

UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO STUDENT STABBINGS TIMELINE

A spokesperson for the Pullman Police Department could not immediately be reached for comment about the application. 

As part of his graduate studies at WSU, Kohberger also posted a survey on Reddit, asking prospective participants to provide information about “how emotions and psychological traits influence decision making when committing a crime,” according to the affidavit. 

READ THE PROBABLE CAUSE AFFIDAVIT (WARNING GRAPHIC DETAILS). APP USERS: CLICK HERE.

While at DeSales University, he studied under an expert on serial killers, Dr. Katherine Ramsland, who co-wrote a book with the BTK Killer, Dennis Rader. 

Kohberger received an associate’s degree from Pennsylvania’s Northampton Community College before studying at DeSales and WSU. 

IDAHO MURDER VICTIMS’ ROOMMATE HEARD CRYING, SAW MAN IN MASK NIGHT OF KILLINGS: COURT DOCS

A former friend of Kohberger from Northampton, Pennsylvania, who asked to remain anonymous because of her job, said she does not believe Kohberger wanted to be a police officer, but that he was interested in studying crime. 

“He was very interested in psychology and, you know, criminology and things like that. So he was very interested in kind of the way the mind works,” the friend told Fox News Digital. “Just people in general, what makes things tick.”

Kohberger’s interest in law enforcement dates to his younger years at Pleasant Valley High School in Pennsylvania, when he also aspired to enter the military. A yearbook from 2011 shows Kohberger in a law enforcement class doing push-ups with a badge dangling from his left pocket. 

IDAHO MURDERS: BYRAN KOHBERGER HELD WITHOUT BOND IN STUDENT SLAYINGS AMID CHILLING NEW DETAILS

The yearbook said Kohberger used the class to “help him reach his goal to one day serve in the Army Rangers,” an elite special operations force. 

Kohberger was arrested Dec. 30 at his parents’ home in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania, and extradited to Idaho Wednesday, where he is facing four counts of first-degree murder and a felony burglary charge.

Authorities allege Kohberger broke into an off-campus apartment near the University of Idaho in the early morning hours of Nov. 13 and murdered Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Maddie Mogen, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20 and Ethan Chapin, 20. 

He allegedly left behind a tan leather knife sheath that had “Ka-Bar” and the United States Marine Corps eagle globe and anchor stamped on it, according to the affidavit. Investigators wrote that they found DNA belonging to Kohberger on the sheath. 

Fox News’ Chris Eberhart, Michael Ruiz, Stephanie Pagones and Audrey Conklin contributed to this report. 

 

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KeyBanc says former meme stock Bed Bath & Beyond will fall to 10 cents after bankruptcy warning

US Top News and Analysis 

Don’t be surprised if beaten-down retail stock Bed Bath & Beyond falls even more from here, according to KeyBanc Capital Markets. Analyst Bradley Thomas reiterated his underweight rating on shares, slashing his price target by 95% to 10 cents from $2 after the retailer pre-announced disappointing quarterly results and warned that it could pursue bankruptcy protection. The new price target implies 94% downside from Thursday’s close and reflects concerns that “creditors are in the best position to realize value from assets such as buybuy BABY,” Thomas wrote. Shares were last down 10% before the bell Friday. KeyBanc isn’t the only one turning more sour on the stock, which is already down nearly 33% since the start of the new year. Bank of America said in a note to clients Thursday that a successful turnaround is becoming increasing unlikely given the company’s troublesome operating results. Meanwhile, Telsey Advisory Group suspended coverage, citing bankruptcy concerns and a miss of the firm’s already low expectations for the retailer. “We do not see Bed Bath & Beyond as a strategic fit for any of the home furnishings retailers in our coverage group, but see interest from retailers in the company’s Bed Bath & Beyond store leases, which are ~30,000 sq. ft. and generally in good locations,” wrote analyst Cristina Fernández in a Friday note. Looking ahead, JPMorgan sees opportunities for both Target and Williams-Sonoma to takeover a share of Bed Bath & Beyond’s sales, which could lift 2023 EPS estimates by 1% and 3.6%, respectively, and boost comparable stores sales. “Over the past few months, management has stemmed the bleeding, improved liquidity, and improved relations with these two stakeholders,” wrote analyst Christopher Horvers. “That said, the macro and housing are deteriorating and we don’t think BBBY is out of the dark.” Bed Bath & Beyond shares have experienced a roller-coaster ride in recent years, as smaller traders on Reddit piled into the heavily shorted retailer. This led to a series of so-called meme stock rallies in 2021 and 2022. Those rallies never materialized, with stock losing 17.9% in 2021 and a whopping 82.8% last year. — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed reporting

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Kristi Noem spox eviscerated for ‘nonsense attack’ against Ron DeSantis: ‘Absolute clown car performance’

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Gov. Kristi Noem’s, R-S.D., chief spokesman set off social media users after he attacked Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis‘ abortion stance while issuing a statement on an unrelated issue.

National Review staff writer Nate Hochman revealed the exchange in a post Thursday, explaining he had reached out to Noem’s team for a comment on alleged connections between South Dakota Republican lawmakers and transgender activist and medical groups. After rejecting “any implication that Governor Noem is overly cozy with” the lobbying groups, chief of communications Ian Fury sent a follow-up email contrasting Noem’s abortion record with DeSantis.

“Governor Noem was the only Governor in America on national television defending the Dobbs decision,” Fury wrote. “Where was Governor DeSantis? Hiding behind a 15-week ban. Does he believe that 14-week-old babies don’t have a right to live?”

Hochman wrote that Fury’s “unprompted diatribe” also included accusing National Review of being “no longer pro-life” because it’s “carrying water for Gov. DeSantis.”

2024 SPECULATION GROWS AFTER DESANTIS SPEECH: ‘SURE SOUNDS A LOT LIKE THE LAUNCH OF A PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN’ 

Hochman recounted the story from his Twitter account.

“Kristi Noem’s chief of communications unloaded on Ron DeSantis yesterday, accusing DeSantis of ‘hiding behind’ the 15-week abortion ban he signed in April — and questioning if DeSantis believed ‘that 14-week-old babies don’t have a right to live,’ Hocman wrote.

Twitter users piled on Hochman’s account of these comments, criticizing Fury’s attacks while speculating on Noem’s 2024 presidential aspirations.

American Commitment president Phil Kerpen tweeted, “15 weeks is politically sustainable. This is a nonsense attack.”

“Absolute clown car performance by @IanTFury. Why is @govkristinoem’s team so wildly insecure?” Newsweek opinion editor Josh Hammer asked.

National Review editor Philip Klein wrote, “Lost in the Trump v DeSantis focus of 2024 has been the open hostility that Kristi Noem’s team has had toward DeSantis. @njhochman contacted Noem’s spox about an unrelated story and he just unloaded on DeSantis’s record on abortion.”

“Someone is desperate and scared that her 2024 chances are evaporating already,” historian Varad Metha joked.

Independent Women’s Forum senior policy analyst Inez Stepman commented, “The most transparent deflection I’ve maybe ever seen from a Gov’s press shop. ‘What comment do you have, we are reporting on your obvious corruption and capitulation to woke business interests’ ‘RON DESANTIS HATES BABIES’ Shame on everyone involved in this.”

“In 2024 news…” NBC News political reporter Allan Smith tweeted.

N.H. GOV. SUNUNU TARGETS ‘WOKE POLICY’ BUT CRITICIZES FLORIDA GOV. RON DESANTIS’ CULTURE WAR TACTICS 

The dispute later continued as Fury responded to the National Review report with a lengthy Twitter thread, reiterating his attacks against DeSantis and claiming Hochman “long ago outed himself as someone with an unhealthy bias against @KristiNoem. When his narrative is proven false, he doesn’t let facts get in the way of his efforts to take her down. Here are a few of the most egregious errors in his most recent reporting.”

“My comments to Nate regarding his motivations have gotten some attention. I’ll be more blunt here. Nate is a shill for Gov. DeSantis. He attacks Gov. Noem using the once-proud masthead of National Review because he sees her as a threat. Here are my comments to Nate,” Fury wrote in his eleventh of 12 tweets.

“Respectfully, I don’t think anyone sees Kristi Noem as a serious threat to DeSantis anymore,” Hochman responded. “Pretty much every single claim in Ian’s thread is false, but the weirdest one of all is his doubling-down on the idea that my criticisms of Noem are equivalent to ‘shilling’ for DeSantis—a politician that I never mentioned in either the piece itself or my correspondence with Ian.

“The basis of the claim, as best as I can understand it, is that I’ve written nice things about DeSantis before. The problem is, I’ve written nice things about a lot of different politicians that I generally like. I’m not sure how one gets from point A to point B here.”

DeSantis originally signed a bill restricting abortion access after 15 weeks in April, months prior to the Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade in June. The bill resembled the 2018 Mississippi law that led to the Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organization case that was part of the Supreme Court decision.

In straw polls at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in 2021, both DeSantis and Noem were seen as potential 2024 presidential candidates, behind former President Donald Trump. After eliminating Trump as an option, DeSantis led the poll at 43% while Noem trailed behind at 11%. 

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In December, DeSantis overtook Trump in a poll of GOP presidential primary voters by the Wall Street Journal.

 

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Stunning new Idaho murder detail shows killer appeared to want to ‘get out of dodge’

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

An expert criminal profiler explained to Fox News why he believes a roommate of the four Idaho college students slain was reportedly spared after spotting the killer, a detail gleaned from a newly released court filing.

The killer likely wanted to “get out of dodge” after slaying four other people, criminal profiler John Kelly told “The Ingraham Angle” on Thursday after the affidavit claimed a surviving roommate heard crying and saw a “figure clad in black clothing and a mask… walking toward her.” 

The female, only identified as “D.M.,” stood in “frozen shock” before locking herself in her room, the affidavit stated.

Host Laura Ingraham asked Kelly why a murderer would want to leave a surviving witness to such a grisly crime.

IDAHO MURDERS: KOHBERGER CHANGED LICENSE PLATE FIVE DAYS AFTER STUDENT SLAYINGS

“I think he was in a rush to get out of the house,” Kelly said. “Usually with these types of killers, at a certain point — don’t forget, he’s tired. He’s killed a number of people already. At this point in time, maybe something’s getting to him and he just wants to put himself between him and the bodies as quick as possible. He just wants to get out of dodge as fast as he can.”

The expert said the murderer likely believed staying in the home to kill a fifth victim would have been riskier than escaping more quickly, given that he was reportedly clad in all black and had a mask obscuring at least part of his face.

“I think he just had his fill for the night and wanted out of there,” Kelly said.

IDAHO MURDERS: SUSPECT BRYAN KOHBERGER’S AFFIDAVIT

Police arrested a suspect in the case, Bryan Kohberger, who was a Ph.D. student at nearby Washington State University.

Kohberger was taken into custody at his parents’ house in the Poconos after driving cross-country for the holidays. He was extradited to Idaho from a Stroudsburg, Pa., jail.

In regard to Kohberger specifically, Ingraham cited a Newsweek story in which a forensic psychiatrist told the outlet the suspect’s “obsessive-compulsive eating habits” indicated he’d be afraid he’d be addicted to meat if he ate it. 

“And it represented his struggle against his cannibalistic urges,” the host read on, calling the report “freakshow central.”

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Kelly agreed, saying the situation does sound freakish.

“You’re absolutely right. I mean, I don’t know what I’m going to hear next,” he said, adding serial killers like Jeffrey Dahmer had cannibalistic tendencies in terms of eating meat.

“Bottom line is when you look at this obsessive-compulsive behavior, if you look at every serial killer — and we’ve done research on this — you will find that they have some type of obsessive-compulsive behavior.”

“And like Dahmer, cannibalism is up for grabs. You know, it can happen,” he said. 

 

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