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Attorneys for some defendants also suggested Trump’s victory was unfair in light of the fact that rioters are still being prosecuted and sentenced. Talk of potential presidential pardons permeated at least one violent rioter’s sentencing Thursday, when Zachary Alam told a judge he had no remorse for his actions. I want a full pardon.”“Instead of pardons of innocence, some January 6ers should receive pardons of patriotism,” Alam added. US District Judge Dabney Friedrich, a Trump appointee, later said Alam was “delusional” to think that his actions on January 6 were patriotic. Alam was convicted on multiple felony and misdemeanor counts stemming from his participation in the Capitol attack.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith, Elizabeth Mullin, Jaimee Avery, Zachary Alam, ” Alam, Alam, , Dabney Friedrich, Ashli Babbitt, Friedrich, Nicholas Fuller, ” Michelle Peterson, Fuller, Peterson, , ” Peterson, Colleen Kollar, Bill Clinton, “ Mr, Joe Biden, Christopher Cooper, Cooper, Obama Organizations: CNN, Capitol, Trump, Prosecutors, US, US Justice Department, DC Locations: Washington ,, Minnesota
WASHINGTON — A Jan. 6 rioter who was the subject of right-wing conspiracy theories suggesting he was a plant who worked with law enforcement was sentenced to eight years in prison Thursday, among the longest prison sentences given in connection with the U.S. Capitol attack. In court Thursday, Alam said his fellow Jan. 6 inmates saw the segment in the jail in Washington when it aired on the local Sinclair station, WJLA. “They came to the conclusion that I was a confidential human source,” Alam said of his fellow Jan. 6 defendants. (President-elect Trump has called Capitol rioters “political prisoners” and “hostages” and said he would “absolutely” consider pardoning every one of them). Even after he saw fellow rioter Ashli Babbitt get shot and killed, Alam was still calling for violence, Lederer said.
Persons: WASHINGTON —, Zachary Alam, Donald Trump, Alam, Trump's, Trump, Sharyl Attkisson, Attkisson, , ” Alam, , President Trump, Dabney L, Friedrich, Steven A, Metcalf, Rebekah Lederer, Alam’s, ” Friedrich, Lederer, Ashli Babbitt, ” Lederer Organizations: U.S . Capitol, Sinclair Broadcast Group, Justice Department, Capitol, Sinclair, U.S, District of Columbia, Federal, FBI, Trump, Alam Locations: Washington, , Jan, U.S
The US Forest Service manages rentals of repurposed fire lookouts, but these historic properties are hard to come by. Dabney Tompkins and Alan Colley decided to build their own tower in the early 2000s. "We particularly liked the picture on the front cover," Colley said. The couple attempted to book a stay at the first lookout that caught their eye, but they were out of luck — it was booked through the next year. They managed to secure a last-minute overnight at a different fire-lookout tower, prompting the Portland-based pair to spend the next several years renting similar properties from the US Forest Service.
Persons: Dabney Tompkins, Alan Colley, Tom Hanny, Tompkins, Colley Organizations: US Forest Service Locations: British Columbia, Portland
Jae Kim has come to terms with driving over 700 miles each week to get to work. He decided to make the move and figure out his work situation once his family was settled. Eight years later, he's still driving about five hours there each week to get to the office and five hours back home. BI previously spoke to Dennis Dabney, a Gen X dad who flies weekly from Texas to Arizona for work. He recommends that anyone considering a long commute go into it "with eyes wide open" because it's not for every family situation.
Persons: Jae Kim, Kim, he's, I've, there's, I'm, Dennis Dabney, Dabney, it's Organizations: Service Locations: Auburn , Alabama, South Carolina, Alabama , South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, Arizona
Then 2022 rolled around, and Dabney was offered a promotion within his company to be a program director — in Phoenix. Dabney was excited about the opportunity, and he viewed it as the perfect chance to advance his career and boost his income. And that has been crucial to decisions that I've made over the years about where to go and where to work," Dabney told Business Insider. While he said his company helped him with relocating costs, he estimated the supercommute costs him around an extra $20,000 each year. Advertisement"It was a nonstarter ripping my kids out of high school to go to Louisiana and then eventually Phoenix," Dabney said.
Persons: Dennis Dabney, Dabney, , I've, he's, it's, Nick Bloom, Alex Finan Organizations: Service, Air Force, Business, Survey, Census Bureau, Stanford Locations: Virginia, Fort Worth , Texas, Phoenix, Fort Worth, Louisiana, Texas
Lauren Hoselton scored over 20 NIL sponsorship deals as a student-athlete at Ole Miss. She's now a VP at the Grove Collective and helps college athletes at her alma mater get NIL deals. So I told myself to get creative and use my entrepreneurial mindset to make money off NIL. From there, I continued to hustle and use platforms such as LinkedIn and the marketplace Opendorse to get NIL deals. I pitched myself to managers in my college town to secure as many brand deals as possible.
Persons: Lauren Hoselton, She's, , Ole Miss, I've, I'm, Bill Dabney, They'd Organizations: Ole Miss, Grove, Service, University of Mississippi, Delta Air Lines, Lauren Hoselton Consulting, University of South Locations: University of South Florida, Grove
The veteran character actor Dabney Coleman died Thursday at 92. Coleman began appearing in movies and TV series in the 1960s, when he was in his early 30s, and from the beginning, he had the look and the attitude of a grumpy middle-aged man. Much of Coleman’s best TV work — like the short-lived sitcoms “Buffalo Bill” and “The Slap Maxwell Story,” and the soap opera parody “Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman” — aren’t available to stream. And while he had roles in dozens of very good films and TV shows, he was often low in the billing. The seven Coleman performances below, though, are both outstanding and substantial, showcasing his imposing screen presence and ace comic timing.
Persons: Dabney Coleman, Coleman, , Bill ”, Maxwell, Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman ” Locations: Coleman’s
Dabney Coleman, an award-winning television and movie actor best known for his over-the-top portrayals of garrulous, egomaniacal characters, died on Thursday at his home in Santa Monica, Calif. His daughter Quincy Coleman confirmed the death to The New York Times but did not cite the cause. At a time when antiheroic leads, with the outsize exception of Carroll O’Connor’s Archie Bunker, were a rarity on television comedies, Mr. Coleman’s distinctly unlikable Bill Bittinger on “Buffalo Bill” was an exception. A profile of Mr. Coleman in Rolling Stone called Bill “a rapscallion for our times, a playfully wicked combination of G. Gordon Liddy and Groucho Marx.” (“He has to do something terrible,” Bill’s station manager said of him in one episode. “It’s in his blood.”)
Persons: Dabney Coleman, Quincy Coleman, Coleman, antiheroic, Carroll O’Connor’s Archie Bunker, Coleman’s, Bill Bittinger, Buffalo Bill ”, Rolling Stone, Bill “, Gordon Liddy, Groucho Marx, , “ It’s Organizations: New York Times, NBC, Buffalo Locations: Santa Monica, Calif, Buffalo
An Ohio man who assaulted law enforcement officers during the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and who the Justice Department said became a “one-man misinformation machine” as he spread lies online about what occurred that day, was sentenced on Thursday to four years and 10 months in prison. The man, Kenneth Joseph Owen Thomas, 41, of East Liverpool, Ohio, had said online that his conviction in June on four counts related to his assaults on officers was a “huge win,” doubling down on his attacks that day, prosecutors said in court documents. They emphasized his apparent lack of regret in their sentencing memo, stating that Mr. Thomas had “expressed no remorse for his crimes,” and instead “sought fame and notoriety” after being part of the mob on Jan. 6. Judge Dabney Friedrich of U.S. District Court in Washington also ordered Mr. Thomas to pay a $20,000 fine and $2,000 in restitution.
Persons: Kenneth Joseph Owen Thomas, Mr, Thomas, , Dabney Friedrich of Organizations: Capitol, Justice Department, Dabney Friedrich of U.S Locations: An Ohio, East Liverpool , Ohio, Washington
Skinner is running for reelection to the City Council of Johns Creek, an Atlanta suburb of about 85,000. In 2020, they were pivotal in Democrat Joe Biden's close victory over Trump, the Republican incumbent, in the president election. “President Trump is obviously divisive,” said Skinner in a interview, insisting the endorsement “was about the veterans” rather than Trump himself. I don’t want to become Atlanta,” said Kramer, the Johns Creek Republican. Johns Creek is about 52% non-Hispanic white.
Persons: Stacy Skinner, , Donald Trump, Skinner, , Devon Dabney, Betsy Kramer, “ I'm, ” Kramer, “ I’m, Democrat Joe Biden's, Brad Raffensperger, Brian Kemp, Trump, It’s, Sarah Reckhow, Dabney, ” Dabney, Johns, Kramer, I’m, Jason Miller, ” Miller, Allen Sells, “ I’ve, Miller, Sells, Bridget Thorne, She’s Organizations: Veterans, Trump, Republicans, City Council, Republican, Democrat, Republican Party, Georgia, Raffensperger, Michigan State University, Democratic, Civil Rights Movement, Johns, . Census, City Locations: China, Mexico, Johns Creek, Atlanta, Fulton County, Fulton, Georgia's, lockstep, Washington, Georgia, U.S, America, Johns, Black, Boston, , Roswell,
President Joe Biden tore into Republicans for opposing his student loan forgiveness plan. The PPP loans were aimed at keeping business afloat during the pandemic by providing critical backstops to meet payroll and other limited needs. "College loan forgiveness benefits one person and undermines the basic principles of personal responsibility." The Sarasota Republican had over $2.7 million in forgiven PPP loans and interests for car dealerships connected to him. A spokesperson for the Oklahoman blasted Biden for suggesting there was something wrong with opposing student loan forgiveness in light of accepting PPP money.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, , John Roberts, Roberts, Chuck Edwards, Edwards, Vern Buchanan, Buchanan, Kevin Hern, Hern, Miranda Dabney Organizations: Service, Friday's, White, Biden, . Nebraska, North Carolina Republican, Asheville Citizen Times, Florida Republican, Sarasota Republican, Tampa Bay Times ., Oklahoma Republican, Oklahoman Locations: ., Florida, Oklahoma
The poll found that 74% of Black Americans favor reparations compared to just 26% of white Americans. A divided America Views on whether the U.S. government should provide some form of reparations for slavery and its legacy are split along party and racial lines. They also say it’s wrong to have taxpayers finance reparations, given that no one alive today is responsible for slavery. In April 2021, Gohmert went on the attack by proposing an amendment calling for the Democratic Party to pay for reparations. In the slavery era, the Democratic Party supported slavery; the Republican Party, led by Abraham Lincoln, called for slavery’s restriction and eventually abolished it.
Persons: , Elizabeth Warren, Chris Van Hollen, Lloyd Doggett, Tommy Tuberville, John N, Kennedy, Louie Gohmert, , Black, Robert Lindsay, Gohmert, Abraham Lincoln, Lindsay, Valentine, ” Tuberville, , Tuberville, Valentine Brazil, Nathan Calhoun, ” Kennedy, Nathan Calhoun’s, Dabney P, Calhoun, John Crawford, ’ Warren, Warren, – Crawford, Crawford, ” Warren, Isaac Hollingsworth, , Van Hollen, ” Van Hollen, Miller Doggett, Doggett, ” Doggett, Jim Crow, Tom Bergin, Makini Brice, Nicholas P, Brown, Donna Bryson, Lawrence Delevingne, Brad Heath, Andrea Januta, Gui Qing Koh, Tom Lasseter, Grant Smith, Maurice Tamman, Catherine Tai Design, John Emerson, Jeremy Schultz, Blake Morrison Organizations: Black, Reuters, , 117th, U.S ., Louie Gohmert Former U.S, Representative, Republican, Democratic Party, Republican Party, Vigilance, Kennedy U.S, Massachusetts Democrat, Senate, Chris Van Hollen U.S, Maryland, Lloyd Doggett U.S, H.R, Texas Democrat Locations: United States, America, U.S . Civil, Louie Gohmert Former, Texas, Europe, Bowie County , Texas, Boston, Bowie County, Alabama, Valentine Brazil, Nevada, Tuberville, Saline County , Arkansas, Brazil, Ouachita, Louisiana, Abbeville , South Carolina, Massachusetts, Dorchester County , Maryland, Maryland, Virginia, Tennessee
Many faces were awash with tears at All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church where locals organized the vigil. Outside the vigil, Shayana Dabney, 23, a Black bisexual woman said the "heartbreaking and egregious" shooting had left an indescribable sadness in the pit of her stomach. People gather for a vigil at All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church in Colorado Springs, Colo., on Sunday. “The city is hurt.”But, according to some, the city's pain appears to also come from an intolerance for the LGBTQ community that has developed in recent years. Jared Polis, an openly gay man, speaking virtually at the vigil because he tested positive for Covid, called the attack devastating.
CompaniesCompanies Law firms Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP Follow(Reuters) - Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan said Monday that U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission official C. Dabney O'Riordan has joined the firm's SEC enforcement practice as a partner in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.O'Riordan was the longest serving head of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement’s Asset Management Unit before leaving the agency in September, according to the 900-attorney firm. At Quinn Emanuel, she will represent asset managers that handle private funds including private equity managers, hedge fund managers, mutual fund advisors and ETF advisors, she said. “There’s a lot of rulemaking going on in the asset management space,” said O'Riordan, who joined the SEC in 2005. She also knew some of her new colleagues before joining, including co-chairs of the firm’s SEC enforcement defense practice, Michael Liftik and Sarah Heaton Concannon, O'Riordan said. Read more:Litigation giant Quinn Emanuel beefs up leadership, elevating DC, NY partnersOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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