Cleveland Killing Prompts Facebook To Review Handling Of Violent Posts

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Facebook said Monday it will review its process for reporting inappropriate content after an accused killer posted a video of his apparently unprovoked shooting of a 74-year-old man in Cleveland.

Three posts to the suspect’s Facebook page ― a video announcing his intent to commit a murder, a graphic video of the killing, and a live video of his confession ― stayed online for about two hours, the social network said. 

“We disabled the suspect’s account within 23 minutes of receiving the first report about the murder video, and two hours after receiving a report of any kind,” the company said. “But we know we need to do better.”

Facebook said it was reviewing its “reporting flows to be sure people can report videos and other material that violates standards as easily and quickly as possible.” The company noted it is “constantly exploring” ways to harness advanced technologies, such as artificial intelligence, to stop the spread of videos that violate its standards.

The man police have accused in the Cleveland killing, Steve Stephens, 37, remains at large. He is wanted for aggravated murder in the killing of Robert Godwin Sr., who was walking home from a family Easter gathering. 

Authorities widened the search into a nationwide manhunt on Monday. 

“We will leave no stone unturned,”  Cleveland Police Chief Calvin Williams said at a press conference. 

In 2015, a man posted videos to social media of himself shooting and killing reporter Alison Parker, 24, and cameraman Adam Ward, 27, while they were filming a live broadcast for Roanoke, Virginia, news station WDBJ. 

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Trump’s Tough Tweets Aren't Reflected In Foreign Policy, At Least So Far

WASHINGTON ― The new sheriff in town had a message for North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un on Monday: “Gotta behave.”

What did President Donald Trump’s warning, issued during his first White House Easter Egg Roll, mean, exactly, coming after a weekend in which the rogue nation tested another ballistic missile?

That’s what the world is still trying to figure out.

Three months into Trump’s term, the United States has ramped up bombing campaigns in Syria and Yemen, used a gigantic non-nuclear bomb on an actual target for the first time, and fired dozens of cruise missiles in response to a chemical weapons attack ― giving the impression of an unleashed military.

He’s tweeted that if China doesn’t “properly deal with North Korea,” the U.S. will, and said China will get a better trade deal with the U.S. if the Chinese “solve the North Korea problem.”

And yet, for all of his bluster, the new president has taken foreign policy positions not terribly different from the consensus positions of the past few administrations.

Despite campaign vows to tear up the nuclear deal with Iran, move the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem and perhaps pull out of NATO because it was obsolete, Trump has done none of those things ― aggressive tweets notwithstanding. The dissonance has left foreign policy observers scratching their heads.

“I think he’s just settling in to the idea that he is commander in chief, and likes being the tough guy in the room,” said Eliot Cohen, a top State Department official under President George W. Bush and a participant on his National Security Council. “He has not been tested yet.”

Vice President Mike Pence perhaps illustrated the “talk tough but act more or less the same” approach most clearly during his visit to South Korea over the weekend. At the Demilitarized Zone marking the border with North Korea, Pence declared: “The era of strategic patience is over.” In those remarks, though, Pence also said the United States would pursue its goals “through peaceable means, through negotiations. But all options are on the table as we continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with the people of South Korea.”

That latter part suggests a continuation of the policy under former President Barack Obama, whose administration used similar language in regard to North Korea’s nuclear weapons and missile programs.

Susan Thornton, the State Department’s acting assistant secretary for the region, made that message clear during a conference call Monday afternoon. “We are definitely not seeking conflict or regime change,” she said, adding that the administration had decided “to maximize pressure, economic pressure on the North Korean regime to try to get it to make tangible steps to roll back their illegal programs.”

Ned Price, a former CIA analyst and the NSC spokesman under Obama, said Trump’s suggestion that it was his own idea to bring China in as a partner is absurd.

“The Obama administration worked around the clock to forge a coalition to address North Korea,” Price said. “And yes, the most important player there is China. And that’s why the Obama administration cultivated the relationship with Beijing, treating it as the most consequential bilateral relationship in the world.”

Indeed, distilling Trump’s foreign policy into a distinct and readily explained synopsis is proving a challenge, even for those whose job it is to do exactly that.

When asked about a “Trump Doctrine,” his NSC spokesman, Michael Anton, responded to Politico with a jumble of words that appeared to suggest there really isn’t one.

“I don’t know if there’s a way you can state it, the way you could state in one sentence the Truman Doctrine or the Reagan Doctrine, or some famous doctrines of the past. His doctrine, I think, it’s still emerging, it’s still coming together, but the outlines of it were clear in the campaign,” Anton said. “It was: There’s an approach to the use of force, there’s an approach to putting American interests first, an approach to putting especially the interest of American workers and the American economy first in trade negotiations.”

Anton did not respond to a Huffington Post request for an interview. But in the Politico interview, he went on to add: “All these things, I think, have a coherence that unites them, and the NSC with our interagency partners are currently in the beginning stages of working on a document that’s required by Congress, called the National Security Strategy, that when that is eventually published ― probably in the fall ― will be the Trump doctrine, but it won’t be a sentence. It’ll be ― I don’t know how many pages, but a number of ― a couple dozen pages that explain this in some detail.”

In some areas, Trump has clearly given the military freer rein to pursue long-standing objectives without worrying as much about civilian deaths or negative publicity. American forces, for example, have stepped up airstrikes in Yemen compared to what had been taking place under Obama.

The country received a good deal of attention as the site of a botched commando raid that took the life of a Navy SEAL and dozens of civilians barely a week into Trump’s presidency. Less prominent has been increased American help for Saudi Arabia in its war against Yemen’s Houthi rebels, as well as the intensified air campaign against the group AQAP, or Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

In eastern Afghanistan, the Air Force dropped its largest non-nuclear bomb on a series of tunnels they said were being used by the Islamic State group ― the first time the weapon has been used in combat even though it has been available for 15 years.

And in Syria, Trump ordered a cruise missile strike against an airfield under the control of dictator Bashar Assad after U.S. intelligence determined it was used to launch a sarin gas attack on civilians ― an action that Republicans, including Trump, warned Obama not to take in 2013 after Assad used chemical weapons then.

To Cohen, though, those incidents of military force do not by themselves offer either Americans or other countries a clear idea of future actions.

“I would stress that this is no big deal yet. The 59 cruise missile salvo was a safe, minimal response to an egregious crime,” Cohen said. “The real test will be altogether more complex and difficult, and we have no idea how he will react to that.”

And in foreign affairs, particularly when it could involve military force, clear statements of principle are critical, said Price.

“We’ve seen how this has devolved, with little explanation, little compunction on the part of the administration to explain to the American people what it is they’re doing and what they will be doing in the future when it comes to the use of force,” Price said.

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Neil Gorsuch Sounded A Lot Like Justice Scalia On His First Day On The Job

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WASHINGTON — Justice Neil Gorsuch made his big debut in the Supreme Court’s marble courtroom on Monday.

Aside from his presence, it was a very ordinary day at the high court. The justices released no high-profile decisions, added no new disputes to their docket, and heard three hours of oral arguments in dry, technical matters.

But the new justice was there, beaming as he and his colleagues took the bench, seemingly eager to prove he was ready for the job ― and every now and then reminding observers of the justice he replaced, Antonin Scalia. (President Donald Trump had, after all, promised to nominate someone just like the late justice.)

Gorsuch reportedly skipped a private conference among the justices last week so that he could be well prepared for this week’s arguments. He had to dig in since, aside from an explosive church-state case scheduled for Wednesday, the rest of the court’s April calendar is made up almost entirely of more legal disputes that most people won’t ever hear about.

Before they took the bench on Monday, the justices did one thing that was symbolic in its timing. They declined to hear the long-shot appeal of a New Mexico lawyer who sued Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) over his refusal to even grant a hearing to Merrick Garland — the judge who might have sat where Gorsuch now sits had the election turned out differently.

“Justice Gorsuch took no part in the consideration or decision of this petition,” noted the court’s unceremoniously brief order, issued at around 9:30 a.m. on Monday. The case, creative though it may have been, was always a tough sell, and it’s not surprising that the court chose not to hear it.

After Chief Justice John Roberts delivered a short welcome to Gorsuch, the court got down to business. If you’re facing the justices, he sits on the far right — the seat for the most junior member of the court. Justice Elena Kagan, who had been the most junior member since 2010, now sits on the far left. Gorsuch has inherited a host of duties from her, like opening doors and attending cafeteria committee meetings.

About 10 minutes into the first case, the new justice opened his mouth and asked his first question, which was both thoughtful and lengthy. 

“Where in the statute is that provided?” Gorsuch asked (in the TL;dr version). The court was hearing a tricky dispute dealing with the rules that federal civil service workers must follow when suing over workplace harms. The justice suggested that the “plain language” of the law may compel a specific result.

During oral argument in a securities case that afternoon, Gorsuch brought up similar concerns.

“Why shouldn’t we follow the plain language and the traditional understanding of the term ‘action’?” he asked. “Congress could have used ‘claims,’ which is what you’re saying. It’s the same claims … but it’s a different action.”

For a moment, it was almost as if Gorsuch was trying to follow in the footsteps of the late Justice Scalia, an avowed textualist.

The new justice also channeled Scalia in the earnestness of some of his exchanges. In the third case the court heard Monday, yet another hyper-technical dispute over civil procedure rules, Gorsuch engaged one of the lawyers in a back-and-forth that goes on for several pages in the oral argument transcript. When the lawyer wouldn’t give him a straight answer, the justice seemed to snap a little.

“I’m sorry for interrupting, counselor,” Gorsuch said. “If you would just answer my question, I would be grateful.” After the lawyer, Shay Dvoretzky, gave it his best try, Gorsuch shot back, “I’ll let you go.”

Overall, the rookie justice was poised, respectful and unafraid to leave a mark on his first day. By one empiricist’s count, he spoke more words than six other justices. (According to attorney blogger Adam Feldman, only Roberts and Kagan talked more.) He also seemed friendly with Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who sits directly to his right and with whom he’ll be spending lots of time on the bench ― at least until the next vacancy occurs.

Gorsuch’s big test this week will come during Wednesday’s oral argument in Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia v. Comer, a Missouri case that could test the barrier between church and state. Maybe then, Gorsuch’s inner Scalia will come out in full force.

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Arkansas Court Blocks Executions As State Pushes Ahead With 'Conveyor Belt' Lethal Injections

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A flurry of court rulings on Arkansas’ unprecedented attempt to execute eight prisoners in an 11-day span has temporarily spared the lives of two prisoners, while leaving the lives of other condemned killers in limbo. 

The Arkansas Supreme Court, in a 4-3 decision on Monday, granted stays of execution for Bruce Ward and Don Davis. Both had been scheduled to die Monday, the first of what critics call the state’s “conveyor belt” plan for multiple executions. 

“There will be no executions tonight. We are deeply grateful that the Arkansas Supreme Court has issued stays of execution for Bruce Ward and Don Davis,” Scott Braden, assistant federal defender in Arkansas, said in an email statement.

State Attorney General Leslie Rutledge said she would immediately appeal.

Later, Rutledge’s office said she wouldn’t appeal Ward’s stay “at this time.”

Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) criticized the state Supreme Court for sparing the two men.

Soon after the state Supreme Court ruling, a federal appeals court lifted stays for five of the condemned inmates that had been put in place on Saturday. That case challenges the state’s method of performing the executions. A stay for prisoner Jason McGehee was granted in a separate case on Friday.

In Monday’s ruling, the U.S. Eight Circuit Court of Appeals said the five inmates had ample time already to file objections to the execution protocol, and only acted at the last minute. Judge Jane Kelly, in a dissent, argued the the case was about more than which drugs are used to put inmates to death, and questioned whether Arkansas was in line with the Eight Amendment’s “evolving standards of decency.”

The state is aggressively moving to thin its death row before its supply of midazolam ― a controversial sedative in the lethal-injection cocktail ― expires in April. Hutchinson has said he’s unsure where the state can get more.

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Despite the federal appeals ruling, a state court ruling remains in place that blocks the state Department of Corrections from using pancuronium bromide ― a second drug in the lethal three-drug mixture.

The state temporary restraining order was granted Friday by Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen, who has since become controversial for attending a death penalty protest hours after his ruling. 

Drugmaker McKesson Medical-Surgical sought the order to prevent the state from using the drug after learning the corrections department had obtained it for executions, which the company doesn’t permit. A day after winning the restraining order, the company filed to withdraw its petition, saying the federal ruling that stayed the executions made the state court order unnecessary

Griffen drew criticism from Republican lawmakers for taking part in Friday’s protest. Griffen faces potential disciplinary action and was removed from all death penalty-related criminal and civil cases in Pulaski County. 

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This Hilarious Dad’s Response To His Daughter’s ‘Accident’ Is Perfect

The title for “best dad ever” just got some tough competition. 

On Friday, Ben Sowards, an artist, author and father from Utah, got a call from his wife that their 6-year-old daughter, Valerie, had “an accident” at school and needed to be picked up.

“Honestly, I knew she was mortified, but I thought if I could make her laugh everything would be fine,” Sowards told the Huffington Post.

And just like that, he got a brilliant idea.

He decided to pick up Valerie from school looking like this:

Valerie was waiting for her dad in the principal’s office when Sowards quietly came in and asked to borrow Valerie’s book bag so he could hide something. Valerie was confused by his request, until she saw her dad’s damp slacks.

“She was totally exasperated. But, once she saw my pants, I got that look from her where I knew everything was OK. All dads know what look I’m talking about,” Sowards said. “And we just strolled out of the school like nothing was happening.”

When the two got home, Sowards’ 17-year-old daughter, Lucinda, took a few photos of them. Sowards thought she was snapping the pictures and just sending them to his wife, but Lucinda had bigger plans. She posted the photos to Twitter, where they made a huge splash — receiving over 253,000 likes and 62,000 retweets.

After the post went viral, many people pointed out the similarity between what Sowards did and a scene in the movie “Billy Madison,” in which the title character wets his pants with water when he discovers a boy he has become friends with had an accident. Madison then plays it off like peeing your pants is a cool thing to do.

“I remember the movie and that may have been somewhere in my subconscious,” Sowards told HuffPost. “But when you’re a parent you work on instinct.”

Lucinda backs up her dad’s claim. She said it’s in her dad’s nature to use humor whenever one of his kids is having a rough time, recalling a time four years ago when she fell while skating on a school trip.

“I got a massive black eye and he FaceTimed me and had vividly painted a black eye that matched mine on himself,” she said.

As for Valerie and all the attention the photos got, Lucinda and Sowards reassured HuffPost that she’s doing just fine.

“She’s doing great,” Lucinda said. “She’s learned to laugh about it and thinks what my dad did was hilarious.”

Just call him No. 1 Dad.

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