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First on CNN: Judge privately admonishes prosecutors for grandstanding at hearing for press dinner gunman

Kraig Pakulski 0 29 Article rating: No rating
Judge Moxilla A Upadhyaya sits in the courtroom during a hearing for Cole Tomas Allen

By Katelyn Polantz, CNN

(CNN) — A federal judge privately admonished prosecutors for attempting to grandstand Thursday at a detention hearing for the White House Correspondents’ Dinner gunman, according to a transcript obtained by CNN.

“I don’t know what’s going on here. I know that you want to present your case, I guess, to some audience other than the Court,” Magistrate Judge Moxila Upadhyaya told three prosecutors in the courtroom on Thursday out of earshot of the public and press. “I don’t want this to turn into a circus.”

Upadhyaya’s comments highlight a dynamic that has arisen in the six days since Cole Tomas Allen was taken into custody after a federal agent shot at him — with Trump administration officials aggressively describing their theory of the alleged attempted assassination of the president in news interviews and unsolicited court filings.

Several times, DC US Attorney Jeanine Pirro and others in television interviews have gone much further and given more definitive descriptions of the shooting than the detail that’s been represented in court from the FBI and Justice Department line prosecutors.

Secret Service Director Sean M. Curran on Thursday said Allen shot an officer at point-blank range. Pirro said on Fox News Thursday he fired at the Secret Service officer. Court filings describing the events have been less definitive.

At the hearing on Thursday, prosecutors were prepared in court to show new video and photos they had of the shooting, Allen’s weapons and of the hotel crime scene. Upadhyaya stopped them from doing this in court, because it was not needed after Allen’s lawyers said he agreed to remain detained while he awaited trial, she ruled.

Appearing annoyed, the judge then called the prosecutors and defense team to the bench to speak with them privately, where the judge continued to call out the Justice Department’s approach.

The exchange also highlights how early and incomplete the investigation still is.

“We’re five days into this investigation,” prosecutor Jocelyn Ballantine responded to the judge, according to the transcript. “As soon as we have finalized reports and discovery” — meaning evidence that the defense team can review — “that we’re in a position to be able to accurately provide to counsel, we will be doing that. We take our discovery obligations seriously.”

Ballantine then says the US Attorney’s Office wasn’t ready to discuss in open court the documents they have so far from the investigation.

Following the hearing, the US Attorney’s Office put into the court record and posted on social media the videos and photos they had prepared.

They said, in a letter to the judge, the Justice Department “now formally completes the record.”

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The post First on CNN: Judge privately admonishes prosecutors for grandstanding at hearing for press dinner gunman appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

The Fed subtly signaled that only rate cuts are on the table. Some Fed officials are crying foul

Kraig Pakulski 0 24 Article rating: No rating
The Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve building in Washington

By Bryan Mena, CNN

Washington (CNN) — One word in the Federal Reserve’s lengthy policy statement released this week is causing consternation among its officials, some of whom are warning that it could end up costing the US economy.

That word is “additional.”

Since the early 2000s, the Fed has signaled if interest rates could increase, decrease or remain unchanged — known as “forward guidance” — through officials’ public remarks and policy statements after every meeting.

On Wednesday, its latest forward guidance hinted that lower interest rates might be the only possibility moving forward, noting it will consider “additional adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate.” In its latest move, the Fed this week kept its key interest rate unchanged for the third consecutive meeting.

The word “additional” specifically drew objections. Fed presidents Lorie Logan of Dallas, Beth Hammack of Cleveland and Neel Kashkari of Minneapolis “did not support inclusion of an easing bias in the statement at this time,” according to the Fed on Wednesday, so all three of them cast dissents. The three Fed presidents released statements Friday detailing why that was a mistake.

Since 2024, the only adjustments the Fed has made to the target range have been down, largely driven by signs of a weakening economy. But the economic situation has dramatically changed this year: The US-Israeli war with Iran, which began on February 28, has kept global oil prices hovering around $100 a gallon for weeks and has kept US gas prices elevated.

There can be serious economic consequences if the Fed misreads the economy — even communicating the wrong direction for interest rates can be risky, the Fed officials said.

The Fed’s forward guidance “influences financial conditions and the economy,” Logan said in a statement Friday, “and it affects the achievement of the (Fed’s) maximum employment and price stability goals.” Kashkari echoed that in a separate statement Friday.

Officials follow their forward guidance to help keep markets stable, make monetary policy more effective and influence financial conditions.

Fed watchers interpreted the use of “additional” in the policy statement as evidence of “easing bias,” or that officials are leaning toward lowering rates in the near term, while signaling that rate hikes are not likely. It was a rare type of dissent over language, not the level of interest rates, in a policy statement.

Kevin Warsh, President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Fed, is on track to take the reins in just a few weeks, and Warsh may push for lower rates, since he was nominated by a president who has long pounded the table for rate cuts. That’s also drumming up the perception that the Fed is leaning toward lowering rates, which the three Fed presidents who dissented are firmly against.

Their dissents, plus Miran’s separate one in favor of lowering rates this week, resulted in four dissents, the most since October 1992.

Hammack’s statement explained that “this clear easing bias” is “no longer appropriate given the outlook” because not only is the Iran war stoking inflation pressures, but the US labor market seems to have stabilized, meaning there’s no urgency to deliver rate cuts to stimulate the economy.

Wars

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