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Secret Service agent ‘definitely’ shot by suspected gunman at last weekend’s correspondents’ dinner, US attorney says

Kraig Pakulski 0 28 Article rating: No rating

By Betsy Klein, CNN

(CNN) — US Attorney Jeanine Pirro said Sunday that the Secret Service agent who was shot at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner last weekend was hit by a shotgun blast from the suspect charged with with attempting to assassinate President Donald Trump.

“We now can establish that a pellet that came from the buckshot, from the defendant’s Mossberg pump action shotgun, was intertwined with the fiber of the vest of the Secret Service officer,” Pirro said during an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper on “State of the Union.”

Pirro’s DC US attorney’s office filed several charges against Cole Tomas Allen following the attack.

“It is definitely his bullet,” she added.

A CNN analysis of hotel surveillance video released by Pirro’s office last week, coupled with audio taken from inside the ballroom during the shooting, does not definitively conclude when or whether Allen fired a shot. But the audio analysis does indicate that six shots total were fired during the incident, which aligns with initial statements by law enforcement that Allen fired one shot, while a responding officer fired five more.

Pirro said that additional surveillance video of the incident “will be released.” She also offered new details on where Allen went in the moments before he charged past law enforcement officers at the security checkpoint.

In the video, a law enforcement K9 and its handler looked inside a doorway that Allen entered. The dog briefly enters the doorway, though it remains unclear what exactly was seen.

“He goes into that room to take off a long coat that he has on,” Pirro told Tapper, reiterating, “He’s wearing a long, dark coat because he has to hide the Mossberg pump action shotgun.”

Pirro said that the K9 is a “bomb detection dog.”

Jonathan Wackrow, a former US Secret Service agent and CNN contributor, said that the dog would have been trained to sniff for “high-order explosives” but was likely not trained to be able to pick up on the scent of the powder in a shotgun shell.

“These dogs are deployed mission-specific. The mission here was to find high-order explosives or explosive devices that could hurt the general public or the president, not to find ammunition,” he said.

While Allen faces an initial charge of discharging a firearm during a crime of violence, his charges could expand or change as a grand jury investigation progresses toward a potential indictment.

“There’s initial charges and there’s an investigation, and to the extent that the government learns more things, I assure you they will, they will become charges,” acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said during an appearance Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

There will be a preliminary hearing with the grand jury on May 8, Pirro said.

Though an alleged manifesto written by Allen does not name Trump as a target, Pirro said her office has enough evidence to establish him as the “very clear” target.

“We have a lot of evidence that indicates his intent and the fact that everything that he did thereafter, whether it was, you know, following what the president was doing, where he was going to the day of the of the event at the hotel, asking on his phone, ‘Is the president in the ballroom yet? Has the president sat down yet? What time will dinner be served?’” she said.

She continued: “This is clearly – the president is a target. And make no mistake, it is not just the manifesto, it is his actions.”

Pirro downplayed any argument of insanity, saying that Allen is “far from insane – he is brilliant. … This is a guy who had no psychotic break.”

She also dismis

College Baseball: UCSB, Cal Poly and Westmont all win

Kraig Pakulski 0 25 Article rating: No rating
ENT_4413
Entenza Design
Warriors celebrate PacWest Tournament berth

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) -

Big West Baseball:

UCSB 4, Bakersfield 3: The UC Santa Barbara Baseball team (29-15, 15-8 Big West) relied on two veteran leaders to get across the line Saturday night at Cal State Bakersfield (18-27, 9-14 Big West), with four-year Gaucho Corey Nunez driving in three of his team's four runs and Santa Barbara native Chase Hoover locking down a five-out save to secure the 4-3 victory. Nunez's three hits and three RBIs are both season highs, with Hoover's save his joint-team-leading fourth of the year.

HOW IT HAPPENED
The Gauchos did all the damage they needed to do early, getting on the board with their first two plate appearances of the night. Liam Barrett walked, took second on a wild pitch, third on a failed pickoff attempt, then home on Nunez's RBI double. Nunez would advance to third, then score on Rowan Kelly's sacrifice bunt.

The Roadrunners responded with a solo home run off of Gaucho starter Calvin Proskey in their half of the first, but that would be all. Noah Karliner helped preserve Santa Barbara's 2-1 lead with a laser beam throw from right field, cutting down Bakersfield's lead runner trying to reach third base.

Even better, the Gauchos got that run back in the top of the second. Xavier Esquer punched a single through the left side of the infield, then made a good read on a ball in the dirt to get to second base, setting him up to score on Nunez's RBI single.

Nunez was involved again when Santa Barbara extended its lead to 4-1 in the fourth, with Barrett's one-out single preceding yet another RBI double for the Gaucho shortstop.

Proskey made that lead stick with perfect second and third innings, then by working around a pair of walks in the fourth. After the lead-off man got on to start the fifth, Cole Tryba replaced Proskey on the mound and retired the next three Roadrunners he faced on strikes, needing just nine pitches to do it — an immaculate inning.

Walks got more 'Runners on the bases against the Gauchos in the sixth and the seventh, though Tryba got out of the trouble both times. It was relatively easy in the sixth, with the lefty retiring three batters in a row with two more punchouts, but the seventh was more dramatic. Tryba faced loaded bases with two outs, but got out of it. His night finally ended in the eighth, though he left two runners aboard. Both of them would come home to score on a one-out double that cut the margin to one run and brought Hoover out of the bullpen.

A strikeout and a groundout got the former San Marcos Royal out of the eighth with the lead still intact, and he was perfect in the ninth. After starting the inning with a strikeout, a grounder and pop fly both went right to Nunez and the Gauchos slammed the door.

UP NEXT
Elsewhere, Santa Barbara got more help in The Big West standings, with UC San Diego and Cal State Fullerton both 0-2 in their weekend series and two games adrift of the Gauchos. Santa Barbara will look to complete a sweep of the Roadrunners in Sunday's series finale, with first pitch scheduled for 1 p.m. from Hardt Field. Fans can catch all the action live on ESPN+ or by following along with live stats and a free audio-only broadcast at ucsbgauchos.com.

(Article courtesy of UCSB Athletics)

More Than 1 In 3 American Workers Are Delaying Or Canceling Major Purchases Due To Job Security Concerns

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating
Written By: Ellyn Briggs for Redfin Real Estate As global socioeconomic stress continues to rattle markets, American consumers are facing a difficult period. Inflation is rising, investors are uneasy, mortgage […]

The post More Than 1 In 3 American Workers Are Delaying Or Canceling Major Purchases Due To Job Security Concerns appeared first on edhat.

¿Cómo Cherie DeVaux hizo historia en el Kentucky Derby gracias a la fe y la perseverancia?

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

Por Kyle Feldscher, CNN

En los momentos previos al inicio del Kentucky Derby, dos mujeres extraordinarias —una bajándose del escenario más importante de las carreras de caballos y otra a punto de subir a él— caminaron juntas hacia el paddock de Churchill Downs.

Donna Brothers, una exjinete con 1.130 victorias en su carrera, trabajaba en su última carrera como comentarista en la cobertura del Derby para NBC. Mientras el espectáculo previo alcanzaba su punto máximo, caminó junto a Cherie DeVaux —hija y nieta de entrenadores de caballos— para hablar sobre el legado de su familia y su primera participación en el Kentucky Derby.

Cuando Brothers le preguntó a DeVaux qué significaría hacer historia como la primera entrenadora en ganar el Derby, DeVaux respondió que no podía imaginar algo así mientras caminaban juntas, pero luego devolvió el reconocimiento a Brothers.

“Mujeres como tú son las que hicieron que esto fuera fácil para mí y, por cierto, mi carrera comenzó hace 22 años en Churchill y siempre te he admirado y respetado. Es un honor que hagas conmigo tu última caminata hacia la pista”, le dijo DeVaux a Brothers.

En ese momento pareció simplemente un elogio y un reconocimiento al papel histórico de Brothers en este deporte, mientras DeVaux se preparaba para ver a su caballo, Golden Tempo, competir por las rosas. Pero terminó convirtiéndose en un simbólico relevo generacional para las mujeres en las carreras de caballos.

El caballo de DeVaux, que llegaba con probabilidades de 24-1, terminó siendo el ejemplar cubierto de rosas tras una increíble remontada. Junto al jinete José Ortiz, pasó del último lugar después de tres cuartos de milla a entrar triunfante al círculo de ganadores en Churchill Downs. La vertiginosa carga final será recordada como uno de los cierres más impresionantes en la historia del Derby, y fue exactamente como su entrenadora lo había planeado.

“Es un caballo que siempre remata desde atrás. Y lo que realmente confirmó el Louisiana Derby fue que estaba alcanzando el ritmo desde el poste del octavo de milla hasta la meta. Si tenía un poco más de distancia, lo lograría”, dijo DeVaux. “Son una de esas cosas en las que simplemente hay que tener fe en el proceso, fe en el caballo y fe en José. Mucha fe. Hay que tener fe”.

La fe fue lo que llevó a DeVaux hasta este momento histórico: convertirse en la entrenadora del caballo ganador de la carrera más famosa de Estados Unidos.

Aunque su familia llevaba mucho tiempo vinculada a las carreras, ella planeaba convertirse en médica. Estudiaba premédica en la universidad cuando necesitó un trabajo y terminó acercándose al negocio familiar.

“Mi mamá me dijo: ‘Bueno, hay una granja aquí al frente y todo lo que tienes que hacer es pasear a los caballos’. Así fue como empecé”, contó DeVaux a periodistas. “Después pensé: ‘Bueno, puedo montarlos’. Y en mi último año tenía una asesora que me insistía en tomar química orgánica, algo que ningún estudiante de premédica quiere hacer. La miré y le dije: ‘No, voy a trabajar en el hipódromo’. Y ella me preguntó: ‘¿Estás segura?’. Y yo dije: ‘Sí, voy a ver cómo funciona’”.

Trabajó bajo la tutela de Chuck Simons durante seis años en el Saratoga Race Course, en el estado de Nueva York, antes de pasar al equipo de Chad Brown en el mismo hipódromo.

Con el tiempo llegó a una encrucijada en su carrera, contó DeVaux. Y ahí apareció otro momento de fe.

“En el verano de 2017 estaba en una especie de encrucijada en mi vida y él me dijo que me debía a mí misma al menos intentarlo. Él tenía fe en mí, veía algo que yo no veía y creyó en mí”, dijo DeVaux a NBC después de la carrera, en referencia a su esposo David Ingordo, quien ayuda a propietarios a comprar caballos pura sangre capaces de ganar carreras como el Derby.

“Él me dijo: ‘Dale tres años. Vamos a darle tres años y veremos si funciona’. Y siempre podría dedicarme

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