this just in russia will invade ukraine any minute now

All Photos – February 18th, 2022 – New York City

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2022 

Trump calls Putin Ukraine moves ‘genius’ Former President Donald Trump on Tuesday praised Russian President Vladimir Putin’s recognition of the independence of two breakaway regions in Ukraine as “genius.” “Putin declares a big portion of Ukraine — Putin declares it as independent. Oh, that’s wonderful,” Trump told a conservative podcaster in an interview published Tuesday. “I said, ‘How smart is that?’ And he’s gonna go in and be a peacekeeper. … We could use that on our southern border.” Trump also said Putin was “very savvy.” The comments came as President Biden called the Russian moves the start of an invasion of Ukraine, and imposed sanctions. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), in his latest break with Trump, denounced “Putin’s aggression” and called for Biden to impose “devastating sanctions.” NBC NEWS 

Trump-linked Digital World’s stock surges after Truth Social launch Shares of Digital World Acquisition Corp, the blank-check company behind former President Donald Trump’s new social media platform Truth Social, jumped 14 percent on Tuesday in the first day of trading following Sunday’s launch on Apple’s App Store. Truth Social topped the App Store’s downloads, with 170,000 and counting since launch, research firm Apptopia said. Truth Social gives Trump a way to return to social media after he was banned by Twitter, Facebook, and Google for violating policies against inciting violence after a mob of his supporters attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in a failed attempt to overturn Trump’s election loss, which he falsely blamed on voter fraud. REUTERS 

Britney Spears reportedly nabs $15 million book deal Brace yourselves: Britney’s tell-all book is coming, and she reportedly nabbed a jaw-dropping paycheck for it. Months after being freed from her conservatorship, Britney Spears has reached a deal with Simon & Schuster, which according to Page Six is “said to be worth as much as $15 million.” This deal, an insider said, is “one of the biggest of all time, behind the Obamas.” News that Spears has her own tell-all on the way comes after she absolutely unleashed on Jamie Lynn Spears for her book Things I Should Have Said, which was published last month. Britney slammed her sister for trying to “sell a book at my expense,” calling her “scum” and saying she was “lying and making money off of me.” Neither Britney Spears nor Simon & Schuster have confirmed the book yet, though we’d bet the odds of it being titled Toxic are very, very high. PAGE SIX 

The United States calls the Russian troop deployments in eastern Ukraine “an invasion”. (CTV News) 

Biden imposes sanctions against Russia for Ukraine ‘invasion’ President Biden on Tuesday announced sanctions against Russia over what he described as “the beginning of a Russian invasion of Ukraine.” European allies also hit Russia with sanctions, and Germany halted approval of the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline from Russia, over Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to send “peacekeepers” into two “independent” eastern Ukraine enclaves controlled by Russian-backed separatists. Biden called Putin’s action “a flagrant violation of international law” and said the U.S. is responding with the “full blocking” of two large Russian financial institutions, along with sanctions on Russian debt. Critics said the measures fell far short of the full-scale economic warfare many Ukraine supporters want. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Blinken cancels meeting with Russian counterpart Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Tuesday he canceled a scheduled meeting with his Russian counterpart, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, because Russia’s recognition of separatist enclaves in Ukraine proved Moscow wasn’t serious about finding a diplomatic solution to the Ukraine crisis. “Russia’s move to recognize the ‘independence’ of so-called republics controlled by its own proxies is a predictable, shameful act,” Blinken posted on Twitter. “We condemn them in the strongest possible terms and #StandWithUkraine.” Blinken said he conveyed that message in a conversation with his Ukrainian counterpart in a Monday evening phone call to “reaffirm unwavering U.S. support for Ukraine.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Pentagon approves unarmed National Guard troops to help D.C. handle protest The Defense Department said late Tuesday that Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin had approved the deployment of 700 National Guard troops to help manage traffic in and around Washington, D.C., next week during a possible cavalcade of big rigs and other vehicles modeled after the “Freedom Convoy” in Canada. The 400 D.C. Guard members and 300 from other states will not carry firearms, take part in law enforcement, or conduct domestic surveillance, the Pentagon said. Several groups are organizing convoys to Washington, D.C., to pressure President Biden to end any remaining COVID-19 restrictions or requirements. The District of Columbia government and U.S. Capitol Police had requested the deployment. The trucker convoy in Canada paralyzed much of the capital, Ottawa, for 23 days. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

The foreign ministers of European Union member states agree on a package of new sanctions against Russia. (Al Jazeera) 

Germany suspends the Nord Stream 2 project in response to Russia’s recognition of the Donetsk People’s Republic and the Luhansk People’s Republic as independent states. (DW) 

Protesters gather at the Russian Embassy in Berlin, Germany to oppose President Vladimir Putin’s decision to send soldiers to separatist regions in Ukraine. (CTV News) 

S&P 500 falls into correction territory The S&P 500 on Tuesday fell into correction territory, defined as 10 percent below its recent high, as Russia recognized two breakaway regions in Ukraine and sent in troops as “peacekeepers,” escalating the Ukraine crisis. The S&P dropped 1 percent to close at its lowest level in four months. It had been down 2 percent earlier in the day, but rebounded some after President Biden called Russia’s moves an “invasion” and announced new sanctions against Russia. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed the day down 1.4 percent. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 1.2 percent. The Dow is now 8.7 percent below its January record, and the Nasdaq has fallen 17 percent from its November peak. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Portland man charged with murder in shooting of protesters Oregon prosecutors said Tuesday they had charged a Portland man, Benjamin Smith, with nine charges, including one count of second-degree murder, for allegedly drawing a pistol and firing at people associated with a protest against police violence. Dajah Beck, who was part of the group, told The New York Times that a man, identified by police as Smith, approached the group and said, “If I see you come past my house, I’ll shoot you.” One of the demonstrators, 60-year-old June Knightly, approached the gunman, Beck said, and told him: “You’re not going to scare us. You’re not going to intimidate us.” The man shot Knightly in the face, killing her, and shot four others. The shooting stopped after someone shot Smith in the hip. Police declined to charge the second gunman. THE OREGONIAN 

3 white men convicted of hate crimes for Arbery murder A Georgia jury on Tuesday found three white men — Travis McMichael, his father Greg McMichael, and their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan — guilty on federal hate-crime charges linked to the murder of Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery. Prosecutors said during the trial that the men chased Arbery through their coastal Georgia neighborhood and shot him because of their pent-up violent racism. Defense attorneys had argued that race wasn’t a factor, and that the men only chased Arbery because they thought he was responsible for recent thefts in the neighborhood. All three men were convicted late last year on murder charges and sentenced to life in prison. The hate-crime charges also could carry a life sentence, although a sentencing date hasn’t been set. NPR 

Supreme Court to hear case of web designer refusing same-sex marriage work The Supreme Court on Tuesday agreed to hear an appeal filed by Colorado web designer Lorie Smith, who wants to be able to deny wedding-related services to same-sex couples. Smith hasn’t started the wedding business yet, but she says she plans to refuse to promote messages condoning same-sex marriages because of her religious convictions. In 2018, the court considered a similar clash between a Colorado baker who declined to produce a wedding cake for a gay couple, but the ruling failed to provide a clear precedent. The case gives the justices another opportunity to weigh claims of religious freedom against laws barring discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. The court is expected to hear the case in its next term, which starts in October. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Supreme Court ends Trump effort to keep records from Jan. 6 panel The Supreme Court on Tuesday formally ended former President Donald Trump’s request to withhold his White House records requested by the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. The committee is trying to piece together, among other things, what Trump was doing while a mob of his supporters stormed the House and Senate chambers, hoping to overturn his election loss. The high court last month declined to block the National Archives from sending the documents to the Jan. 6 committee while it considered whether to formally reject Trump’s request. Trump tried to invoke executive privilege to keep the documents from the committee, but a federal appeals court in December upheld a lower court ruling saying Trump didn’t have the authority to contest President Biden’s decision to let the Archives hand over the material. REUTERS 

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announces a citywide testing campaign due to surge of the cases caused by the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. It is planned to test each citizen three times during the campaign. (ABC News) 

Singapore reports a record 26,032 new COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 622,293. (CNA) 

Home Depot shares drop as outlook dims despite strong earnings Home Depot shares plunged 9.8 percent on Tuesday afternoon, accounting for about 223 points of the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s 580-point decline. The losses came after Home Depot reported better-than-expected quarterly earnings and raised its dividend, but provided a disappointing profit outlook. Home Depot was the Dow’s best performer in 2021. It gained more than 55 percent last year as customers increased spending on home upgrades while the housing market soared. But the company’s shares have struggled this year, falling 24 percent as investors brace for the Federal Reserve to start raising interest rates to fight high inflation, pushing up mortgage rates and potentially triggering a housing slowdown. Rival home-improvement giant Lowe’s reported strong sales and its shares rose 2 percent in pre-market trading. CNN 

Stellantis reports strong profit in sign of auto industry recovery Automaker Stellantis on Wednesday reported a profit of $15.1 billion in the first year after it was formed by the combination of Fiat Chrysler and Peugeot maker PSA Group. The reported profits represent a 179 percent yearly increase compared to its predecessors’ combined results in 2020, when they faced ongoing supply-chain disruptions due to the pandemic. Stellantis shares rose 5 percent in early trading. The company, which makes the Jeep and Dodge brands, said it expected auto sales to rise 3 percent in North America and Europe, reinforcing signs that carmakers are regaining strength after two years of setbacks during the coronavirus pandemics. Stellantis said its projections assumed no more significant fallout from COVID-19. THE DETROIT NEWS 

U.S. women’s soccer team players, federation reach equal-pay settlement The United States Soccer Federation has agreed to pay members of the U.S. women’s national team $24 million to settle the players’ equal-pay lawsuit, the opposing sides of the legal battle announced in a court filing Tuesday. Under the settlement, the players will get a lump sum payment of $22 million plus another $2 million to be deposited into an account supporting players and their efforts to promote women’s and girls’ soccer after their playing years end. Each player can apply for up to $50,000 from the fund. The court must approve the final settlement once the federation and the team members reach a new collective bargaining agreement. The USSF has committed to equal pay rates for members of the women’s and men’s national teams. “This will fully resolve the litigation,” the players said in a statement. ESPN 

The U.N. Security Council unanimously passes a resolution declaring that Iraq is no longer required to pay out to victims of its 1990 invasion of Kuwait. Iraq had paid out US$50 billion to 1.4 million claimants, including one claim to the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation that totaled US$14.7 billion, by the time of the resolution’s passage. (Toronto Star) 

A South Korean state commission confirms that retreating North Korean soldiers murdered over 1,150 South Korean Christian civilians in the early stages of the Korean War due to a state anti-religion campaign. (Korea Times) 

The secretary general of the People’s Party, Teodoro García Egea, resigns after a scandal over alleged spying on the President of the Community of Madrid Isabel Díaz Ayuso. (Swissinfo) 

The inaugural draft for the USFL is held with quarterback Shea Patterson being selected first overall by the Michigan Panthers.  (Bleacher Report) 

Juwan Howard, head coach of the Michigan Wolverines men’s basketball team, is suspended for the rest of the regular season following a postgame fight that saw Howard strike Joe Krabbenhoft, assistant coach of the Wisconsin Badgers men’s basketball team. The Badgers’ head coach, Greg Gard, is fined $10,000. Additionally, forwards Terrance Williams II and Moussa Diabaté of the Wolverines are suspended for one game each, as is guard Jahcobi Neath of the Badgers, for their involvement in the altercation. (WKOW) 

Bill Murray to star in Aziz Ansari’s feature directorial debut When planning your first feature film as a director, you surely can’t go wrong getting Bill Murray involved. Former Parks and Recreation star Aziz Ansari is set to direct his first movie. Ansari will reportedly not only direct the dramedy but also write and star in it. The film doesn’t have a title yet, but it’s reportedly based on the non-fiction book Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End, described by the New York Times Review of Books as a “moving and clear-eyed look at aging and death in our society.” It isn’t clear yet what Murray’s role will be. This project continues a comeback for Ansari after he was accused of sexual misconduct in 2018, prompting the comedian to take a step back before returning with new stand-up material and a third season of Netflix’s Master of None (which he barely appeared in himself). VARIETY 

Tuesday,  February 22nd, 2022 

https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/us-be-worlds-biggest-lng-exporter-2022-2021-12-21/

In an address to the nation, President Putin declares that Ukraine is a country with “no tradition of independent statehood and an artificial creation of Soviet Union founder Vladimir Lenin”, and that the country has become a “U.S. puppet regime rife with corruption”. (Reuters) 

Putin sends troops into breakaway Ukraine regions Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday ordered Russian troops into two territories in eastern Ukraine that are controlled by Russian-backed separatists, hours after recognizing their independence. President Biden responded by signing an executive order Monday blocking trade and investment by Americans in the two separatist enclaves. The U.S. is expected to announce new sanctions against Russia on Tuesday. The White House said Putin’s action “refutes Russia’s claimed commitment to diplomacy, and undermines Ukraine’s sovereignty.” The U.S. and its allies expressed concerns that Russia might use skirmishes in the Donetsk and Luhansk separatist regions as a pretext for a broader invasion. The U.S. says Putin’s moves violate a 2015 peace agreement aiming to return the two regions to Ukrainian control. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Russian President Vladimir Putin signs decrees recognising the independence of the Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic with immediate effect. He also asks the parliament to ratify the treaties on friendship and mutual aid with the breakaway territories. (BBC News) (Axios) (TASS) 

The Russian parliament ratifies the friendship and cooperation treaties with the DPR and LPR, following Putin’s request made the previous day. (TASS) 

A large column of military vehicles, including tanks, is reported on the outskirts of Donetsk city hours after Russia formally recognised the self-proclaimed republic as an independent state. (Reuters) 

Russian Armed Forces are deployed to the separatist republics of Donetsk and Luhansk for a “peacekeeping mission”, shortly after Russia recognized the independence of the republics. (Axios) 

Separatist forces shell the village of Zaitseve, Donetsk, killing two soldiers and a civilian. (Times of Israel) 

The U.S. State Department evacuates its remaining diplomats in Ukraine to Poland. (The Straits Times) 

Germany halts Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline approval German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Tuesday suspended certification of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, which will carry natural gas from Russia to Europe, after Russian President Vladimir Putin recognized two breakaway regions in Ukraine and ordered Russian troops to go in as “peacekeepers.” The escalating tensions pushed oil prices to their highest level since 2014. Brent crude, the global benchmark, was up by 3.5 percent to $98.77 per barrel after rising as high as $99.50. West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, jumped 4.8 percent to $95.47 a barrel. The United States and its European allies are preparing to announce new sanctions against Russia on Tuesday. “The potential for a rally over $100 a barrel has received an enormous boost,” said Tamas Varga of oil broker PVM. REUTERS 

Germany suspends the Nord Stream 2 project in response to the Russian recognition of Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic as independent states. (DW) 

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin announces that China will sanction American defense contractors Lockheed Martin and Raytheon after the United States approved a US$100 million missile defense repair deal between the two companies and Taiwan. (Al Jazeera) 

Syria voices support for the Russian recognition of Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic. (Reuters) 

U.S. stock futures fall as Ukraine tensions escalate U.S. stock futures dropped early Tuesday after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered troops into breakaway enclaves in eastern Ukraine, escalating tensions and stoking fears of a broader invasion. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 were down 0.2 percent at 6:30 a.m. ET. Nasdaq futures were down 0.6 percent. Putin on Monday recognized the independence of the two Ukrainian regions controlled by Russian-backed separatists, undermining diplomatic efforts to avoid war. President Biden, who a day earlier had agreed “in principle” to a summit with Putin to de-escalate the Ukraine crisis, issued an executive order banning trade with the two separatist enclaves, and was expected to announce new sanctions against Russia on Tuesday. CNBC 

Trump’s Truth Social platform launches Former President Donald Trump’s long-rumored social media platform, Truth Social, made its debut in Apple’s App Store on Monday and promptly became its top social-media networking app. But the launch was marred by widespread glitches and a thousands-long waiting list to join. Many hopeful users received error messages upon signing up, or never received a verification email to approve their accounts. Trump developed plans to launch the service after Twitter, Facebook, and other social media platforms banned him following the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack, accusing the then-president of violating policies against inciting violence by urging supporters to fight to overturn his election loss. FORBES 

Studies indicate COVID-19 booster could provide years of protection A range of new studies suggest that a COVID-19 booster shot may provide protection against future variants for many months, even yearsThe New York Times reports. A recent study posted on bioRxiv, for instance, suggests that a third Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna shot helps to produce antibodies that could be effective against yet-unseen mutations — even though the vaccines were “not specifically designed to protect against variants.” “If people are exposed to another variant like Omicron, they now got some extra ammunition to fight it,” Dr. Julie McElrath, a Seattle infectious disease physician, told the TimesTHE NEW YORK TIMES 

Boris Johnson announces lifting of coronavirus restrictions in England British Prime Minister Boris Johnson confirmed on Monday that England will end its coronavirus restrictions, making it the first major Western economy to take the step as the surge driven by the Omicron variant eases. Starting Thursday, infected people will no longer be legally required to self-isolate, although the government still urges them to stay home, Johnson said in the House of Commons as he unveiled his “Living with COVID” plan. The country also will stop free and universal coronavirus testing on April 1. “Restrictions pose a heavy toll on our economy, our society, our mental well-being,” Johnson said. “We do not need to pay that cost any longer.” BLOOMBERG 

Stand-your-ground laws tied to 11 percent homicide increase “Stand your ground” laws are linked to an 11 percent increase in monthly firearm homicide rates, according to a study published Monday in JAMA Network Open, a peer-reviewed medical journal. The data suggest that these laws, which allow people to respond with deadly force instead of retreating from an attacker, might have resulted in hundreds of additional homicides nationally every year. The controversial laws have become a focus of debate over addressing gun violence in the wake of the fatal shooting of Black teenager Trayvon Martin in 2012. Proponents say these laws deter violence, but the evidence shows “the opposite effect,” said University of Oxford associate professor David Humphreys, one of the paper’s authors. THE WASHINGTON POST 

A state commission by South Korea confirms some reports of North Korean war crimes in the Korean War. The war crimes in question were perpetrated against South Korean Christians. (Korea Times) 

Arbery hate-crime trial goes to jury The federal hate-crime trial of the three white men convicted of murdering Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia went to the jury on Monday after prosecutors and defense lawyers delivered their closing arguments. Justice Department civil rights division counsel Christopher Perras told jurors the only thing defendants Travis McMichael, his father Gregory McMichael, and their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan knew when they chased down Arbery in February 2020 was that he “was a Black man running down a public street.” Perras said racial slurs the defendants used in texts and social media posts showed they were motivated by racism. Defense lawyers said race wasn’t a factor and the men thought Arbery had been behind recent thefts in their neighborhood.  CNN 

Colombian court decriminalizes abortion for up to 24 weeks Colombia’s Constitutional Court on Monday decriminalized abortion up to 24 weeks into a pregnancy in a ruling that marked a major shift for the majority-Catholic South American nation. Colombia followed Mexico and Argentina to become the third big country in Latin America to decriminalize the procedure, all in the past 14 months. Abortion rights advocates are seeking to capitalize on the momentum to push for loosening abortion laws elsewhere in the region. Crowds of abortion rights supporters celebrated outside the court in Bogota, Colombia’s capital, shouting, “Abortion in Colombia is legal!” Since 2006, Colombia has permitted abortion in cases of rape, nonviable pregnancies, and when the mother’s health is in danger. THE WASHINGTON POST 

The Constitutional Court legalizes abortion in all cases for up to six months of gestation, and removes time limits in cases of rape, fetal defects, or if the mother’s life is in danger. (Reuters) 

Trudeau calls for healing and continued emergency powers after trucker protest  Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday that it is time for healing after police cleared out Freedom Convoy anti–vaccine mandate protesters who had paralyzed downtown Ottawa for more than three weeks. “More than ever, now is the time to work together. It’s also the time to reflect on the kind of future we want for our country,” Trudeau said. Police arrested 191 people and towed 79 trucks and other vehicles over the weekend before the protest was declared over on Sunday. Trudeau cleared the way for the crackdown by invoking emergency powers, and his government won a vote in the House of Commons on Monday to extend the emergency authority for up to three more weeks. “This state of emergency is not over,” Trudeau said. POLITICO 

Medina Spirit stripped of 2021 Kentucky Derby title The Kentucky Derby on Monday invalidated Medina Spirit’s 2021 victory after months of litigation and laboratory tests due to the horse’s race-day drug test, which showed the presence of the banned drug betamethasone. Lawyers for Medina Spirit’s Hall of Fame trainer, Bob Baffert, argued that Medina Spirit had absorbed the corticosteroid through an ointment, and that the ban only applied to injectable betamethasone. But many horseracing experts had considered the disqualification inevitable, because Kentucky racing regulations don’t allow any detectable trace of the drug on race day. The officials made the decision after a Feb. 14 hearing. In addition to disqualifying the colt, now deceased, the authorities suspended Baffert for 90 days and fined him $7,500. Barring further developments in the case, runner-up Mandaloun will be declared the race’s winner. USA TODAY 

Global health pioneer Dr. Paul Farmer dies at 62 Renowned infectious disease specialist Dr. Paul Farmer, who devoted his life to making health care accessible to millions of people on four continents, died unexpectedly Monday in Rwanda, his nonprofit organization, Partners in Health, confirmed. He was 62. Farmer died of a sudden cardiac event while sleeping in his apartment at a hospital he helped establish, said Sheila Davis, Partners in Health’s chief executive officer. Farmer taught at Harvard University and traveled extensively for his work with Partners in Health and its sister organization, Zanmi Lasante, in Haiti. “There are so many people that are alive because of that man,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told The New York TimesTHE MIAMI HERALD 

At least 63 people are killed and 40 others injured by an explosion at a gold mine in Gbomblora, Poni, Burkina Faso. (Reuters) 

Hong Kong reports a record 7,533 new COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the total number of confirmed cases in the territory to 60,383. (The Standard) 

South Africa changes their COVID-19 vaccination rules to allow mixing of vaccines between the Pfizer–BioNTech and Janssen COVID-19 vaccines for second and third doses and also reduces the interval between the second and third doses of the Pfizer vaccine in order to increase the country’s vaccination rate. (CNA) 

A public inquiry into the 2020 Nova Scotia shootings is opened. (CBC) 

NBC Winter Olympics ratings drop to new low  NBC’s coverage of the Beijing Winter Olympics had the worst ratings since the network started broadcasting the Games decades ago. The Winter Olympics had an average prime-time audience of 11.4 million over the more than two weeks of coverage across NBCUniversal’s broadcast, cable, and streaming platforms. That represents a 42 percent drop in viewers compared to the Pyeongchang Olympics in 2018, which had the worst Olympic ratings up to that point. “This was probably the most difficult Olympics of all time,” NBC Sports Chairman Pete Bevacqua said, adding that advertisers were given additional commercial time to make up for the smaller audience. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Monday,  February 21st, 2022 

President’s Day 

COVID cases continue to fall as Omicron surge fades New COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continued to fall in the United States over the weekend. The average daily count of confirmed new infections barely exceeded 100,000, down from 800,850 on Jan. 16, according to Johns Hopkins University data. New York saw the number of cases drop by more than 50 percent in the last two weeks, the latest sign that the surge driven by the highly contagious Omicron variant is fading. “I think what’s influencing the decline, of course, is that Omicron is starting to run out of people to infect,” said Dr. Thomas Russo, professor and infectious disease chief at the University of Buffalo’s Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.  THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Leaked data from Credit Suisse exposes the identities of over 30,000 of the bank’s clients whose anonymous numbered Swiss bank accounts, which collectively held over $100 billion, had allowed them to keep their identities secret. Its clients included heads of state (such as king Abdullah II of Jordan), human rights abusers, drug traffickers, intelligence officials, and individuals under sanctions or involved in financial crimes such as tax evasion or corruption, among others. The secret data from Switzerland’s second largest bank was leaked about 1 year ago to the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung and was analyzed by the non-profit Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and 46 other news organizations, including The New York TimesLe Monde and The Guardian(The Guardian)

In response to yesterday’s historic leak of client data from Credit Suisse, Switzerland’s second largest bank, the EU’s European Commission is asked to “re-evaluate Switzerland as a high-risk money-laundering country” by the European People’s Party (EPP), which is the group with the largest number of seats in the European Parliament. (Reuters) 

Trump’s Truth Social launches in Apple’s App Store Former President Donald Trump’s new social media platform, Truth Social, is launching in Apple’s App Store on Monday, Reuters reported Sunday, citing posts from the network’s chief product officer posted on a test version of the service. The release of the app would give Trump a way to return to social media on the Presidents Day holiday after his ban from Twitter, Facebook, and Alphabet’s YouTube following the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack. The companies said Trump’s post encouraging supporters to fight the certification of his election loss had violated their policies against inciting violence. Last week, Donald Trump Jr. tweeted a screenshot of a message his father posted on the Truth Social beta version saying, “Get Ready! Your favorite President will see you soon!” REUTERS 

U.S. intelligence indicates Kremlin has ordered military to invade Ukraine The United States has gathered intelligence indicating that the Kremlin has ordered Russia’s military to go ahead with an invasion of Ukraine, U.S. officials said Sunday. The Biden administration’s level of confidence in the assessment has increased as Moscow took steps intelligence agencies predicted, including renewed shelling in areas claimed by pro-Russian separatists. “Everything leading up to the actual invasion appears to be taking place,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on CNN’s State of the Union. “All of these false-flag operations, all these provocations to create justifications.” President Biden met with the National Security Council to discuss the threat of war as Belarus extended military exercises with Russian forces near the Ukraine border. The drills previously were scheduled to end Sunday. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan states the United States will rally the international community to hold Russia accountable should it invade Ukraine. (CBS News) 

Biden agrees ‘in principle’ to meet with Putin on Ukraine The White House said Sunday that President Biden had agreed “in principle” to meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin to discuss the Ukraine crisis. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said the two leaders could speak after Secretary of State Antony Blinken talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Feb. 24, provided Russia has not sent troops into Ukraine. “We are always ready for diplomacy. We are also ready to impose swift and severe consequences should Russia instead choose war,” Psaki said. French President Emmanuel Macron spoke by phone with Putin on Sunday to push negotiations for a possible ceasefire between Russian-backed forces and Ukrainian forces in the eastern part of the country, the Élysée Palace said. Macron later spoke to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. NPR 

Russian President Vladimir Putin and French President Emmanuel Macron announce that they will work toward a ceasefire agreement in order to avert war with Ukraine. (Firstpost) 

Military exercises between Belarusian and Russian forces in Belarus are extended amid tensions with Ukraine. Around 30,000 Russian troops are currently stationed in Belarus, according to NATO. (Reuters) 

Russia recognizes the independence of the Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic, two breakaway regions of Ukraine as independent states. (BBC News) 

Russia says it has killed five Ukrainian soldiers who tried to infiltrate its territory. Ukraine disputes the claim as “fake news.” (Reuters) 

Morocco’s Ryad Mezzour and Israel’s Orna Barbivai both sign a trade deal in Rabat on behalf of their respective countries. (National Post) 

Canadian police regain control of downtown Ottawa   Canadian police fenced off parts of downtown Ottawa on Sunday to reestablish control of the capital city after a weekend crackdown ended the so-called Freedom Convoy protest against COVID-19 restrictions. Officers made 191 arrests and towed nearly 80 vehicles. Truckers started the demonstration more than three weeks ago, blocking city streets with parked trucks to protest a vaccine mandate on cross-border truck drivers. The demonstration grew as others came to express opposition to other coronavirus restrictions. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau last week invoked emergency powers to give the government authority to shut down the protest. Police said they had gathered intelligence on departing protesters “to make sure that these illegal activities don’t return to our streets.” THE GUARDIAN 

Taiwan announces that its army will conduct live military drills next month which will simulate an invasion attempt of its islets of Dongyin and Kinmen, and its coast guard will conduct similar drills near Pratas Island, amid rising tensions between Taiwan and China. (South China Morning Post) 

Boris Johnson to detail plans to lift U.K. COVID restrictions British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that on Monday he would unveil his government’s plan to lift coronavirus restrictions under its new “living with COVID” strategy. The effort will make Britain the first major European country to let people diagnosed with COVID-19 go to work and shops, and use public transport. Johnson said Sunday people shouldn’t “throw caution to the wind,” but that the success of the U.K. vaccination program meant the nation could start relying on personal responsibility rather than government mandates to curb infections. 81 percent of adults have been vaccinated and boosted in England. “Today will mark a moment of pride after one of the most difficult periods in our country’s history,” Johnson said in a statement. REUTERS 

1 dead, 5 wounded in shooting near Portland protest site One person died and five others were wounded on the fringes of a protest against police killings in Portland over the weekend. The clash appeared to be “a confrontation between armed protesters and an armed homeowner,” Lt. Nathan Sheppard told The New York Times on Sunday. Police said investigators were having a hard time piecing together what happened because the crime scene was “extremely chaotic” and some witnesses “were uncooperative with responding officers.” Dajah Beck, one of the wounded victims, told the Times she was participating in a volunteer motorcade setting up a safety plan and rerouting traffic in preparation for the march. She said the group was unarmed and “not part of the protest.” She said a man had called the women in the group “violent terrorists” and screamed a misogynist vulgarity, then started shooting. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Closing arguments to start in Arbery hate-crime trial Closing arguments begin Monday in the federal hate-crime trial of the three white men convicted of the murder of Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man they chased down as he was jogging through their south Georgia neighborhood. The killing, which was caught on video by defendant William “Roddie” Bryan, fueled nationwide racial justice protests. Prosecutors introduced texts in which Travis McMichael, who fatally shot Arbery with a shotgun, and Bryan used racial slurs to argue that the crime was racially motivated. Defense attorneys have said the men thought Arbery was behind recent crimes in the neighborhood. Travis McMichael said at a hearing last month that he would admit to attacking Arbery because of his “race and color” under a plea agreement, but Arbery’s family opposed the deal and the judge rejected it. REUTERS 

An Iranian F-5 jet crashes into a school in Tabriz, East Azerbaijan province, killing both pilots and a person on the ground. (Reuters) 

Seven children are killed and five more are injured during a Nigerian Air Force airstrike in the Maradi region of Niger. The army reported that the airstrike was the result of “a mistake on the border”. (Al Jazeera) 

The Italian Health ministry recommends that severely immunocompromised people should receive a fourth dose of the mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccine at least 120 days after receiving their previous booster. (U.S. News and World Report) 

Queen Elizabeth II tests positive for COVID-19 with “mild cold-like symptoms”. (BBC News) 

Sunday, February 20th, 2022 

Austin Cindric narrowly beats Bubba Wallace to win Daytona 500 Rookie Team Penske driver Austin Cindric won the Daytona 500 on Sunday, blocking Bubba Wallace’s last-second attempt to pass him. Cindric, 23, finished the 500-mile car race fractions of a second ahead of Wallace, the third-smallest margin of victory in Daytona 500 history. Cindric took the lead after two late crashes, and won the big race at the start of his first full NASCAR Cup Series. “I know there’s going to be highs and lows, being a rookie in a field of drivers this strong. I’m just grateful for the opportunity,” Cindric said. It was Wallace’s second time finishing as runner-up. “Damn, I wanted to win that one,” he said. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Rookie Austin Cindric wins the 64th running of the Daytona 500, becoming the ninth driver to score his first career Cup Series victory in the event. (FOX Sports) 

The End

this just in russia will invade ukraine any hour now

Sunday, February 20th, 2022 

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson says that Vladimir Putin is planning “the biggest war in Europe since 1945” and that Russia intends to launch an invasion that will encircle the Ukrainian capital Kyiv(BBC News) 

Russian President Vladimir Putin and French President Emmanuel Macron announce they will work towards a ceasefire agreement to avert war with Ukraine. (Firstpost) 

Biden to convene National Security Council to discuss Ukraine crisis President Biden is scheduled to meet with the National Security Council on Sunday to discuss the situation on the Ukrainian border. Biden said Friday that he is “convinced” Russian President Vladimir Putin has made up his mind to invade Ukraine. Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine have stepped up artillery attacks against government forces and begun evacuating women and children, while Russian forces stage large-scale military exercises, including test-firing nuclear-capable ballistic and cruise missiles. Current estimates place the number of Russian troops positioned along Ukraine’s border at up to 190,000. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Americans could see increased energy costs if Russia invades Ukraine, Harris says Vice President Kamala Harris told reporters Sunday that if Russia invades Ukraine, Americans may have to “put ourselves out there in a way that” could result in increased energy costs. She added that the administration is “taking very specific … steps to mitigate what that cost might be.” Harris met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky at the Munich Security Conference on Saturday. Zelensky told Harris, through an interpreter, that he is grateful for American support and that “the only thing we want is to have peace.” In a speech delivered the same day, Harris warned the U.S. and NATO would respond to a Russian invasion of Ukraine with “far-reaching financial sanctions and export controls.” BLOOMBERG 

Russia launches an investigation following reports that shells landed inside Rostov Oblast, 2 km from the Russia–Ukraine border. At least one structure on a farm is reportedly destroyed.  (TASS) 

Australian Defence Minister Peter Dutton reveals a Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy destroyer fired at a Royal Australian Air Force Boeing P-8 Poseidon over the exclusive economic zone of Australia with a military-grade laser weapon as it transited through the Arafura Sea last week. (Sky News Australia) 

The controversial Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam begins its electricity production, with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed attending its inauguration. (Al Jazeera) 

Hundreds of protestors gather outside the Nepalese parliament in Kathmandu to protest a US$500 million grant from the Millennium Challenge Corporation for infrastructure projects, claiming the deal undermines Nepal’s sovereignty. Several are injured following clashes with police. (BBC) 

The closing ceremony for the Winter Olympics in Beijing is held. (NPR) 

2022 Olympics: Games conclude after 15 days of competition The 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics closed Sunday after 15 days of competition. The closing ceremony featured children with illuminated snowflakes performing a loosely choreographed dance to an arrangement of “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star,” followed by the Parade of Flags, set to an arrangement of Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy.” Norway topped the medal table with 16 gold medals, followed by Germany with 12 and China with nine. The U.S. came in fourth with eight gold medals. American athletes also brought home 10 silver medals and seven bronzes. Paris will host the 2024 Summer Olympics. The 2026 Winter Games will be held in the Italian cities of Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo. NBC 

Queen Elizabeth II tests positive for COVID-19 Queen Elizabeth II, 95, has tested positive for COVID-19, Buckingham Palace announced Sunday. She is reportedly experiencing “mild cold-like symptoms” but expects to be able to continue performing “light duties” during the coming week. The queen may have contracted the virus from her eldest son and heir, Prince Charles, who tested positive earlier this month. The queen is fully vaccinated. On Feb. 6, Elizabeth marked 70 years on the throne. BBC 

Ottawa police continue clearing protesters on Parliament Hill. Over 170 people have been arrested since Thursday as part of an effort to end the protests. (NBC News) 

Freedom Convoy: Canadian police arrest at least 170 protesters and tow more than 50 vehicles Canadian police took aggressive action over the weekend to break up the Freedom Convoy protests that have occupied downtown Ottawa for three weeks. Police arrested at least 170 people on Friday and Saturday and towed more than 50 vehicles. Police used batons and “chemical irritant” against protesters, who they described as “aggressive and assaultive” and accused of attempting to use children to shield themselves from police. Videos show some demonstrators being trampled by police horses. One protester reportedly threw a bicycle at a police horse, and another was arrested after allegedly launching a gas canister. CNN 

Freedom Convoy demonstrators admit that the protests are near the end. (The Washington Post) 

Trump courses could host new Saudi-backed golf league Former President Donald Trump’s company is reportedly working on a deal with a new Saudi-backed golf league that would make at least two of Trump’s courses — located in Doral, Florida, and Bedminster, New Jersey, into stops on the tour. The PGA Tour pulled a tournament from Doral during Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and another from Bedminster after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. The new league, overseen by the Saudi-funded LIV Golf Investments, has been working to recruit PGA players, including Phil Mickelson. Mickelson reportedly said in an interview that, despite Saudi Arabia’s “horrible record on human rights,” he views the new league as “a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.” FOX NEWS 

Epstein associate found dead in jail while awaiting trial for raping minors Former French modeling agent and Jeffrey Epstein associate Jean-Luc Brunel was found dead in his Paris jail cell during the night, a spokesman for the city’s prosecutor said Saturday. Brunel, 75, had been charged with raping minors over the age of 15 (France’s age of consent) and with sexual harassment. He was also suspected of procuring young women for Epstein’s sex trafficking ring. The prosecutor said Brunel was found hanging and that his death appeared to be a suicide. According to some sources, no cameras recorded Brunel’s death. THE MIAMI HERALD 

Jeffrey Epstein associate Jean-Luc Brunel is found dead inside his cell at La Santé Prison in Paris. Brunel faced allegations of sexual assault spanning three decades and of participating in the sex trafficking ring run by Epstein. (Sky News) 

Nepali police clash with rioters over U.S.-funded infrastructure project Hundreds of protesters clashed with riot police outside Nepal’s parliament as lawmakers debated a $500-million aid grant from the United States. Protesters rushed police barricades and hurled stones at officers. Police responded with batons, tear gas, and water cannons. The grant would fund construction of a 187-mile electricity transmission line and improve roads in the South Asian country. Minister for Communication and Information Technology Gyanendra Bahadur Karki said the infrastructure program would benefit 24 million of Nepal’s 30 million people. Two communist parties, which are part of the governing coalition, oppose the deal, claiming that the project will erode Nepal’s sovereignty. REUTERS 

Australia welcomes tourists after nearly 2 years of closed borders Australia re-opened its borders to tourists on Monday after nearly two years of stringent travel restrictions that earned it the nickname “Fortress Australia.” Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Sunday that 56 international flights were expected to land at Australian airports in the next 24 hours. “We are going from Covid cautious to Covid confident when it comes to travel,” he said. Before the pandemic, Australia’s tourism industry was growing at a rate nearly double that of overall GDP growth, but many in the industry worry that it will take a long time for tourism to return to pre-COVID levels. Tourists who have received two vaccine doses will not need to quarantine. THE GUARDIAN 

2022 Olympics: U.S. figure skaters won’t receive medals until doping investigation concludes The Court of Arbitration for Sport announced Sunday in Beijing that the U.S. Olympic figure skating team will not receive their medals until a doping investigation into Russian skater Kamila Valieva has concluded. The CAS panel, which initially ruled Monday that no medals would be awarded for events in which Valieva finished in the top three, rejected the Americans’ appeal after meeting Saturday evening. It may take months or years for the investigation to reach its conclusion. Only then will the nine Americans, who finished second in the Feb. 7 team event, receive their medals. If the Russian team is disqualified, the U.S. will move up to third place on the medal table.  ESPN 

Saturday, February 19th, 2022 

The Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic declare a full military mobilisation, a day after starting evacuating civilians to Russia. (Reuters) 

Two Ukrainian troops are killed and four others are wounded after shelling by separatist forces. Separatists have opened fire on more than 30 settlements with artillery, according to the military. (Reuters) 

U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris warns that the United States will impose sanctions on Russia if it invades Ukraine. (NBC News) 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urges sanctions on Russia before a potential invasion. (CBS News) 

The Slovakia men’s hockey team wins their first medal at the Winter Olympics after defeating Sweden in the men’s tournament. (The Hockey News) 

Biden ‘convinced’ Putin has decided to invade Ukraine President Biden told reporters on Friday that he is “convinced” Russian President Vladimir Putin has made up his mind to invade Ukraine. “As of this moment, I’m convinced he’s made the decision. We have reason to believe that,” Biden said, when asked if he thought Putin was leaning one way or another. In response to a question about whether or not diplomacy is still an option, Biden replied, “Until he does, diplomacy is always a possibility.” Kyiv and Moscow have been engaged in a delicate back and forth for weeks now, as Russian troops continue to threaten Ukraine’s border, despite Putin’s repeated insistence that there’s no invasion on the horizon. NBC NEWS 

Trump brought classified documents to Mar-a-Lago, Archives says Classified national security documents were in fact among the boxes former President Donald Trump brought with him upon leaving office, the government’s chief archivist said Friday. In a letter to the chair of the House Oversight Committee, Archivist David Ferriero said the National Archives “has identified items marked as classified national security information within the boxes” recently recovered from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort. By removing classified information from the White House in this way, Trump may have violated the Presidential Records Act. The Archives staff has been in touch with the Department of Justice. BLOOMBERG 

Freedom Convoy: Police move in on Ottawa protesters Police moved in to arrest Canadian protesters in downtown Ottawa Friday morning, with the goal of ending weekslong demonstrations that have transformed into a referendum on the country’s COVID-19 restrictions and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s handling of the pandemic. Hundreds of officers began handcuffing protesters and towing away vehicles as truckers honked defiantly. Ottawa police tweeted late Friday night that there have been no serious injuries or deaths. Police also set up a secured area within Ottawa’s downtown core and announced that “[o]nly those with an exception or who live/work there are allowed into the Secured Area.” Anyone else remaining in or attempting to enter the area, police said, “will be subject to arrest.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Putin orders nuclear weapons drills Russian President Vladimir Putin gave the order Saturday for his country’s military to begin a series of drills involving its nuclear arsenal. The exercises will include ballistic and cruise missile launches as well as nuclear-capable bombers and warships from the Black Sea Fleet. This latest show of force comes after President Biden warned on Friday that he is “convinced” Putin has decided to invade Ukraine. The Russian-backed separatists who control part of eastern Ukraine are also preparing for war. On Friday, separatist leaders, warning of an imminent Ukrainian offensive, told 700,000 women and children to evacuate the region. On Saturday, they called on all military-age men to register to fight. REUTERS 

Daunte Wright’s family ‘very disappointed’ by Kim Potter sentencing Former Minnesota police officer Kim Potter has received a two-year sentence for the killing of Daunte Wright. Judge Regina Chu during a hearing on Friday announced a 24-month sentence for Potter, 16 months of which she will serve in prison and the rest she will serve on supervised release. Prosecutors had pushed for a seven-year sentence. Potter was found guilty in December on charges of first-degree and second-degree manslaughter after she fatally shot Wright, a 20-year-old Black man, during a traffic stop in April 2021. She says she mistook her gun for her taser. Daunte’s mother Katie Wright, who is white, said Chu had been swayed by Potter’s “white women tears.” THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Judge won’t throw out Jan. 6 incitement lawsuits against Trump Former President Donald Trump’s motion to dismiss lawsuits accusing him of inciting the Jan. 6 Capitol failed on Friday. Trump faces three lawsuits, one from Democratic members of Congress and two others from police officers. The Supreme Court ruled in 1982 that presidents are immune from lawsuits stemming from their officials acts, but Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Trump’s speech on Jan. 6 was outside the scope of his presidential duties. Mehta also seemed sympathetic to the accusations of incitement. “President Trump’s January 6 Rally Speech was akin to telling an excited mob that corn-dealers starve the poor in front of the corn-dealer’s home,” he wrote in his decision. REUTERS

Harris to meet with Ukrainian president in Munich Vice President Kamala Harris is scheduled to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz at the Munich Security Conference on Saturday. In a speech delivered the same day, Harris warned that the U.S. and NATO would respond to a Russian invasion of Ukraine with “far-reaching financial sanctions and export controls” that “will target Russia’s financial institutions and key industries” and “inflict great damage.” She told Eastern European allies on Friday that “our greatest strength is our unity.” Zelensky has faced criticism for leaving Ukraine when an invasion might commence any day, but President Biden said Friday that it was “a judgment for [Zelensky] to make.” CNN 

IOC president offers ‘rare’ criticism of China over official’s comments on Taiwan, Xinjiang The president of the International Olympic Committee — Thomas Bach — offered what has been described as a “rare” criticism of a Chinese Olympic official during a news conference on Friday. Bach said he reminded the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games of “the unequivocal commitment to remain politically neutral as it is required by the Olympic charter.” Rule 50 of the Olympic charter prohibits any “political, religious, or racial propaganda” at the Olympics. Beijing Olympics spokesperson Yan Jiarong said Thursday that “Taiwan is an indivisible part of China” and that reports of genocide and forced labor in China’s Xinjiang region are “based on lies.” THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Defense rests in hate crimes trial of men who killed Ahmaud Arbery The defense rested Friday after calling only one witness in the federal hate crimes trial of Gregory McMichael, Travis McMichael, and William Bryan, who were convicted in November of murdering Ahmaud Arbery. The defense argued the three white men who chased Arbery down in pick-up trucks and shot him while he was out jogging, were motivated by concerns about neighborhood crime, not racial animus. The prosecution called 20 witnesses, who said the three men routinely made racist remarks. One witness said Gregory McMichael told her, “All these Blacks are nothing but trouble. I wish they’d all die.” Another said Travis McMichael called her a “n—-rlover” after learning she’d once dated a Black man. CNN 

2022 Olympics: U.S. men’s curling team fails to medal After winning gold in 2018 and becoming internet sensations in the process, the U.S. men’s curling team came up short in the 2022 Olympics, placing fourth. The beloved Midwestern dads lost to Great Britain in the semifinals on Thursday and to Canada in Friday’s bronze medal game. “If you have people you enjoy traveling with and hanging around with, the curling is a bonus … And winning in curling is even a bigger bonus,” American team leader John Shuster said. The British team went on to defeat Sweden and win the gold medal. THE GUARDIAN 

Friday,  February 18th, 2022 

The Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic order mandatory mass evacuations of civilians from their respective capital cities, Donetsk and Luhansk. Around 700,000 people are expected to be evacuated to Russia with the first buses carrying civilians to the Russian border already travelling to Rostov Oblast. Russian President Vladimir Putin orders lump-sum allowances of 10,000 rubles (130 US dollars) to be paid to refugees from Donbas. (MSN) (TASS) 

UAZ-469 jeep is blown up outside of a building of the Donetsk People’s Republic government in Donetsk city. No injuries are reported. (The Jerusalem Post) 

Russia confirms that the Druzhba pipeline is on fire in rebel-held Luhansk Oblast after a massive explosion cut off gas to almost a hundred households. The pipeline is one of Russia’s main pipelines used to transport oil to the European Union although transit supplies to Europe were not affected and continue as usual. (Reuters) 

Additional explosions are reported in Luhansk. The Luhansk People’s Republic authorities state that a gas station has been blown up.  (National Post) 

The British government relocates its embassy from Kyiv to the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, and again urges its citizens to leave the country while they still can. (Reuters) 

Estonia delivers a shipment of U.S.-made FGM-148 Javelin anti-tank missiles to Ukraine. (Reuters) 

U.S. President Joe Biden says that Vladimir Putin will launch a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in the “coming days” and that Russian troops will try to capture the capital Kyiv.  (Mirror) 

Anti-war protesters gather in Burlington, Vermont to call for a peaceful solution to the ongoing conflict amidst fears of a war with Ukraine. (WCAX-TV) 

Mali’s ruling military junta demands that French forces leave the country “without delay” after French President Emmanuel Macron announced a withdrawal of troops in an “orderly fashion” in the coming months. (France 24) 

Denmark recalls its frigate HDMS Esbern Snare from the Gulf of Guinea following a request from NATO to increase readiness and contribute to deterrence in Europe. The warship has been conducting anti-piracy measures in the Gulf since October. (The Local) 

Israel’s Iron Dome fails to intercept a Hezbollah-operated military drone from Lebanon that penetrated seventy kilometers into Israeli airspace. The drone flew for forty minutes before returning to Lebanon. Israeli jets fly at very low altitude over Beirut in response to the incident. (Times of Israel) 

At least nine people are killed in Belgium, Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland and the United Kingdom as Storm Eunice impacts northwestern Europe. (BBC News)  

England records a record wind gust of 122 mph (196 kmh) on the Isle of Wight in the English Channel. (Reuters) 

The Grain Power Station in Kent, England, goes offline following the collapse of one of its towers and the roof of The O2 Arena in London is severely damaged due to high winds.(ITV News)  

The roof of the ADO Den Haag Stadium, in The Hague, the Netherlands, is severely damaged. (The Guardian) 

Eleven people are missing after a ferry travelling between Greece and Italy catches fire. (Reuters) 

India and the United Arab Emirates sign a free trade agreement over digital goods, raw materials, and apparels. It is the first major trade deal signed by India since Prime Minister Narendra Modi came into power in 2014. (Moneycontrol) 

U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin announces the sale of 250 M1 Abrams main battle tanks to Poland amid tensions with Russia. The Polish Land Forces will become the first European military to operate the American M1 Abrams. (Reuters) 

The Ottawa Police Service makes over 100 arrests, including the arrest of protest organizer Pat King. Police accuse protestors of assaulting officers with one person being arrested after allegedly throwing a bicycle at a horse with a mounted officer on it. (CBC News)  

The End Saturday 

Biden says Russia is creating an ‘excuse’ to invade Ukraine President Biden said Thursday there was a strong chance Russia would invade Ukraine “in the next several days,” warning that Moscow was “engaged in a false flag operation to have an excuse to go in.” Biden said Russian-backed separatists had created “a big provocation” with shelling in eastern Ukraine. The Ukrainian government and separatists accused each other of violating a cease-fire. Russia expelled the No. 2 diplomat at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow without immediately saying why. Separately, Russia said in a written statement that the U.S. Jan. 26 refusal to accept Russia’s demand to halt NATO expansion in Eastern Europe left Moscow with no option but to respond, including with “military-technical measures.” NBC NEWS 

Canadian police arrest 2 organizers of Freedom Convoy protest Canadian police late Thursday started arresting organizers of the so-called Freedom Convoy that has been clogging streets in the capital city, Ottawa, near Parliament, for more than two weeks. A spokesperson for Freedom Convoy 2022, one of the main groups behind the coronavirus-restriction protest, said leaders Tamara Lich and Chris Barber had been arrested, with Lich charged with “aiding and abetting mischief.” Ottawa police did not immediately comment. The report of the arrests came shortly after authorities promised the “imminent” end of the demonstration. Truckers have paralyzed Ottawa’s downtown for weeks, blocking streets with semi-trucks and blaring horns in protest of restrictions, including vaccine mandates for drivers returning across the U.S.-Canada border. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Florida House passes 15-week abortion ban The Florida House on Thursday passed a bill seeking to ban abortions in the state after 15 weeks of pregnancy. Republicans pushed the bill through in a party-line, 78-39 vote. The Senate, also controlled by the GOP, is expected to promptly take up the proposal and send it to Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) for his signature. The proposal would establish the state’s strictest abortion restrictions since the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that established women’s right to abortion access nationwide. Florida is one of an increasing number of Republican-dominated state legislatures to propose or enact laws setting up challenges to Roe and other Supreme Court precedents, which have protected the right to abortion access until fetal viability at about 24 weeks. THE FLORIDA TIMES-UNION 

73 percent of Americans have Omicron immunity The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington estimated Thursday that 73 percent of Americans are immune to the Omicron coronavirus variant. “We have been exposed to this virus and we know how to deal with it,” said Ali Mokdad, a professor of health metrics sciences at the university. New infections and hospitalizations have fallen sharply from the Omicron peak. Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s top health adviser, said the nation now needs to focus on balancing the need to protect people from COVID-19 with increasing pandemic fatigue. People “are just up to here with COVID, they just really need to get their life back,” Fauci told Reuters. “You don’t want to be reckless and throw everything aside, but you’ve got to start inching toward that.” REUTERS 

Former NYT columnist Nicholas Kristof ineligible to run for Oregon governor  The Oregon state Supreme Court ruled Thursday that former New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof is ineligible to run for governor this year. Kristof announced his candidacy for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in October, after leaving the Times. In January, Oregon Secretary of State Shemia Fagan said he was not eligible because of a rule requiring candidates to have lived in the state for three years before the election. Kristof, who lived in New York until December 2020, initially said state officials were trying to keep him off the ballot because of his willingness to challenge the status quo. On Thursday, he thanked the justices for considering the matter, saying he would “respect the court’s decision and will not pursue this further.” AXIOS 

Brazil death toll from floods, mudslides reaches 117 The death toll in floods and mudslides that demolished homes and cars in the Brazilian mountain town of Petropolis rose to at least 117 on Thursday as search crews continued to sift through the wreckage. Another 116 people remained missing in the historic German-influenced town, so it was still impossible to know how many people died. “We don’t yet know the full scale of this,” Mayor Rubens Bomtempo said in the aftermath of the Tuesday landslides. Videos posted on social media showed mud and water crashing through the town and carrying away houses and vehicles. One video showed two buses disappearing into a river as passengers scrambled out windows, some only to be swept away. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Netflix announces 5th and final season of ‘Stranger Things’ Netflix announced Thursday that its science-fiction megahit Stranger Things will be renewed for a fifth season, but it will be the show’s last. Season four will come out in two parts this year, with “Volume 1” making its debut on May 27, followed by “Volume 2” starting July 1. It has been three years since the third season of the drama, set in the 1980s. “Seven years ago, we planned out the complete story arc for Stranger Things,” creators Matt and Ross Duffer wrote in an open letter to fans. “At the time, we predicted the story would last four to five seasons. It proved too large to tell in four but — as you’ll see for yourselves — we are now hurtling toward our finale.” THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 

Russia’s Kamila Valieva fails to medal after doping controversy Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva had a rare error-filled long-program performance on Thursday, falling into fourth place and failing to win a medal. Valieva botched her first four jumps, and later fell while attempting a quad toe loop, finishing fifth in the long program and dropping out of medal contention. Her Russian teammates Anna Shcherbakova and Alexandra Trusova took gold and silver, respectively, and Kaori Sakamoto of Japan won bronze. It was an unexpected finish following the 15-year-old Russian star’s doping controversy. Valieva, who had been favored to win the gold, had tested positive for a performance-enhancing heart drug before the Games. She was suspended but won an appeal to be allowed to skate. Her case remains unresolved. USA TODAY 

Walmart reports a strong quarter despite inflation Walmart reported quarterly earnings that beat analysts’ expectations on Thursday. The retail giant also announced that it would boost its . The news sent Walmart shares climbing by nearly 2 percent early in the day, although they closed down by 0.1 percent. Walmart said holiday shopping was strong and that its focus on value was helping it attract customers worried about rising prices of groceries and other products across the country. “We know that consumers are focused on inflation, and we’re continuing to watch key item pricing to ensure that we help them through this,” Chief Financial Officer Brett Biggs said. “This type of environment plays to our strengths.”  CNBC 

Appeals court says workers face irreparable harm under United Airlines vaccine mandate A divided federal appeals court panel in New Orleans ruled Thursday that a United Airlines pilot and a flight attendant will suffer irreparable harm due to the airline’s coronavirus vaccine mandate. The 2-1 ruling leaves the mandate in place but sends the case back to a lower court judge in Texas to consider suspending it until the challenge is resolved. The policy forces United employees to get vaccinated or go on leave, which “is an impossible choice for plaintiffs who want to remain faithful but must put food on the table,” judges Jennifer Walker Elrod and Andrew Oldham wrote in the majority opinion. Judge Jerry E. Smith dissented, saying the company offered to accommodate workers’ religious objections by offering them alternative jobs. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Tesla says regulators are harassing Elon Musk Tesla attorneys on Thursday filed a letter with a federal judge accusing the Securities and Exchange Commission of harassing CEO Elon Musk over his compliance with a 2018 regulatory settlement over his use of social media. The lawyers said the regulator was conducting unfounded investigations of Musk and the electric-car company, “largely because Mr. Musk remains an outspoken critic of the government,” attorney Alex Spiro wrote in the letter to U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan. Also on Thursday, U.S. auto safety regulators have launched another investigation of Tesla after receiving 354 complaints from owners about “phantom braking” in Tesla Models 3 and Y over the past nine months. No crashes or injuries were linked to the issue. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 


Brad Pitt sues Angelina Jolie over sale of her interest in their winery We have another Brangelina legal battle on our hands, which this time pertains to a winery and a … Russian oligarch? Brad Pitt is suing his ex-wife, Angelina Jolie, for allegedly secretly selling her interest in a winery they owned together. Pitt and Jolie bought the Chateau Miraval winery in France in 2008, and Pitt reportedly says they had an understanding they wouldn’t sell their interests in it without one another’s consent. But he now alleges Jolie didn’t get his approval before selling hers to Tenute del Mondo, a company controlled by Russian oligarch Yuri Shefler, and he’s seeking for the deal to be undone. “She sold her interest with the knowledge and intention that Shefler and his affiliates would seek to control the business to which Pitt had devoted himself and to undermine Pitt’s investment,” the lawsuit said. This comes after years of the two battling in court for custody of their children — and a source close to Pitt claimed to TMZ, “Unfortunately, this is another example of the same person disregarding her legal and ethical obligations.”  ROLLING STONE 

Kelly Clarkson files to change her name to Kelly Brianne Kelly Clarkson is looking to change her name, and no, it’s not to Kelly Skywalker. The singer and daytime talk show host has filed documents seeking to legally change her name from Kelly Clarkson to Kelly Brianne amid her divorce from Brandon Blackstock. Brianne is Clarkson’s middle name, and she wrote in the court documents that “my new name more fully reflects who I am.” The American Idol alum filed for divorce from Blackstock, with whom she shares two children, in 2020, and she was declared legally single last year. In 2021, she had her name legally changed back to Kelly Clarkson, dropping Blackstock, though she was still using Clarkson professionally before that. If her request is approved, it’s unclear whether she’ll still professionally go by Kelly Clarkson. If not, presumably her eponymous talk show would need an update, too — unless the plan is for The Kelly Clarkson Show to be permanently hosted by someone not named Kelly Clarkson. Either way, it’s safe to say that legally speaking, she’s so moving on from that name, yeah, yeah. LOS ANGELES TIMES 

Kanye West’s new album will apparently only be available on a $200 device If your main complaint about the original Donda album was that you weren’t listening to it on a needlessly expensive device, well, Kanye West has the sequel for you. West took to Instagram, not to continue harassing his ex-wife but to announce that his new album, Donda 2, will not be available to stream on Apple Music, Amazon, Spotify, or YouTube. Instead, West said it will “only be available on my own platform,” the Stem Player. He appeared to be indicating that fans would have to buy this special device, which costs $200 and allows users to “customize any song,” to listen to the album. Fans were pretty annoyed by the news, with one writing on Reddit that “there’s not a f—ing chance in hell I’m paying $200 to listen to one of his albums,” though some suggested West might just make it available to stream on the Stem Player website and not require the device. Of course, this is all based on the assumption that Donda 2 will actually get released, which given West’s reputation for delays is fairly questionable. BLOOMBERG 

Bob Saget shows up posthumously as a chef in a rap video Bob Saget has made one last posthumous appearance — and there’s almost no way you’d have seen it coming. Desiigner dropped a new music video Friday, “Bakin,” featuring a surprise appearance by Saget as a chef flipping bacon. Why not? It’s not just a quick five-second cameo, either — he’s actually in a lot of the video, co-starring with pornstar Kendra Sunderland. The video ends with a tribute to Saget, who died in January at 65, as well as more than a minute of behind-the-scenes footage of him on the set in December. “I’m thrilled to be here,” he says. DJ Whoo Kid, who’s featured on the song, explained to Rolling Stone, “We needed a chef for the video and I remember thinking, ‘Who the f— is gonna be the chef who can make it weird?’” Desiigner, who said Saget “used to rock me to sleep at night” via Full House re-runs on Nick at Nite, also declared, “We want to turn this up for Bob, you could say this is a going home party for him.”  ROLLING STONE 

2022 Oscars to require vaccine — but not for performers and presenters In classic Oscars fashion, the Academy has walked back a controversial decision, but in a way that no one is really happy with. Last week, The Hollywood Reporter revealed the 2022 Oscars would have no COVID-19 vaccine requirement, news that immediately sparked backlash. But The New York Times now reports the Academy will, in fact, require guests, including all nominees, to show proof of vaccination and two negative tests. But here’s the strange part: performers and presenters won’t have to show proof of vaccination and will just need to get tested. That exception led former Oscars host Seth MacFarlane to declare, “Seriously, Academy, you’re higher than Ted.” For those who want to wildly speculate over which (allegedly!) unvaccinated stars the Academy might (allegedly!) be trying to accommodate, it’s worth noting the previous year’s acting winners usually present, which in this case includes Anthony Hopkins, Frances McDormand, Daniel Kaluuya, and Youn Yuh-jung. The Hollywood Reporter previously wrote that a “few high-profile industry figures,” including “at least one of last year’s acting winners,” wouldn’t be able to come unless the Academy was “less stringent” with its COVID-19 rules. Hmm….  THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Thursday, February 17th, 2022 

The Ukrainian government accuses Russian separatists of shelling a kindergarten in Stanytsia Luhanska, Luhansk Oblast using artillery, injuring three civilians. The Luhansk People’s Republic says that its forces were attacked by the Ukrainian military with mortars, grenade launchers and machine gun fire. At least 32 shells hit the city, causing power outages and damaging multiple structures. (MSN) (The Guardian) 

The United Nations Security Council convenes in order to discuss Russia’s military buildup on the Ukrainian border. (C-SPAN) 

The U.S. State Department confirms that the U.S. deputy ambassador to Russia was expelled from the country. White House Principal Deputy Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre calls the expulsion “unprovoked”. (Reuters) 

The EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell says that shelling has begun in eastern Ukraine. (La Vanguardia) 

Senior British officials say that Russian President Vladimir Putin has now decided to invade Ukraine following “changes in the last 24 hours”. (The Times) 

Germany deploys 130 troops and 60 armoured personnel carriers to Lithuania. Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda says that the German forces are authorized to defend the country from threats. More troops are expected to arrive later this week. (Reuters) 

France and the EU-wide Takuba Task Force announce that they will begin withdrawing from Mali, stating that the military government in place since last year’s coup has placed “multiple obstructions” to their counter-terrorism operations. (Al Jazeera) 

Panama-flagged car carrier MV Felicity Ace is abandoned approximately 90 nautical miles southwest of the Azores following a severe fire onboard. The ship’s entire 22-man crew safely evacuates using lifeboats. (CNN) 

British Columbia lifts most of its COVID-19 restrictions, allowing all businesses to reopen and operate at full capacity. Indoor gatherings and organized events are also permitted to operate without occupancy limits. However, provincial mandates requiring the use of vaccine cards for entry into businesses and the use of masks in indoor settings remain in effect. (CBC) 

Governor Gavin Newsom announces that California will become the first U.S. state to approach COVID-19 as a endemic rather than a pandemic. (CBS News) 

Japan reports a record 269 deaths from COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (Nippon.com) 

Tamara Lich and Chris Barber, two organizers of the protest in Ottawa, are arrested by police. (CTV News) 

Australia designates the entirety of Hamas, including its political wing, as a terrorist organisation, and also designates Atomwaffen Division, Tahrir al-Sham and the Guardians of Religion Organization as terrorist organisations. (SBS News) 

The Kuwaiti Ministers of Defense and the Interior, both members of the ruling Al-Sabah family, resign. The resignations are accepted by the Emir, who appoints a different member of the Al-Sabah family and Mohammad al-Fares, the current Oil Minister, to their respective posts. (Reuters) 

The British government ends its immigrant investor programs, known as a Tier 1 (Investor) visa, with “immediate effect”. The scheme was introduced in 2008 in order to encourage wealthy people from outside the European Union to invest in the United Kingdom. (BBC News) 


Jake Gyllenhaal breaks his silence on Taylor Swift’s ‘All Too Well’ Jake Gyllenhaal knows all too well what it’s like to draw Swiftie ire. The actor commented for the first time on Taylor Swift’s song “All Too Well,” which is widely believed to be about the singer’s relationship with him. They dated over a decade ago, and the song was first released in 2012. It was back in the spotlight last year after Swift released an even more brutal 10-minute version, prompting backlash against Gyllenhaal from her fans. But when asked about the song and ensuing firestorm, Gyllenhaal told Esquire, “It has nothing to do with me. It’s about her relationship with her fans.” He added, “It is her expression. Artists tap into personal experiences for inspiration, and I don’t begrudge anyone that.” Coming extremely close to uttering the words “you need to calm down,” Gyllenhaal also said it’s “important when supporters get unruly that we feel a responsibility to have them be civil.” When asked if he’s actually listened to Red (Taylor’s Version), he just said, “No.” Alas, the location of Swift’sscarf goes completely unaddressed — sorry, Dionne Warwick, but the search continues. ESQUIRE 

Olivia Rodrigo is going on a road trip in a Disney+ concert film Good thing she has her driver’s license. Olivia Rodrigo is getting her own concert film on Disney+ next month called driving home 2 u (a SOUR film), which follows the pop star as she heads on a road trip from Salt Lake City, where she started writing her first album, to Los Angeles. The documentary will feature “new live arrangements of her songs, intimate interviews and never-before-seen footage from the making of the album,” the streamer said, and the songs will be performed at “unique locations” like Red Rock Canyon State Park. Rodrigo dropped her massively popular debut single “Drivers License” at the start of 2021, and her first studio album Sour debuted that May. The Sour film will join Disney’s concert films from Taylor Swift and Billie Eilish, and it’s obviously a natural home for Rodrigo given her role on Disney+’s High School Musical: The Musical: The Series. Hopefully no parallel parking is required on this particular road trip.  ROLLING STONE 

‘Stranger Things’ to end with Season 5 after really long Season 4 It’s the beginning of the end in the Upside Down. Netflix announced Thursday its hit series Stranger Things has been renewed for a fifth season, which will officially be the show’s last. “Seven years ago, we planned out the complete story arc for Stranger Things,” creators Matt and Ross Duffer said. “At the time, we predicted the story would last four to five seasons. It proved too large to tell in four but — as you’ll see for yourselves — we are now hurtling toward our finale.” The highly-anticipated fourth season, which has taken nearly three years to come out, will finally debut this summer — but it will be split into two parts. This is because of the season’s “unprecedented length,” the Duffers said, and Netflix says they aren’t kidding: “Every episode is super-sized,” meaning “Season 4 is 2x as long as Season 3!” Who needs editing, right? It’s not clear when the final season might debut, but at this rate, the kids might be old enough to run for president by the finale. THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 

Robert Pattinson tried on every previous Batman suit Holy fashion show, Batman! Before becoming the next Caped Crusader, Robert Pattinson got to walk in the shoes of the Batmen who came before him — or rather, walk in the suits. Pattinson revealed on Jimmy Kimmel Live! he got to try the suits worn by all previous Batmen, from Val Kilmer to George Clooney, and he couldn’t help but notice that “every single one still has the actors’ sweat.” These suits are apparently all stored in a “little cage” in Warner Bros.’ costume department. “They’re like, ‘Do not mess these suits up,’” Pattinson recalled, noting he was “terrified” the whole time. Apparently, the only suit Pattinson didn’t try on was Adam West’s. When Pattinson’s own suit was made, he took some advice former Batman Christian Bale offered him at a urinal. “The first thing you need to do in the Batsuit is figure out a way to pee,” Pattinson recalled Bale telling him. “So when I went to the costume department I was like, ‘First thing’s first, I need a flap on the back. Easy access!’”  VULTURE 

Mark Wahlberg’s family went on vacation without him after he got COVID So this is Christmas? Mark Wahlberg recalled having a less-than-ideal holiday season this year after he got COVID-19 — and his family left for vacation without him. “I’m down in the basement a couple of days before Christmas,” he said on The Ellen DeGeneres Show. “I don’t get to open any gifts with anybody or anything. Next thing you know, they’re still going on holiday.” Wahlberg recalled being in the basement hearing his family starting the car and thinking, “Are you not going to come to the stairs and say goodbye?” They did end up saying goodbye while standing “like 36 feet” away, but the story does have a somewhat less hilariously depressing ending: after getting two negative tests, Wahlberg says he joined his family on vacation a few days later — though he still “had a little bit of a cough,” and “they didn’t really want me there.”  PEOPLE 

The End Friday 

U.S., NATO say Russia adding, not withdrawing, troops from Ukraine border United States and NATO officials said Wednesday that Russia was still adding to its estimated 150,000 troops near the Ukraine border, instead of returning some of the forces to their bases as Moscow claims. In Ukraine, where citizens displayed flags in a show of national unity against a possible Russian invasion, the government blamed Moscow for what it described as the worst cyberattack its defense ministry had ever experienced. Russia denied responsibility. The latest events fueled skepticism about the sincerity of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s pledge to seek a diplomatic solution to the Ukraine crisis. REUTERS 

Biden rejects Trump claim of executive privilege over visitor logs President Biden on Wednesday rejected former President Donald Trump’s request to prevent the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack from obtaining White House visitor logs from that day. White House counsel Dana Remus wrote in a letter to the National Archives that Biden decided to order the release of the logs after concluding that asserting executive privilege, as Trump requested, “is not in the best interests of the United States, and therefore is not justified, as to these records and portions of records.” Biden last year declined to support Trump’s claim of executive privilege over documents and records requested by the committee. Trump lost a court appeal seeking to block the release of the material to the committee. CNN 

Prosecutors cite racist texts by Arbery’s killers in hate-crime trial An FBI intelligence analyst testified Wednesday at the federal hate crimes trial of Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery’s murderers that two of the three men routinely used racial slurs in text and Facebook messages. Travis McMichael, who was convicted last fall of murdering Arbery with a shotgun blast, routinely used the N-word, and referred to Black people as “savages” and “monkeys.” William “Roddie” Bryan, who filmed the shooting, complained about Martin Luther King Jr. Day in 2019, texting a friend: “I’m working so all the [N-words] can take the day off.” “I knew all that hate was in those men,” Arbery’s father, Marcus Arbery, said. “It’s hard, but I’m just glad the world can see this.” THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTION 

Excess U.S. deaths during pandemic surpass 1 million The number of “excess deaths” in the United States during the pandemic surpassed 1 million this week, according to government mortality statistics. The tally, updated weekly, shows the extent of the nation’s health crisis by combining COVID-19 deaths with deaths from other health problems that have risen as medical facilities were overwhelmed by COVID-19 patients and people put off other health care, increasing deaths from other conditions including heart disease, hypertension, and dementia, The Washington Post reported. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recorded 2.8 million deaths in 2019, before the pandemic hit, with 500,000 deaths in excess of the norm in both 2020 and 2021. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Trump posts 1st message on his new social media platform Former President Donald Trump has made his first message on his alternative social media platform, TRUTH Social, which is preparing to launch soon. “Get ready! Your favorite president will see you soon,” Trump wrote in a post shared on Twitter by his son Donald Trump Jr. The site closely mirrors Twitter, which permanently suspended Trump’s account on its platform after the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack “due to the risk of further incitement of violence.” The app, which also looks like Twitter, is still in an invitation-only beta. The full version is set to go live Monday, according to its Apple App Store page, but Trump Media CEO Devin Nunes told Newsmax earlier this month that the app won’t launch until the end of March. NEW YORK POST 

Ryan Zinke broke ethics rules as Trump’s Interior secretary Ryan Zinke, who served as former President Donald Trump’s Interior Department secretary, repeatedly broke ethics rules in office by improperly participating in real estate negotiations with developers, including the then-chairman of the energy giant Halliburton, according to a report released Wednesday by the department’s internal watchdog. Zinke claimed in 2018 that he had nothing to do with a Whitefish, Montana, land deal, but the report said emails and texts showed he represented his family’s foundation in communications with the developers 64 times between August 2017 and July 2018. “These communications … show that Secretary Zinke played an extensive, direct, and substantive role” in negotiations on the project, wrote the office of Inspector General Mark Greenblatt, a Trump appointee. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Fed minutes show talk of faster interest rate hikes to fight inflation Federal Reserve policymakers at their last meeting discussed accelerating interest rate hikes to fight high inflation, according to minutes of the Jan. 25-26 discussions released Wednesday. The first increase is expected in March. Fed officials hiked rates gradually — never more than once per quarter — the last time they did so, between 2015 and 2018. But the minutes said that if inflation doesn’t ease as expected, most of the central bank’s leaders believe “a faster pace of increases in the target range for the federal-funds rate than in the post-2015 period would likely be warranted.” The Fed might nudge up rates, currently near zero, in March, May, and June, according to The Wall Street Journal. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Death toll in Brazil mudslides, floods rises to 94 The death toll from flooding and mudslides in Petropolis, Brazil, reached at least 94 people on Wednesday. Civil defense authorities in mountainous Rio de Janeiro state said an undetermined number of people remained missing, and Petropolis Mayor Rubens Bomtempo said the number of dead could rise as searchers sift through the debris. The city, known as the Imperial City because it was a summer mountain getaway for Brazilian 19th-century monarchs, was slammed with more rain in one afternoon than it normally gets in the whole month of February. “The situation is almost like war,” Rio de Janeiro Gov. Claudio Castro told reporters on Wednesday. There are “cars hanging from poles, cars overturned, lots of mud and water still.” REUTERS 

Poll shows 75 percent back local rules on masks, vaccines, or both Politico-Morning Consult poll released Wednesday found that 75 percent of respondents believed local governments should encourage either vaccinations, masks, or both to access indoor public spaces. Support for urging people to both wear masks and get vaccinated is down to 49 percent, a seven-percentage-point drop since September. Fifty-four percent of respondents said the government should prioritize the economy over slowing the spread of COVID. Only 38 percent said addressing COVID should be the higher priority. Fifty-seven percent said people should social distance as long as necessary to curb infections, while 31 percent said Americans should stop social distancing to stimulate economic activity, even at the cost of spreading the virus. POLITICO 

Canada beats U.S. to win gold in women’s hockey The defending Olympic champion U.S. women’s hockey team had to settle for silver at the Beijing Olympics after losing to archrival Canada in the finals on Thursday. The Canadian women’s hockey team took an early 3-0 lead. Team USA made a late scoring drive but Canada hung on to win 3-2. Canada won all seven of its matches in Beijing, including a 4-2 win over the U.S. in group play last week. Canada also beat the U.S. 3-2 in last year’s women’s hockey world championship game. Canada has now won gold in five of the seven Olympics since women’s hockey became an Olympic sport in 1998. The U.S. has won two golds and four silvers, all of their losses to Canada. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Investors buy record share of homes sold in U.S. Investors bought a record 18 percent of the homes sold nationwide in the final quarter of 2021, according to real estate company Redfin. Investors, driven by rising rents, snapped up nearly one in seven homes sold in the country’s top 40 metropolitan areas over the course of the year. During the final quarter, buyers spent $49.9 billion on 80,293 homes, an average of $433,000 per listing, Redfin’s analysis showed. Rents in new leases jumped by 14 percent in December. “The supply shortage is also an advantage for landlords, as many people who can’t find a home to buy are forced to rent instead,” Redfin economist Sheharyar Bokhari said in a press release. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Disney to develop residential communities Walt Disney Co. said Wednesday that it is launching a new business that will develop residential communities that the research-and- development team it calls Imagineers will help design. The first project by the business, which will be called Storyliving by Disney, will be built in California’s Rancho Mirage, where Walt Disney once owned a home, in collaboration with Scottsdale, Arizona-based DMB Development. That community will be called Cotino, and it will offer estates, single family homes, and condominiums, Disney said. This is not the first push beyond the film and theme-park businesses that Disney is best known for. The company also has a cruise line, and in the 1990s built a 5,000-acre residential community in Florida called Celebration. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Wednesday, February 16th, 2022 

Syrian state media agency SANA reports that Israel has fired missiles at at the Syrian town of Zakiyah, with no recorded casualties. (Toronto Star) 

Cristina Calderón, the last full-blooded Yahgan and last native speaker of the Yahgan language, dies in Chile. (France24) 

A man is killed in a shark attack off Little Bay, Sydney, Australia. It is the first fatal shark attack in Sydney since 1963. A witness estimated that the shark was about 4.5 metres (15 ft) in length. (Reuters) 

At least 13 people are killed after wedding guests fall into a well, in Kushinagar, Uttar Pradesh, India. (CNN) 

Switzerland lifts almost all of its COVID-19-related restrictions, with people no longer needing to show COVID-19 vaccine certificates to enter public venues, due to confidence that infection rates had been uncoupled from hospitalization. (Politico.eu) 

The European Court of Justice dismisses Poland and Hungary‘s challenges against the regulation and confirms that the regulation is in compliance with the treaties of the European Union. This will allow the European Commission to suspend funds from the EU budget to member states that have rule of law issues which are likely to affect the management of EU funds. (Al Jazeera) 

The Alaska Aces, the second most successful team in the history of the league with 14 championship titles in 35 years, announced that it will cease to exist after the conclusion of the ongoing 2021 PBA Governors’ Cup. (ESPN) 

Shailene Woodley and Aaron Rodgers call off their engagement We’ll take celebrities who won’t be walking down the aisle for $1,000, Aaron. Shailene Woodley and Aaron Rodgers have reportedly called off their engagement. “It was an amicable split; it just wasn’t working,” a source told People. Meanwhile, an InTouch source said Rodgers “put football first and they were barely spending any time together,” and Woodley “felt he neglected their relationship.” The Divergent star had been dating the Green Bay Packers quarterback and aspiring Jeopardy! host since 2020, and they announced their engagement in February 2021. It’s been a wild trip with these crazy kids, and after Rodgers found himself in hot water for misleading the public into thinking he was vaccinated, Woodley defended him against the “sh—y media” — while simultaneously insinuating he has a large penis. As Rodgers maintained his vaccine stance and continued complaining about cancel culture to every microphone in his vicinity, a report from People said they were “not talking about their politics” and “decided to agree to disagree about things and not debate them.” We’ll just assume Rodgers got some terrible relationship advice from Joe Rogan. PEOPLE 

Tom Hanks’ son says he didn’t have a ‘strong male role model’ Tom Hanks’ son Chet Hanks is a YouTuber now, and he kicked off his first video with a promise: “I’ve come a long way since ‘White Boy Summer.’” Vowing to go “deeper” and “realer” on his channel, Hanks described what it was “like growing up as Tom Hanks son,” offering the same description he once told George W. Bush at the White House: “There’s a lot of advantages, but sometimes it can be pretty weird.” Hanks said people generally assume he’s an “arrogant, entitled, spoiled brat,” something he says led him to “walk around with a lot of anger” and head down a “path of self-destruction.” Now, he says he’s dealt with these anger issues, but he still ranted against those who “would want to be close with me because they were infatuated with my dad,” declaring these people just “f—ing jealous of me.” He also wished someone could have given him advice about all this as a kid, but “I didn’t have a strong male role model.” In case it doesn’t go without saying, yes, Hanks was indeed shirtless in the video.  PAGE SIX 

Bender voice actor explains the ‘Futurama’ salary dispute Futurama voice actor John DiMaggio doesn’t yet have good news to share with everyone about his salary dispute with Hulu, but he’s providing a few more behind-the-scenes details. Hulu recently ordered a revival of the animated series, but as of now, DiMaggio isn’t on board to voice Bender. On Twitter, DiMaggio explained what’s going on. “I don’t think that only I deserve to be paid more,” he said. “I think the entire cast does.” DiMaggio said “nothing about this is meant to be disrespectful to the fans or my Futurama family” but that the salary dispute is “about self-respect” — “and honestly, being tired of an industry that’s become far too corporate and takes advantage of artists’ time & talent.” The rest of the original cast are on board for the reboot, and Deadline reported the hope is still to bring DiMaggio back but that “the role is currently being recast.” DiMaggio, who’s now headed to work on another gig, says he’s “still hoping for the best.”  ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY 

A new ‘Star Trek’ movie is finally moving forward Is it finally time for Star Trek to boldly go back to theaters? A new Star Trek movie is finally moving forward six years after the last installment, Star Trek Beyond, was released. Director J.J. Abrams told Paramount investors the sequel “will be shooting by the end of the year,” and according to Variety, the goal is for Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Zoe Saldana, Karl Urban, John Cho, and Simon Pegg to all return. A fourth film in the rebooted Star Trek series has had numerous stops and starts since 2016. At one point, Chris Hemsworth was expected to return as Kirk’s dad, and there was even talk of Quentin Tarantino of all people directing. But the sequel has languished, possibly because Paramount has been gun shy after Beyond was a bit of a box office disappointment. Since then, we’ve seen endless Star Trek shows on streaming like Star Trek: Discovery. But can the franchise once again live long and prosper as a film series, too? VARIETY 

‘Brooklyn Nine-Nine’ star Melissa Fumero cast in Netflix’s comedy about Blockbuster  Is there anything more brutal than putting a company out of business and then making a show about it? That’s pretty much what Netflix is doing with a new workplace comedy set in America’s last Blockbuster Video, which has just added a new star to its cast. Melissa Fumero, who played Amy Santiago on Brooklyn Nine-Nine, is set to star alongside Fresh Off the Boat‘s Randall Park in Blockbuster. She’ll reportedly play Eliza, the lead of the show and a dedicated mother who works alongside Park’s character at the store. The series is set to explore what it takes “for a small business to succeed against all odds,” the Reporter writes — in this case, a business that didn’t succeed in large part because of the very streaming service we’ll be watching this show on. Netflix, by the way, already streams The Last Blockbuster, a documentary about America’s real-life last Blockbuster. Jeez, can they possibly rub it in any harder? DEADLINE 

The End

this just in russia could invade ukraine any day now

Wednesday, February 16th, 2022 

Vladimir Putin states that “genocide” is happening in Eastern Ukraine. (Reuters) 

Biden says Russia still might invade Ukraine but diplomacy continues President Biden said Tuesday that Russia still might invade Ukraine despite Moscow’s unverified claim that it had pulled some of its estimated 150,000 troops back from the smaller neighbor’s borders. Biden said the United States and its allies would “give the diplomacy every chance” to deescalate the crisis, without bowing to Russian demands that include barring Ukraine from one day joining NATO. Biden said he would not send U.S. forces to fight in Ukraine, but vowed that the U.S. would “defend every inch of NATO territory with the full force of American power.” Russian President Vladimir Putin said his country was willing to continue talks provided its demands, including rolling back NATO’s expansion in Eastern Europe, were a priority in the conversation. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Libertarian and humorist P.J. O’Rourke dies at 74 Right-libertarian author, journalist, and humorist P.J. O’Rourke has died from complications of lung cancer. He was 74. After earning a master’s degree in English from Johns Hopkins University in 1970, O’Rourke was hired in 1973 at the humor magazine National Lampoon, where he wrote a famous piece of gonzo journalism entitled “How to Drive Fast on Drugs While Getting Your Wing-Wang Squeezed and Not Spill Your Drink.” He would rise to be the magazine’s editor-in-chief. His later jobs included serving as a foreign correspondent for Rolling Stone and an election reporter for Real Time with Bill Maher. O’Rourke also published 20 books, including Parliament of Whores and Give War a ChanceTHE U.S. SUN 

NOAA: Sea level rise to make infrastructure-damaging floods 10 times more common  Sea levels along the U.S. shoreline will rise by 10 to 12 inches on average by 2050 due to climate change, regardless of the impact of efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) projected in a report on Tuesday. The rise will equal sea level changes seen over the last century, and make coastal floods that have damaged infrastructure more than 10 times as frequent over the next three decades, Nicole LeBoeuf, director of NOAA’s National Ocean Service, said in a summary of the report. “I can tell you with complete confidence that these are not the kind of changes that we grew up with,” said LeBoeuf, a native of the Texas Gulf Coast. REUTERS 

Study finds Western megadrought is worst in 1,200 years The megadrought gripping the Southwest has been the driest two decades there in 1,200 years or more, according to an analysis published Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change. The drought started in 2000, and has severely reduced water supplies and fueled wildfires. It was already considered the worst drought in 500 years when exceptionally dry conditions in summer 2021 “really pushed it over the top,” said lead researcher A. Park Williams, a University of California, Los Angeles, climate scientist. During the summer, two-thirds of the West was affected by extreme drought. The researchers determined that the weather conditions were worsened by human-caused climate change. NPR 

Remington agrees to $73 million settlement with Sandy Hook families Remington Arms has agreed to pay families of five adults and four children killed in the 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School $73 million to settle their liability claims, according to a Tuesday court filing. Remington made the semiautomatic Bushmaster XM15-E25 rifle that Adam Lanza, 20, used to kill 20 first-graders and six staff members at the Newtown, Connecticut, school. The settlement marked the first time a gun maker has been held liable for a U.S. mass shooting. “Marketing weapons of war directly to young people known to have a strong fascination with firearms is reckless and, as too many families know, deadly conduct,” Nicole Hockley, whose son, Dylan, was killed in the shooting, said in a statement. ABC NEWS 

Prince Andrew settles Virginia Giuffre’s sexual abuse lawsuit  Britain’s Prince Andrew has agreed to a settlement in a lawsuit accusing him of sexually assaulting an underage girl controlled by the late Jeffrey Epstein, who died in prison awaiting sex trafficking charges, according to a letter from the accuser’s lawyer asking the Manhattan judge to dismiss the case. Under the deal, Andrew will pay the accuser, Virginia Giuffre, an undisclosed amount and make “a substantial donation to Ms. Giuffre’s charity in support of victims’ rights,” according to the Tuesday court filing. The prince “regrets his association with Epstein, and commends the bravery of Ms. Giuffre and other survivors in standing up for themselves and others,” according to a related document. Andrew has denied abusing Giuffre. CNBC 

Rice becomes 30th House Democrat declining to seek re-election Rep. Kathleen Rice (D-N.Y.) announced Tuesday that she would not seek re-election this year. She is the 30th House Democrat to bow out ahead of the November mid-term elections, as the party tries to prevent Republicans from reclaiming the majority in the narrowly divided chamber. Rice, a former prosecutor, has represented New York’s 4th Congressional District since 2015 and was re-elected in 2020 with 56 percent of the vote. She did not immediately reveal what she planned to do next, saying only that she would continue to focus on “protecting our democracy and serving my constituents” for the rest of her current term. Twenty-nine other Democrats and 13 Republicans have announced they are retiring or seeking other offices in November. THE WASHINGTON POST 

The United States suspends all imports of Mexican avocados after threats are made against an American plant safety inspector in Uruapan, Michoacán. (AP) 

Producer prices rose 1 percent in January The Labor Department reported Tuesday that producer prices rose by a seasonally adjusted 1 percent in January, up from a 0.4 percent increase in December. The increase, the biggest jump since May 2021, came as a coronavirus surge driven by the highly contagious Omicron variant extended supply-chain disruptions as consumer demand remained strong, according to economists. Producer prices increased by 9.7 percent over the preceding year, about the same increase as the government reported the previous month. “Overall, producer prices remain elevated and close to historic highs,” said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics. The new data added support for the Federal Reserve to roll back its efforts to boost the recovery to keep the economy from overheating. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Ottawa police chief resigns after criticism over Freedom Convoy response Ottawa Police Chief Peter Sloly resigned Tuesday after complaints that the police responded weakly to the so-called Freedom Convoy trucker protests against coronavirus restrictions. News of Sloly’s departure came a day after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he would invoke emergency powers to end the demonstrations, which have clogged the Canadian capital’s downtown for two weeks, and spread to disrupt U.S.-Canada border crossings that are crucial trade routes. When the Ottawa protest started two weeks ago, police failed to put up barriers in time to prevent semi-trucks from clogging downtown streets. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Family of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins sues Alec Baldwin over ‘Rust’ shooting A lawyer for the family of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on Tuesday announced the filing of a wrongful death lawsuit against actor Alec Baldwin and others over Hutchins’ death on the New Mexico set of the film Rust in October. Baldwin was rehearsing a scene when the prop gun he was holding discharged with a live round that hit Hutchins, fatally wounding her. Director Joel Souza was injured but recovered. Baldwin said he didn’t know the pistol had a live round in it, and denied that he pulled the trigger. Attorneys for Hutchins’ family accused Baldwin and others responsible for safety on the set of disregarding industry standards to cut costs, leading to the tragedy. THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTERVARIETY 

Jury rejects Palin’s libel suit against Times A jury on Tuesday ruled against Sarah Palin in her libel suit against The New York Times. The jury found that Palin, the 2008 Republican vice-presidential candidate and former Alaska governor, failed to prove that the newspaper exhibited “actual malice” when it erroneously linked a map that Palin’s political action committee had posted to the deadly 2011 mass shooting that left then-Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Ariz.) severely wounded. The verdict came a day after Judge Jed Rakoff said he would dismiss the case if the jury found in favor of Palin because she had fallen short of standards necessary for a public figure to win a defamation case. Palin is expected to appeal. CNN 

Tyson, Disney join companies easing mask requirements Tyson Foods and Walt Disney World and Disneyland on Tuesday eased their mask requirements, becoming the latest major companies to roll back restrictions designed to curb coronavirus infections as new U.S. cases decline. On the same day, outdoor music festivals Coachella and Stagecoach announced that they would not require audience members to wear masks, or show proof of vaccination or negative COVID-19 tests. The news followed decisions in the last week by California, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Oregon to loosen indoor mask requirements. Average daily new cases for the last seven days fell to 140,204 on Tuesday, below the peak level of last summer’s Delta-variant wave. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Stock futures edge lower after Tuesday’s big gains U.S. stock futures fell slightly early Wednesday after surging on Tuesday as fears of an imminent Russian invasion of Ukraine eased. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 were down by 0.2 percent at 6:30 a.m. ET. Futures for the Nasdaq were down 0.1 percent. All three of the main U.S. averages jumped on Tuesday after Russia said it was pulling back some of its estimated 150,000 troops massed near the Ukraine border. The Dow and the S&P 500 closed up by 1.2 percent and 1.6 percent, respectively, snapping a three-day losing streak. The tech-heavy Nasdaq gained 2.5 percent. CNBC 

San Francisco voters recall 3 school board members over coronavirus response San Francisco residents on Tuesday voted overwhelmingly to recall three school board members in a display of anger over the district’s handling of the coronavirus crisis. According to initial results, more than 70 percent of voters supported ousting board President Gabriela López and members Alison Collins and Faauuga Moliga. Parents were angry at the board for spending time last year renaming a third of the district’s schools instead of focusing solely on reopening classrooms faster after pandemic shutdowns. Ten days after the Board of Supervisors officially accepts the election results, Mayor London Breed will appoint replacements for the outgoing board members. SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLETHE NEW YORK TIMES 

Tuesday,  February 15th, 2022 

U.S. shuts Kyiv embassy but Russia moves some troops away from Ukraine The Biden administration said Monday it was shutting down its embassy in Kyiv as the United States and its allies warned that Russia could invade Ukraine within days. The U.S. believes Moscow has massed as many as 130,000 troops near the Ukraine border, with tens of thousands of them participating in military exercises in Belarus. Secretary of State Antony Blinken emphasized that the U.S. is continuing to work closely with Ukraine on “intensive diplomatic efforts to deescalate the crisis.” Russia announced that it was pulling back about 10,000 of the estimated 130,000 troops it has massed near the Ukraine border, although it said it was continuing military drills. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

The United States relocates its embassy operations from the capital Kyiv to Lviv in western Ukraine, citing a “dramatic acceleration in the buildup of Russian forces” on the Russia–Ukraine border(Reuters) 

The U.S. State Department tells Americans to leave Belarus immediately due to the threat of war. (National Post) 

Russian President Vladimir Putin says that diplomatic talks will continue. Russia also announces that troops will be partially pulled out from the border but that exercises will continue. (Wall Street Journal)  

The State Duma of Russia passes a bill to officially recognise the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic in Eastern Ukraine as independent states. The bill has been sent to President Vladimir Putin for final approval.  (Deutsche Welle) 

Several Ukrainian websites, including the Ministry of Defence of Ukraine, Privatbank, and Oschadbank are affected by cyberattacks. (CBS News) 

The U.S. and its NATO allies in Europe say that they are ready to retaliate against Russian cyberwarfare on Ukraine depending on the severity of the attacks. (Reuters) 

The Luhansk People’s Republic says that a service member has been killed on the frontline by a Ukrainian military sniper, according to its office at the Joint Centre of Control and Coordination. (Urdu Point) 

Stock futures rise as Russia moves some troops away from Ukraine border U.S. stock futures jumped early Tuesday after reports that Russia was moving some troops away from the Ukraine border, raising hopes it wouldn’t invade. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 were up by 1.1 percent and 1.4 percent, respectively, at 6:30 a.m. ET. Nasdaq futures were up by 1.9 percent. Concerns about the Ukraine crisis and looming Federal Reserve interest-rate hikes dragged stocks down on Monday. The Dow and the S&P 500 fell by 0.5 percent and 0.4 percent, respectively. The tech-heavy Nasdaq was flat. Oil prices jumped to their highest level since September 2014. CNBC 

An attempted terrorist attack on a memorial rally in the city of Luhansk is reportedly stopped. Russian media blames the Ukrainian Defence Ministry and “special services” of being involved in the attack. A video shows an improvised explosive device being discovered inside a garbage can. (The Jerusalem Post) 

A Spanish-owned fishing trawler, Villa de Pitanxo, sinks off the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, killing 10 crew members and leaving 11 others missing. A search and rescue operation is underway. (BBC News) 

Vietnam lifts its COVID-19-related curbs on international passenger flights with no limitation on the number of flights in order to restore the travel to pre-pandemic level. (Al-Jazeera) 

The End Wednesday 

A number of protestors blockading the Canada–U.S. border near Coutts, Alberta have dispersed after an RCMP raid on a “smaller group within the larger protest” resulted in the seizure of weapons, ammunition, and body armour and the arrests of 13 people on Monday (CTV News) 

Chief of police of the Ottawa Police Service Peter Sloly resigns amidst criticism of his handling of the protests. (CTV News) 

U.S. requests extradition of former Honduras president The United States on Monday formally asked Honduras to extradite former President Juan Orlando Hernández to face charges of receiving money from drug cartels. Police surrounded Hernández’s house hours after the U.S. made the request to the Honduran Foreign Ministry. Prosecutors in New York say the former president, once a U.S. ally, used his Central American nation’s armed forces to provide security for drug traffickers. His extradition is not considered a sure thing, because it must be approved by the country’s Supreme Court, which Hernández stacked with loyalists while he was in office from 2014 to January of this year, when he was unseated by opposition leader Xiomara Castro. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández is arrested in Tegucigalpa after the U.S. extradition request. (EFE) 

Louisville, Kentucky mayoral candidate Craig Greenberg survives an assassination attempt at a local campaign office. A local activist is arrested in connection with the shooting. (The Washington Post via AP) 

Accounting firm cuts ties with Trump as investigation continues Former President Donald Trump’s longtime accounting firm abruptly ended its relationship with him and the Trump Organization last week as he faces ongoing criminal and civil investigations into allegations he and his family business inflated the value of properties to secure loans, The New York Times reported Monday, citing court filings. In a Feb. 9 letter to the Trump Organization, the accounting firm, Mazars USA, said it could no longer stand by financial statements it prepared for Trump based on information he and his company provided. In the letter, Mazars said the Trump Organization should retract the documents from 2011 to 2020, according to the Times. The Trump Organization said in a statement it was disappointed with Mazars’ decision.  THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Texas sues over Facebook’s facial-recognition technology Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Monday filed a suit against Facebook parent Meta Platforms over the use of facial-recognition technology, which the company has discontinued. The lawsuit requests hundreds of billions of dollars in civil penalties, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing a person familiar with the matter. Paxton said Facebook’s use of the technology violated Texas privacy protections for personal biometric data, accusing the social-media giant of “secretly harvesting Texans’ most personal information — photos and videos — for its own corporate profit.” Meta said in a statement that the claims were “without merit,” and that its users were notified and given the opportunity to consent to the use of the technology. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Trudeau invokes emergency powers against trucker protests Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday invoked emergency powers in a bid to break up the so-called Freedom Convoy protests against coronavirus restrictions that clogged Ottawa’s downtown and blocked key border crossings. Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced Monday that his province, the most populous in Canada, would lift its COVID-19 vaccination mandate in two weeks, but said the move wasn’t in response to the protests. He said the change was coming because it was “safe to do so” now that the coronavirus surge driven by the highly contagious Omicron variant is subsiding. The province also will lift its 50 percent capacity cap on restaurants on Thursday, four days earlier than previously scheduled. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

The government of Canada invokes the Emergencies Act for the first time since the law was passed in 1988, thereby giving the federal government temporary powers to deal with ongoing blockades associated with the protests. (CBC News) 

Hate-crime prosecutors cite racist texts by Ahmaud Arbery’s murderers Prosecutors in the hate-crime trial of the three white men convicted of murdering Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery pointed to their racist comments and use of the N-word in text messages to assert that the crime was racially motivated. Defense attorneys said the three men — Travis McMichael, who fatally shot Arbery; McMichael’s father, Greg McMichael; and another neighbor, Roddie Bryan — chased down Arbery as he ran through their Georgia neighborhood because of their “honest, though erroneous, suspicion” that he was behind recent robberies in the area. “I’m not going to ask you to like Travis McMichael…,” said defense attorney Amy Lee Copeland. “But I’m going to ask you to return a verdict of not guilty to this indictment.” NPR 

Musk donated 5 million Tesla shares to charity last year Tesla CEO Elon Musk donated 5,044,000 shares in the electric-vehicle maker to charity from Nov. 19 to Nov. 29 last year, according to a Monday Tesla filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The donation, worth $5.74 billion, came as Musk sold $16.4 billion worth of Tesla shares after polling Twitter users about whether he should unload 10 percent of his stake in the company. Musk tweeted that he would be paying more than $11 billion in taxes last year as he exercised lucrative stock options. Bob Lord, an associate fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies who studies tax policy, said Musk would get a “huge” tax benefit by gifting shares instead of selling them because he would avoid capital gains tax. REUTERS 

Parkland victim’s father protests on 4-year anniversary of shooting Manuel Oliver — father to Joaquin “Guac” Oliver, one of the 17 people killed in the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 14, 2018 — protested atop a construction crane in Washington, D.C., Monday morning, the four-year anniversary of the massacre. “The whole world will listen to Joaquin today. He has a very important message,” Oliver tweeted, standing on the 150-foot crane. Oliver hung a sign from the crane addressing President Biden, saying, “45K people died from gun violence on your watch!” Oliver and his wife Patricia are calling for Biden to pledge substantial reform to curb gun violence during his State of the Union address, slated for March 1. Biden commemorated the tragedy with a call for action to reduce gun violence. THE MIAMI HERALD 

Amy Schumer, Regina Hall, and Wanda Sykes reportedly will host Oscars Amy Schumer, Regina Hall, and Wanda Sykes are expected to host the 2022 Academy AwardsVariety reported and Deadline confirmed on Monday. Schumer, Hall, and Sykes will be the first official Oscar hosts since 2018, as the ceremony has gone without an emcee during the past three years. Comedian Kevin Hart was scheduled to host in 2019, but he stepped down after backlash over homophobic tweets and jokes. The Oscars hadn’t hired a new host since. Last month, ABC confirmed the 2022 ceremony would bring back a host. But The Hollywood Reporter later revealed the plan was actually to have three of them, turning the ceremony into a “three-act show, with each one-hour act emceed by a different host.” VARIETY 

Intel to buy Israeli chipmaker Tower Semiconductor for $5.4 billion Intel Corp has agreed to buy Israeli chipmaker Tower Semiconductor in a deal worth $5.4 billion, the companies said Tuesday. Intel will pay $53 per share, a significant premium on Tower’s Monday closing price of $33.13. The acquisition will help Intel capitalize on booming semiconductor demand and broaden its offerings as automakers and other companies grapple with chip shortages. Tower specializes in analog chips used in cars, medical sensors, and power management. Tower shares jumped by more than 40 percent in after-hours trading in anticipation of the takeover. The deal, already approved by both companies’ boards, is expected to close in about a year, pending regulatory and shareholder approvals. REUTERS 

Alec Baldwin sued by cinematographer Halyna Hutchins’ family Alec Baldwin has been hit with yet another lawsuit over the Rust on-set shooting, this time from the family of late cinematographer Halyna Hutchins. In October, a prop gun Baldwin was holding discharged on the set of the movie, killing Hutchins and injuring director Joel Souza. Hutchins’ family has now filed a wrongful death lawsuit naming Baldwin and “others who were responsible for the safety on the set and whose reckless behavior and cost-cutting led to” her “senseless and tragic death,” attorney Brian Panish said. The lawyer also said that Baldwin should have confirmed the gun didn’t contain any live rounds. In December, Baldwin denied responsibility for the shooting and claimed he never pulled the trigger. A clip from that ABC News interview was played during Tuesday’s press conference announcing the lawsuit — and Puck News‘ Matthew Belloni observed, “Non-shocker: Alec Baldwin’s bizarre ABC interview comes back to haunt him.”  VARIETY 

Netflix is making a ‘BioShock’ movie Netflix is heading under the sea. A movie based on the video game franchise BioShock is in the works, the streamer announced Tuesday. Netflix has partnered with the game publisher Take-Two Interactive on the movie adaptation, and The Hollywood Reporter says the hope is for this to not just be one film but a “potential cinematic universe,” because, well, that’s just how Hollywood works now. The original BioShock game was released in 2007, and it takes players into an underwater city called Rapture, where its main character finds himself after a plane crash. Universal was once working on a BioShock movie with Pirates of the Caribbean director Gore Verbinski. But the project fell apart, reportedly in part because Verbinski wanted an R rating. Now that the film is in the works again, would you kindly give him a call, Netflix?  THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 

‘Chip ‘N Dale’ reboot gets an insanely meta trailer Wait a second, is the new straight-to-streaming Chip ‘N Dale reboot actually going to be really good? Disney+ dropped a trailer for the new streaming movie Chip ‘N Dale: Rescue Rangers, in which John Mulaney and Andy Samberg voice the animated characters, and it’s definitely not what we were expecting: the film is going super meta, showing Chip and Dale washed up in real life 30 years after their animated show was canceled. The movie combines live-action and animation, Who Framed Roger Rabbit style, and the trailer includes a fun gag about Chip being hand-drawn but Dale being computer animated because he had “CGI surgery.” Roger Rabbit himself shows up in the trailer, which also includes jokes about reboots, Beowulf-style animation, and even a jab at the terrible Cats film. If it looks more clever than expected, that might be because Akiva Schaffer of The Lonely Island is directing. Could he pull off the rare feat of taking what sounds like a terrible cash grab and turning it into something legitimately great, otherwise known as pulling a Lego Movie?  THE AV CLUB 

Seth Rogen tells a story about crying on a date Seth Rogen’s appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live! happened to be scheduled for Valentine’s Day, so he naturally decided to tell an extremely romantic story about the time he wept on a dinner date. Rogen, who admitted he was a “bad dater” before getting married, recalled taking a woman he was casually seeing out to celebrate his birthday with plans to ask her to officially be his girlfriend. “I asked her around when the appetizers were arriving, and she said no,” Rogen said. “And then I started crying.” The fatal mistake, he recalled, was asking so early in the date, seeing as they still had food and even a cake coming, and “this poor woman had to sit there with me as I wept into my truffle mac and cheese.” If this story didn’t make it abundantly clear, Rogen joked, “I had terrible experiences dating women, and I think the women who dated me also did not have the best experiences.” ET 

Russia rejects an official Ukrainian request for a meeting between both countries and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe in order to discuss the crisis. (ABC News Australia) 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy declares February 16 as a “day of unity”. On this day, all Ukrainians will be asked to display the national flag from their buildings, and sing the national anthem in unison. Western intelligence has cited the day as the most likely time of a Russian attack against the country. (Reuters) 

U.S. officials say that Russian troops, along with long-range artillery and missile launchers have begun moving into staging areas near the Ukrainian border after leaving their assembly areas. (CBS News) 

The Saudi-led coalition airstrikes Sanaa, Yemen, in retaliation for an attack by Houthi forces on the Saudi Arabian city of Abha. A Houthi telecommunications system used to command drones is destroyed. (Al Jazeera) 

Seven people are killed and 20 more are injured by an explosion and fire at a block of flats in Saint-Laurent-de-la-Salanque, Pyrénées-Orientales, France. Firefighters are searching for survivors. (BBC News) 

The Public Health Agency of Sweden recommends that people over the age of 80 years, residents of nursing homes, and people receiving at-home care should receive a fourth dose of the COVID-19 vaccine(MedicalXpress) 

The flag of Mauritius is raised on the British-controlled Chagos Archipelago in the Indian Ocean for the first time in history. Mauritian Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth describes the event as a “historic moment”, saying that it was time for the United Kingdom to cede control of the archipelago. (BBC News) 

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland announces that, as part of the invoking of the Act, crowdfunding platforms such as GoFundMe and GiveSendGo must immediately register with the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FINTRAC) and authorizes banks to freeze accounts suspected to be involved in the blockades. (CTV News) 

The United States Department of Justice asks Honduras for the arrest and extradition of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, who left office less than a month ago. (Reuters) 

Ben Affleck and Ana de Armas’ erotic thriller ‘Deep Water’ reveals steamy trailer There’s growing evidence the delayed Ben Affleck and Ana de Armas thriller Deep Water is actually a real movie coming out. Case in point: Hulu finally revealed the film’s trailer on Monday. The extremely steamy footage shows Affleck and de Armas’ characters discussing their love through almost unprecedented levels of whispering, as they very slowly inch toward each other and both declare “there’s something wrong with me.” The film is described as a psychological thriller following a married couple who play “dangerous mind games.” If you can remember as far back as 2020, Affleck and de Armas dated for a while, and they were constantly spotted on walks during that period of the pandemic when we all really needed celebrity gossip distractions. Their romance began after they met working on Deep Water — but the film has taken so long to come out that they already broke up over a year ago. Surely the press tour won’t be awkward in any way.  VARIETY 

Chevy Chase doesn’t ‘give a crap’ his co-stars think he’s a jerk Chevy Chase spoke with CBS Sunday Morning for a rare interview that might as well have been conducted in character as Community‘s Pierce Hawthorne. The actor famously has a reputation for being difficult to work with, and his last major role was on Community. He left the series after its fourth season following a bitter feud with creator Dan Harmon and after reportedly clashing with his co-stars; a New Yorker profile in 2018 said Chase would try to disrupt co-star Donald Glover’s scenes with “racial cracks,” such as by telling him, “People think you’re funnier because you’re Black.” Asked by CBS how he feels about colleagues calling him a jerk, Chase simply said, “I don’t give a crap. I am who I am, and I like who I am.” Chase also said he has always “hated bullies” — a comment that CBS brutally noted, given his reputation, “might come as a surprise.”  THE NEW YORK POST 

Oscars reportedly tap hosts, ask Twitter to vote on best film The group of unfortunate souls whom pundits will inevitably tear apart after this year’s Oscars have reportedly been selected. Amy Schumer, Regina Hall, and Wanda Sykes are expected to host the 2022 Academy Awards, Variety reported and Deadline confirmed on Monday. Previously, The Hollywood Reporter said the plan was to turn the Oscars into a “three-act show, with each one-hour act emceed by a different host.” In other Oscar news, the Academy announced Monday that it’s asking Twitter users to vote on their favorite film of 2021. The movie that gets the most votes will be recognized during the telecast, and it can be any movie released last year, not just the ones nominated — because when has asking the internet to vote in an online poll ever gone wrong? If all of this still doesn’t result in boosted ratings, don’t be surprised if the Academy’s next step is just straight up introducing a “Best movie about Spider-Man” category.  VARIETY 

The End Tuesday 

Monday,  February 14th, 2022 

 
Simone Biles got engaged on Valentine’s Day Simone Biles had about as good a Valentine’s Day as one can. The gymnast revealed Tuesday she got engaged to her boyfriend, Houston Texans safety Jonathan Owens. Biles shared a set of adorable photos on Instagram showing Owens down on one knee on Monday, as well as the engagement ring, which reportedly may have cost around $300,000. It was “the easiest yes,” she wrote, adding, “I can’t wait to spend forever & ever with you.” Meanwhile, Owens wrote on Instagram that he “woke up this morning with a fiancée,” who “really had no clue what was coming” when he proposed. Biles and Owens have been dating since 2020. They originally connected over Raya, according to Glamour — but although Biles might be the greatest gymnast of all time, Owens told Texas Monthly that when they first met, “I didn’t know who she was. I just hadn’t heard of her, and when I told her that, that’s one of the things she liked.” TMZ 

Kanye West and Julia Fox break up Are you sitting down? If you can believe it, Kanye West and Julia Fox’s romance didn’t work out. The rapper and the Uncut Gems star have officially broken up, Page Six reported on Valentine’s Day. On Instagram, Fox insisted she’s not a “sad lonely woman crying on a plane by myself” despite what “the media would love to” suggest, explaining she has “love for” West but “wasn’t in love.” She also declared herself a “#1 hustler,” telling anyone who wants “the full tea” to “buy the book when it comes out.” West, meanwhile, posted a photo of the truckload of flowers he sent estranged wife Kim Kardashian for Valentine’s Day, as he continues to plead with her to take him back. West has had a multi-day meltdown going after a laundry list of celebrities, which got so wild he had to literally hold up paper with the day’s date to prove he wasn’t hacked. On Monday, West was even telling fans that if they see Kardashian’s new boyfriend Pete Davidson, they should scream at him “AT THE TOP OF YOUR LUNGS AND SAY KIMYE FOREVER.” And ladies, he’s single!  PAGE SIX 

https://theweek.com/donald-trump/1010121/trump-lost-but-his-tactics-keep-on-winning

U.S. national security adviser warns Russia could invade Ukraine ‘any day now’  President Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, warned Sunday that Russia could invade Ukraine as soon as this week. Sullivan told host Jake Tapper on CNN’s State of the Union that Russian troops were in place to attack before the Beijing Winter Olympics end on Feb. 20. “A major military action could begin by Russia in Ukraine any day now,” Sullivan said. A day earlier, Biden told Russian President Vladimir Putin that Russia would face “swift and severe costs” if it invades. On Sunday, Biden told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky the U.S. and its allies would respond “decisively” to any Russian aggression. The United States, which ordered the evacuation of most of its embassy staff from Kyiv, says Russia has more than 100,000 troops near Ukraine’s border. NBC NEWS 

The Los Angeles Rams defeat the Cincinnati Bengals, 23–20, to win Super Bowl LVI. (ESPN) 

Super Bowl ads hint at return to pre-pandemic normal The ads that aired on NBC during the Super Bowl included commercials for travel, autos, and entertainment companies, hinting at a return to a pre-pandemic normal. Cue Health aired one of several health and wellness ads. Planet Fitness, in its first Super Bowl ad, showed actress Lindsay Lohan putting her party days in the past. Medical technology company Hologic had singer Mary J. Blige encourage women to get medical screenings. There were many first-time Super Bowl advertisers, including cryptocurrency exchanges FTX, Crypto.com, and Coinbase, which captured considerable attention with an ad displaying just a slowly bouncing QR code leading to an online offer of free bitcoin for new customers. NBC charged $7 million for 30-second spots, which gave brands access to the year’s biggest TV audience. REUTERS 

Rams come back to beat Bengals in Super Bowl The Los Angeles Rams won the Super Bowl with a 23-20 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday. The Rams came from behind and sealed the win when wide receiver Cooper Kupp caught a 1-yard pass from quarterback Matthew Stafford with 1:25 left to play. Kupp made eight catches for 92 yards and two touchdowns, and was named Super Bowl MVP. After that touchdown, Rams defensive anchor Aaron Donald ended the Bengals’ chance for a last-second win by sacking Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow. The Rams were the second team in a row to win the Lombardi Trophy in their home stadium, a feat Tampa Bay pulled off last year. The win made the Rams’ Sean McVay, 36, the youngest head coach to win a Super Bowl. USA TODAY 

Russia figure skater Kamila Valieva cleared to compete despite drug test The Court of Arbitration for Sport ruled Monday that Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva can compete in the individual women’s skating events at the Beijing Olympics despite her positive pre-Games drug test. The CAS said it decided against barring Valieva from competition because she is, at 15, a “protected person” under the World Anti-Doping Code, and her drug tests in Beijing have been clean. The panel also believed barring Valieva from competing would cause her “irreparable harm,” CAS Director General Matthieu Reeb said. The panel did not rule on the merits of Valieva’s case or whether the Russian team will get to keep the gold medal she helped them win in the team skating event. Valieva is favored to win the individual gold. ESPN 

Erin Jackson becomes 1st Black woman to take speedskating gold Erin Jackson won the gold medal in the women’s 500 meters speedskating on Sunday, becoming the first Black woman to win a speedskating medal at the Winter Olympics. “Hopefully, this has an effect,” Jackson said. “Hopefully, we’ll see more minorities, especially in the USA, getting out and trying these winter sports.” Jackson, 29, is a former inline and roller derby skater from Ocala, Florida. She switched to ice skating shortly before the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics. She adapted so quickly that she made the Olympic team that year, finishing 24th in the 500 in those Games. On Monday, Team USA added to its medal totals when Kaillie Humphries and Elana Meyers Taylor won gold and silver in monobobUSA TODAY 

U.S. suspends Mexico avocado imports after inspector threatened Mexico acknowledged over the weekend that the United States has halted avocado imports “until further notice” following a threat against a U.S. plant safety inspector. The temporary suspension came just ahead of Sunday’s Super Bowl, when football fans snack on guacamole during the game and provide Mexican avocado growers with the year’s biggest sales bump. Game-day consumption wasn’t affected by the suspension, as the supply for the weekend had already shipped. The avocado industry is the latest part of Mexico’s economy to be affected by turf battles among drug cartels, including extortion of avocado growers in western Michoacan state, the only part of Mexico fully authorized to export fresh avocados to the U.S. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Key U.S.-Canada border bridge reopened after police arrest protesters Canadian and U.S. authorities officially reopened the Ambassador Bridge after Canadian police on Sunday arrested the more than two dozen remaining protesters blocking traffic across the key trade route linking Windsor, Canada, with Detroit. The border demonstration, which lasted seven days, mirrored a larger protest against COVID-19 restrictions in Ottawa, Canada’s capital. The blocking of the border by truckers and other protesters disrupted a major trade route and exacerbated supply-chain problems for automakers, forcing them to slow or stop production at factories on both sides of the border. “Today, our national economic crisis at the Ambassador Bridge came to an end,” said Windsor’s Mayor Drew Dilkens. The so-called Freedom Convoy has inspired similar convoys in France, New Zealand, and the Netherlands. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Canadian police say a major demonstration at the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor, Ontario, has dispersed peacefully. The protesters had been given warnings for several days. (BBC News) 

Luján vows to return to vote on Supreme Court confirmation Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.), who is recovering from a stroke, said in a video released by his office Sunday that he plans to return to work in “just a few short weeks” to vote on President Biden’s nominee to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer. Biden has said he wants to name his pick by the end of February. Luján’s vote could be crucial for Democrats to confirm Biden’s nominee in an evenly split, 50-50 Senate. Luján, 49, suffered a stroke in January and had surgery to relieve pressure on his brain. He is recovering at the University of New Mexico Hospital in Albuquerque and will soon transfer to an inpatient rehabilitation facility. POLITICO 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan announces that the value-added tax (VAT) will be lowered from 8% to 1% on dairy products, fruit, vegetables, and other basic foods. The VAT reduction, aimed at countering soaring inflation, will go into effect on Monday. (Daily Sabah) 

Kinzinger says he expects Giuliani to comply with Jan. 6 panel subpoena Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) said on CBS’s Face the Nation Sunday that the House Jan. 6 committee expects Rudy Giuliani, who served as former President Donald Trump’s attorney, to comply with a subpoena to appear before the panel. “He’s been subpoenaed,” Kinzinger said. “Our expectation is he is going to cooperate because that’s the law, that’s the requirement. Same as if somebody’s subpoenaed to court.” He added that “there may be some changes in dates as lawyers do their back-and-forth” and affirmed the committee’s commitment to “not rushing” the investigation. Kinzinger, a vocal opponent of Trump, is one of only two Republicans on the Jan. 6 committee, along with Rep. Liz Cheney (Wyo.). The Republican National Committee punished both for their participation; earlier this month, a resolution to formally censure the two passed without any debate or discussion. THE GUARDIAN 

Lockheed drops plan to buy rocket engine maker Aeorojet Lockheed Martin Corp. on Sunday scrapped its planned acquisition of rocket engine maker Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings. The proposed $4.4 billion deal had faced opposition from the Federal Trade Commission, which sued to block it in late January. The FTC argued that Lockheed Martin’s control over Aerojet would potentially hurt other defense contractors. Raytheon Technologies, which makes missiles, had openly objected to the deal. The proposed merger was announced late last year. It would have helped Lockheed dominate the market for solid fuel rocket motors. Lockheed CEO James Taiclet said the acquisition would have improved efficiency and reduced costs, but abandoning it is best for shareholders. REUTERS 

Canada withdraws its military advisors from Ukraine and relocates them to an undisclosed destination in Europe. It moves its diplomatic staff to Lviv, suspending all operations at its embassy in Kyiv(Reuters) 

Ukraine receives a shipment of FIM-92 Stinger anti-aircraft missile systems from Lithuania. (Reuters) 

Ukraine formally requests a meeting with Russia and the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe within the next 48 hours in response to the crisis. (Daily Sabah) 

Eleven people are injured during a mass stabbing by a man riding a bicycle through Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States. The suspect is taken into custody. (ABC News) 

A car bombing in Ashkelon, Israel kills one person and injures two more. The incident is most likely related to Organized crime in Israel. (Times of Israel) 

Frank-Walter Steinmeier is re-elected as president of Germany. (Deutsche Welle) 

Saudi coalition tells civilians to evacuate Yemeni ministries The Saudi-led coalition fighting Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen said Sunday that civilians should immediately evacuate Yemeni ministries in the Houthi-controlled capital, Sanaa. The coalition said Houthi forces were launching “hostile operations” from ministry buildings. The coalition said it would destroy one of these sites, which it said had been linked to the latest Houthi attack on Saudi Arabia’s Abha international airport. Saudi air defenses on Thursday intercepted an explosives-laden drone heading for the airport. A dozen people at the airport were injured by shrapnel in that attack. Saudi Arabia has been leading the fight against Houthis for seven years, since the group ousted the internationally recognized Yemeni government. REUTERS 

‘Ghostbusters’ director Ivan Reitman dies at 75 Ivan Reitman, the director and producer behind beloved comedies like Ghostbusters and Animal House, died Saturday night in his sleep at his home in Montecito, California. He was 75. His children Jason Reitman, Catherine Reitman, and Caroline Reitman said in a statement that their father “taught us to always seek the magic in life. We take comfort that his work as a filmmaker brought laughter and happiness to countless others around the world.” Reitman’s first major hit as a producer was 1978’s National Lampoon’s Animal House. He became a household name in 1984 when he directed Ghostbusters. In the decades since, several additional Ghostbusters films have been made, with Jason Reitman directing the recent installment, Ghostbusters: AfterlifeTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

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