Death row inmate Andre Thomas who cut out eyes, ate one seeks clemency

Plagued by mental illness, Texas death row inmate Andre Thomas started hearing voices when he was 9 years old and first attempted suicide when he was 10, his attorneys say.

Thomas’ psychosis, filled with religious delusions and hallucinations, became worse as he grew older. His family — beset by a long history of mental illness, addiction and poverty — was unable to help.

His lawyers say in March 2004, when he was 21, Thomas’ mental illness erupted in a burst of horrific violence in his hometown of Sherman, Texas. He fatally stabbed his estranged wife Laura Christine Boren, 20, their 4-year-old son Andre Lee and her 13-month-old daughter Leyha Marie Hughes, cutting out the hearts of the two children. He later told police God had instructed him to commit the killings and that he believed all three were demons.

Thomas was sentenced to death for killing the little girl after jurors rejected his insanity defense. Prosecutors argued that he knew his conduct was wrong and exacerbated his mental condition with drug use. He has spent the last 15 years at a unit south of Houston for the state’s most mentally ill prisoners. The heavily medicated Thomas, now 39, is also blind. Twice since the killings, he has gouged out his eyes, eating one of them to ensure that the government could not hear his thoughts, his attorneys said.

Thomas’ attorneys say he will never be competent for his April 5 execution. They, along with over 100 faith leaders and dozens of mental health professionals on Wednesday asked Gov. Greg Abbott and the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles to commute his sentence to life in prison or to grant a reprieve so the courts can determine his competency for execution.

“Gov. Abbott has the power to stop the spectacle of prison guards leading a blind, mentally incompetent, delusional man to the death chamber,” said attorney Maurie Levin.

But authorities say Thomas’ victims and their families should not be forgotten in this debate and that if Thomas is determined competent, his execution should go forward. The killings of Boren and her children shocked Sherman, a city of about 45,000 residents 65 miles (105 kilometers) north of Dallas.


Thomas gouged both his eyes out — eating one — to prevent the government from hearing the voices in his head.
AP

“A jury has spoken about what justice should be in this case. We are not going to ignore that,” said J. Kerye Ashmore, with the Grayson County District Attorney’s Office, which prosecuted the case.

A spokeswoman for Abbott did not respond to an email sent Friday seeking comment. Abbott has granted clemency to only one death row inmate since taking office in 2015.

The Supreme Court has prohibited the death penalty for the intellectually disabled, but not for people with serious mental illness. However, it has ruled that a person must be competent to be executed.

Thomas’ attorneys will have to file a court motion asking that his competency be reviewed. A judge would ultimately decide the issue.

His attorneys say prison records show that as recently as December, Thomas “still hallucinate(s) constantly,” including “voices ‘from a spiritual prison’ and seeking ‘angels.’”

“He is one of the most mentally ill prisoners in Texas history,” Levin said.

Thomas’ attorneys have said his trial was also problematic because jurors who said they opposed interracial marriage were allowed to serve. Thomas is Black and his estranged wife was white. The U.S. Supreme Court last year declined to hear an appeal on this issue.

Ashmore said the standard to determine if someone is competent to be executed is not “whether he is mentally ill or has hallucinations” but figuring out if an inmate understands why he is being put to death or that his execution is imminent.

Joe Brown, the former Grayson County district attorney who led the prosecution, said this has been a difficult case for everyone involved.

“For many people I hear from, it does not matter whether he understands that he is being punished or not. They believe a crime with those facts demands death. To others … the death penalty is never justified. Our legal system does the best it can in that difficult situation,” said Brown, who is now in private practice in Sherman.

The Texas Legislature is set to debate a bill that would make people with severe mental illness ineligible for the death penalty. Similar bills failed to become law in 2019 and 2021.

Kentucky and Ohio have approved such measures in recent years.

“It would be very troubling to execute Mr. Thomas at the exact time that the (Texas) House is once again considering exempting people like him from being executed, said Greg Hansch, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness-Texas. If such a bill became Texas law, it wouldn’t be retroactive.

Rev. Jaime Kowlessar, a pastor from Dallas who is among the more than 100 faith leaders asking to stop the execution, said putting Thomas to death would serve no legitimate purpose.

“We pray that Gov. Abbott will choose the path of healing and grace by sparing Mr. Thomas’ life,” Kowlessar said.

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Gretchen Felker-Martin tweets that she wants to slit J.K. Rowling’s throat

A well-known transgender horror author who was among the signers of a letter decrying the New York Times’ “biased” reporting on trans issues said she wants to slit J.K. Rowling’s throat.

Gretchen Felker-Martin called out several writers she said were transphobic — including “Harry Potter” author Rowling — on Feb. 12.

“If they all had one throat, man,” she added in the since-deleted tweet.


Well-known transgender horror author Gretchen Felker-Martin said she wanted to slit J.K. Rowling’s throat in a since-deleted tweet earlier this week.
Instagram/@gretchenfelkermartin

Felker-Martin came under fire last year after writing a self-confessed “depraved psychosexual horrorshow” in which Rowling is burned alive in her home.

Her debut novel, “Manhunt,” follows two trans women “attempting to survive in a world ravaged by a plague which transforms anyone with enough testosterone in their system into a shrieking monstrosity.”

They find themselves at war with “TERFs,” the derogatory acronym for so-called trans-exclusionary radical feminists — including the “Knights of J.K. Rowling.”


J.K. Rowling is under attack from trans horror author Gretchen Felker-Martin who calls her transphobic.
Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic

Earlier, Felker-Martin had condemned the murder of British transgender teenager Brianna Ghey, 16, implying that Rowling and others had stoked the violence that led to the killing, the Daily Mail reported.

Police don’t yet have a motive in the case, but two 15-year-olds have been arrested.

Journalist Jesse Singal, who was also named in Felker-Martin’s tweet, blasted the author’s death threat and said he does not understand why she is allowed to tweet about such violence.

“If you are seen as being on the ‘wrong’ team, then if you quote-retweet one just a *bit* too snarkily, that’s considered ‘harassment.’ But the ‘good’ people — the “be kind” crowd — can threaten and harass you and tell you to kill yourself forever, and it’s all good,” he tweeted.

Felker-Martin’s tweet was posted just before she joined 180 activists who signed a letter to the Times criticizing its recent coverage of transgender issues. The Times published a column further defending Rowling the day after the letter was delivered, which angered activists even more.

An email sent to staff by Executive Editor Joseph Kahn and Opinion Editor Kathleen Kingsbury obtained by The Post on Thursday admonished those who signed the letter.

“We do not welcome, and will not tolerate, participation by Times journalists in protests organized by advocacy groups or attacks on colleagues on social media and other public forums,” they wrote.

Rowling has become a flash point for trans activists after she has openly questioned whether trans women should be allowed access to some female-only spaces such as prisons, domestic abuse shelters or sporting contests.  

She addresses the backlash in her forthcoming podcast, “The Witch Trials of J.K. Rowling, and said her comments were “profoundly misunderstood.”

“I never set out to upset anyone. However, I was not uncomfortable with getting off my pedestal,’ she said.



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How Florida blueprint can work for the whole US

In November 2022, Gov. Ron DeSantis made history in Florida: winning by nearly 1.5 million votes in a state known for its “razor thin” election margins.

His platform was equally historic and, contrary to what is going on in other parts of the United States, focused on freedom. By enacting policies to keep progressive politics and woke ideology out of the classroom, taking back Disney’s self-governance and tax breaks, and keeping his state open during the pandemic, the Yale-educated former Naval officer has gained national attention and hundreds of thousands of new residents to Florida.

In this exclusive excerpt from his new book, “The Courage to Be Free: Florida’s Blueprint for America’s Survival,” DeSantis explains how he’s preserving liberties in Florida — and just might save the US.

My first term as governor was a whirlwind. I rejected using polls as a guide for governance because leadership is about shaping public opinion, not merely reacting to it. I made sure to be an active, energetic executive who leaned into issues and was consistently on offense.


DeSantis found his voice while leaning into issues during the coronavirus pandemic.
Justin Merriman for NY Post

When the coronavirus pandemic hit, I consumed the data myself and made decisions that bucked conventional wisdom. We also refused to bow down to the woke mob and fought ideological capture of our schools and fought back against big corporations that pursued a leftist agenda.

We were met with fierce opposition from legacy media outlets every step of the way. But we stood our ground. We did not back down. Clearly, our administration was substantively consequential. How effective, though, was this as a political matter? We in Florida can lead the way on important issues and deliver historic results, but this might not be a blueprint for others to follow if it led to electoral failure.


The governor won his second election by a record-setting 1.5 million votes in a state known for razor-thin election margins.
Getty Images

The November 2022 election provided the answer. While winning reelection was not something that was guaranteed, the odds seemed good at the outset. After winning roughly half the vote in 2018 as an unknown commodity, it was obvious, based on four years of interactions with Floridians from all walks of life, that my support had only grown since then, especially after our battles to protect Floridians from mandates and school closures during the coronavirus pandemic.

At the same time, major Florida elections had typically been decided by razor-thin margins. Prior to me becoming governor in 2019, the state’s marquee races during the decade — gubernatorial elections in 2010, 2014, and 2018 and presidential elections in 2012 and 2016 — had all been decided by a single percentage point, or less. Winning by 5% would represent a “landslide” victory for a top-of-the-ticket candidate in Florida.


Gov. DeSantis signs HB7, dubbed the “Stop Woke” bill.
AP

The political complexion of the in-migration to the state during my administration, especially after the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, was positive. Prior to my becoming governor, Republicans had always had a voter registration disadvantage vis-à-vis the Democrats in Florida, yet by the November 2022 election Republicans led Democrats by 306,000 voter registrations — a 2% registration advantage. Many of these new voters moved to Florida due to our policies.

As we came down the stretch of the campaign, publicly released polls showed me with a double-digit lead. Because this seemed out of character for Florida, political insiders assumed that I would win, but only in the range of 6-9% — a significant victory margin given recent history, but not quite the double-digit margin that would be historic. As election day arrived, my campaign was optimistic that we would earn a big victory. In fact, we amassed the greatest Republican gubernatorial victory in Florida history, a near twenty-point landslide the likes of which had not been seen in Florida in a generation.


DeSantis said he was able to win, and by a wide margin, by “taking the road less traveled” in the face of spreading progressivism.
Justin Merriman for NY Post

It was a dominating performance that saw us winning independent voters by more than 15 percentage points, winning nearly 60% of Hispanic voters, winning a majority of women voters, and winning the highest percentage of black voters of any Republican gubernatorial candidate in modern Florida history.

We notched an 11 percentage point win in Miami-Dade County, which is 70% Hispanic and which Hillary Clinton carried over Donald Trump in 2016 by a whopping 30 percentage points. We were the first Republican to win the county in a governor’s race in 20 years.

While there had been chatter leading up to the election that Miami-Dade was in play, few were talking about the possibility that we could win the traditional Democrat bastion of Palm Beach County. Yet, we ended up being the first Republican to win Palm Beach in a governor’s race in nearly 40 years.


DeSantis’ memoir, “The Courage to Be Free,” is out Feb. 28.

We also garnered unfathomable margins in rural Florida, winning at least 80% of the vote in 16 rural counties — the best rural performance by a Republican governor candidate in state history. Whereas we had won in 2018 by just over 30,000 votes, in 2022 we won by more than 1.5 million votes — the largest raw vote margin of victory in Florida gubernatorial history. 

We were able to accomplish these great electoral triumphs by taking the political road less traveled. We spent four years ignoring polls, setting out my vision for the state, successfully implementing that vision, and producing tangible results. From day one, I was fully prepared to let the political chips fall where they may. That we not only succeeded electorally, but did so in dramatic fashion, demonstrates that doing good policy can lead to good politics.

The Florida Blueprint is a simple formula: be willing to lead, have the courage of your convictions, deliver for your constituents, and reap the political rewards. This is a blueprint for America’s revival. We’ve shown it can be done.

From the book THE COURAGE TO BE FREE: Florida’s Blueprint for America’s Revival by Ron DeSantis. Copyright © 2023 by Ron DeSantis. Reprinted by permission of Broadside Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.

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Rick Scott updates sunset plan to exclude Social Security and Medicare

Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott “put it down in black and white” that he doesn’t support sunsetting Social Security and Medicare as part of his ambitious plan to slash federal spending. 

Scott amended his Rescue America plan on Friday to exclude Social Security, Medicare, national security, veterans’ benefits, and other essential services from his proposal to sunset federal programs every five years and force Congress to pass legislation to reauthorize them. 

“That plank of my Rescue America plan was obviously not intended to include entitlement programs such as Medicare and Social Security — programs that hard-working people have paid into their entire lives — or the funds dedicated to our national security,” Scott wrote in an op-ed published by the Washington Examiner on Friday.

“So, since the folks up here are clearly too confused and disingenuous to get it, I’ll put it down in black and white so they can read it, or have someone read it to them,” Scott added. 


Under Scott’s amended plan Social Security, Medicare, and other essential services will be excluded from the sunset of federal programs proposal.
AP

“I believe that all federal legislation should sunset in five years, with specific exceptions for Social Security, Medicare, national security, veterans’ benefits, and other essential services. If a law is worth keeping, Congress can pass it again,” he clarified. 

Scott’s original plan never directly called for an end to Social Security and Medicare, but it did specifically exempt those programs until the changes he made on Friday, reflected on a website dedicated to his Rescue America proposal. 

President Biden appeared to call out Scott’s plan during his State of the Union address earlier this month, outraging Republicans who either believed Biden was misrepresenting the proposal or unfairly accusing Republicans of supporting Scott’s plan.

“Instead of making the wealthy pay their fair share, some Republicans, some Republicans want Medicare and Social Security to sunset,” Biden claimed amid an uproar from the GOP side of the House chamber.

“I’m not saying it’s a majority,” Biden added as GOP members heckled him. 

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) suggested after the State of the Union this month that Scott’s plan was in fact looking to sunset popular entitlement programs, and he disavowed it. 

“That’s not a Republican plan. That was the Rick Scott plan,” McConnell told a Kentucky radio station.

“It’s just a bad idea. I think it will be a challenge for him [Scott] to deal with this in his own re-election in Florida, a state with more elderly people than any other state in America,” McConnell added. 

In his op-ed, Scott took aim at McConnell for apparently misunderstanding his Rescue America agenda.

“I have never supported cutting Social Security or Medicare, ever. To say otherwise is a disingenuous Democrat lie from a very confused president. And Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is also well aware of that. It’s shallow gotcha politics, which is what Washington does,” Scott said. 

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Solar storm speeding toward Earth could affect GPS signals

A massive explosion was spotted on the sun on Wednesday, and now astronomers are keeping a close eye on how that may impact us here on Earth in the coming days.

NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center issued G1-Minor and G2-Moderate Geomagnetic Storm Watches that will run from Feb. 16-18 due to the continuing effects of the Coronal Mass Ejections (CME).

The G1-Minor Geomagnetic Storm Watch will be in effect through Friday after the effects of the CME that passed by Earth on Wednesday.

According to the SWPC, the geomagnetic storm may affect satellite operations and could even lead to weak power-grid fluctuations. In addition, migratory animals could be affected, and the Northern Lights may be visible farther south than usual, like in northern Michigan and Maine.

A second CME was also observed on the sun on Wednesday, and officials said the effects could begin to impact Earth starting late Friday morning or Friday afternoon.

“G1-Minor conditions are likely on 17 Feb, with G2-Moderate conditions likely on 18 Feb as the main driver of the CME arrives at Earth,” the SWPC said.


A solar storm heading for Earth may disrupt GPS signals.
Solar Dynamics Observatory / NASA

A G2-level solar storm could affect high-latitude power systems by triggering voltage alarms, and long-duration storms could cause damage to transformers. In addition, corrective actions may be necessary for spacecraft orbiting Earth.

Radio and GPS signals could also be affected by a G2 solar storm, and the Northern Lights could possibly be seen farther south into places like New York state and Idaho.


The aurora forecast for Feb. 17, 2023.
Fox Weather

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JFK Airport power outage forces 16-hour flight from New Zealand to make U-turn

A power outage at JFK Airport forced a New Zealand flight to divert its travel plans during its eight-hour journey to the Big Apple.

International flights in JFK’s Terminal 1 were brought to a standstill Thursday when a fire caused a major power disruption.

Travelers were required to travel to alternate terminals and airports or come to terms with having to travel on a different day.

On one Air New Zealand flight, passengers were stuck aboard the aircraft for 16 hours after their plane was sent back to Auckland due to chaos at JFK, according to Flight Radar.

“Diverting to another US port would have meant the aircraft would remain on the ground for several days, impacting a number of other scheduled services and customers,” the airline told CNN.


The power outage caused Terminal 1 to not be able to accept any incoming flights.
Youtube/FOX 5 New York

Passengers will now have to go through a rebooking process upon arrival in Auckland.

“We apologize for the inconvenience and thank our customers for their patience and understanding,” the airline added.

An electrical panel failure resulted in a “small isolated fire overnight that was immediately extinguished,” the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey said in a statement.

“The power outage is currently impacting the terminal’s ability to accept inbound and outbound flights.”


JFK’s Terminal 1 is the departure terminal of 31 international airlines including Air China, Air France, and Korean Air.
Getty Images

International flights arriving Thursday were diverted to other airports on the east coast, including Newark Liberty International Airport in New Jersey, Boston’s Logan International Airport, and Washington Dulles International Airport, according to JFK’s website.

“Travelers should check with their carriers for flight status before coming to the airport,” JFK Airport tweeted Thursday night. 

While there’s been no official word over when Terminal 1 will reopen to its full capacity yet, JFK Airport announced Terminal 1 would remain closed on Friday.

“JFK Terminal 1 will remain closed on 2/17 due to electrical issues as the Port Authority continues working with the terminal’s operator to restore flight operations as quickly as possible,” the airport said on Twitter. “Travelers should check with their carriers for flight status before coming to the airport.”

Along with Air New Zealand, Terminal 1 is the departure terminal of 31 international airlines including Air China, Air France, and Korean Air.

The Post has reached out to JFK Airport for further comment.

With Post wires



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CBO projects US will add $19 trillion to the national debt in the next decade

The US is on target to eclipse previous economic forecasts and add a staggering $19 trillion to the national debt in the next 10 years, according to the nation’s budget scorekeeper. 

In a report released on Wednesday, the Congressional Budget Office warned that one way or another, through tax hikes or spending cuts, the country’s fiscal course needs to be corrected. 

“Over the long term, our projections suggest that changes in fiscal policy must be made to address the rising costs of interest and mitigate other adverse consequences of high and rising debt,” CBO Director Phillip Swagel wrote in a letter released along with the report.

The CBO projects that within a decade, the national debt in relation to the size of the economy will rise to unprecedented levels. Debt held by the public is projected to reach 118% of GDP by 2033 — the highest level ever recorded – according to the CBO.

The CBO’s new projections show $3 trillion more will be added to the national debt by 2033 than was previously expected. 


Congressional Budget Office Director Phillip Swagel speaks during a news briefing on the release of new economic reports on Feb. 15, 2023 in Washington, DC.
Getty Images

The report estimates a $1.4 trillion budget gap in 2023 between government spending and tax revenues. 

Over the next decade, the CBO predicts that deficits will average $2 trillion annually, with tax revenues continuing to lag behind the rising costs of entitlement programs, such as Social Security and Medicare.

On top that, the nonpartisan budget group also predicts that the US economy will barely grow in 2023, after taking account of inflation, and that joblessness will increase, with the unemployment rate rising above  5% for the first time since 2021. 


The CBO projects that within a decade the national debt will rise to unprecedented levels.
Getty Images for Peter G. Peterson Foundation

The CBO ascribes the expected growth slowdown to the Federal Reserve’s efforts to rein in inflation by raising interest rates. 

The new forecast could heat up the debate between Republicans on Capitol Hill and President Biden over taxes, spending, and raising the country’s debt ceiling. 

Several GOP lawmakers, including House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.),  have indicated that they will not vote to raise the debt ceiling – which limits the amount of money the government can borrow to fulfill its obligations — unless the 80-year-old president agrees to spending cuts. 


CBO Director Phillip Swagel wrote in a letter suggesting that changes in fiscal policy must be made to address the rising costs of interest.
Getty Images

“The warning is that the fiscal trajectory is unsustainable,” Swagel told reporters Wednesday about the CBO’s new projections, adding that it will be virtually impossible to change the country’s fiscal trajectory, and balance the budget in 10 years, without changes to Social Security and Medicare.

“It’s mathematically possible,” Swagel said, but added that “it’s very, very challenging.”

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Biden refuses for 5th day to discuss ‘benign’ UFOs shootdown

WASHINGTON — President Biden went a fifth consecutive day Wednesday without discussing his unprecedented decision to order the shootdown of three unidentified objects over North American airspace — one day after his official flack praised him as “the best communicator that we have in the White House.”

Biden, 80, took no reporter questions Wednesday and didn’t mention the incidents while speaking at his only public event of the day, in which he delivered well-worn spin on the economy to Maryland union members.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre also didn’t hold a briefing or gaggle Wednesday — after Biden’s avoidance of questions on the shootdowns was the main topic of her briefing Tuesday.

“We are sharing as much information as we can, as — as possible,” Jean-Pierre said at one point. “And — but we do want to make sure that the Americans — American people understand that there’s no need to panic. The President took this action, as I mentioned earlier, because the objects were indeed flying at low — lower elevation and they were in civilian airspace. And we wanted to make sure that we protected that airspace. But, again, you know, we want to also make sure that the Americans are not — do not panic during this time.”


Joe Biden refused to speak about his shootdowns of benign UFOs for the fifth day.
AFP via Getty Images

Biden, who declined to sit for a traditional Super Bowl interview with Fox News, hasn’t said anything about scrambling fighter jets to shoot down likely innocuous objects since Friday, when he said the takedown of an object near Alaska’s coast “was a success.”

Biden ordered additional shootdowns of objects Saturday over Canada’s Yukon territory and Sunday over Lake Huron — with an initial $450,000 missile missing the latter target, requiring a second shot.

White House spokespeople didn’t respond Wednesday to The Post’s request for comment on Biden’s silence.

Critics question whether Biden ordered the spate of missions as an overreaction after being stung by criticism of his decision to allow a Chinese spy balloon to hover over sensitive US facilities from Alaska to South Carolina before ordering its downing off the Atlantic coast on Feb. 4.

Authorities in the US and Canada haven’t found any debris from the three other objects.

Biden, whose family has extensive business interests in China, barely mentioned the spy balloon incident at all during his Feb. 7 State of the Union address to Congress — despite blanket coverage of the incident by news outlets. Much of that balloon’s debris has since been recovered by the US military.


Biden took no reporter questions and didn’t mention the incidents at his only public event of the day.
AP

Although Biden has not recently addressed the balloon or the UFOs, Vice President Kamala Harris said in an interview published Wednesday by Politico that the spy balloon shouldn’t have negative effects on the diplomatic relationship with China. “I don’t think so, no,” Harris said.

Legislators from both parties, including senators who received a classified briefing Tuesday, are calling on Biden to address the public after the bizarre incidents

“I think the public needs and deserves to know more. A lot of what we’ve been told are facts that the American people could know and should know, without any harm to our national security,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) said after the briefing. “I’ve urged repeatedly that on this topic and others, the administration could be more forthcoming.”

“My phone is ringing off the wall and we got a president of the United States who is not saying anything,” agreed Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.). “Get out there and tell the people we’re in good shape, we know what’s going on and let’s go on with our lives. But for some reason we have no leadership right now.”


Karine Jean-Pierre said that Biden had no reason to be embarrassed about the shootdowns.
Getty Images

New York Times reporter Michael Shear pointedly asked Jean-Pierre on Tuesday if Biden was “embarrassed” about the likelihood that he ordered the military to down innocuous objects — after the press secretary conceded that “the intelligence community is considering as a leading explanation that these could be tied to commercial or research entities and benign.”

“The National Weather Service website says that weather balloons are released around the world at 900 locations twice a day every single day of the year, including 92 released by the National Weather Service in the US, that they fly for at least two hours a day, drift as far as 125 miles… and rise up to 100,000 feet above the ground,” Shear noted.

“If it turns out, as it looks like, that the president and [Canadian Prime Minister Justin] Trudeau sent top gun fighters to blow weather balloons out of the sky, does the president regret that and is he embarrassed by that?”

Jean-Pierre attempted to side-step the question, with Shear pressing her: “Is the president embarrassed by that — the idea that he would take hundreds of thousands of dollars of equipment —”

“I don’t think the president should be embarrassed, right, by the fact that he took action to make sure that our our airspace — civilian airspace was safe,” Jean-Pierre finally said.

Near the end of the briefing, the press secretary was asked if the White House felt Biden was more or less adept in certain settings, such as set-piece addresses or press conferences.

“I will tell you this,” Jean-Pierre responded. “The president is the best communicator that we have in the White House.”

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NYC considering allowing city employees to work remotely: Adams

New York City is considering allowing some city employees to work remotely again, Mayor Eric Adams said Tuesday.

When asked during a news conference if he would consider allowing city employees to work from home, Adams said he has already asked city agencies to “come up with creative ways of having flexibility.”

Adam’s commitment to operating “as a team” and accommodating remote work is a drastic shift from his stance just a year ago when he decried remote work and famously told New Yorkers: “You can’t stay home in your pajamas all day.”

At the time, Adams argued that remote workers were hurting service-oriented businesses that rely on a steady stream of customers.

“That accountant that’s not in his office space is not going to the cleaners,” Adams said during a speech last February at the state Democratic Committee’s Nominating Convention.


The mayor said on Tuesday he already asked agencies to come up with flexible solutions to allow work from home for some roles.
JOHN NACION/Shutterstock

“It’s not going to the restaurant. It’s not allowing the cooks, the waiters, the dishwashers [to make a living],” Adams added.

In being flexible, Adams noted his administration is working to keep things fair for city employees and make sure they avoid a “two-tier system where some can work from home and others cannot.”

“So we want as a team to say, how do I look out for my fellow civil servant to say you have to come in, how do we compensate you in some way? And that is what we need to do,” Adams added.


The mayor’s change in tune on remote work also comes as it was reported that work from home has caused Manhattan to lose at least $12.4 billion a year,
Getty Images

It’s unclear what kind of “flexibility” some city agencies would be granted, which agencies would be included and when that change may take place.

His pledge to being flexible also comes as the city — and the country as a whole — are struggling to fill thousands of jobs.

Adams said the city plans on becoming competitive in their recruitment to fill civil service jobs.


Adams’ commitment to flexibility is a far cry from his stance a year ago, when he decried hybrid work and its negative impacts on the city’s economy.
JOHN NACION/Shutterstock

“We have to be clear now. To keep hearing everybody report it’s a New York City crisis, it’s a national crisis of how do we shift to a post-pandemic work environment.”

Adams’ change in tune on remote work also comes as it was reported that work from home has caused Manhattan to lose at least $12.4 billion a year, as workers in Manhattan are spending about $4,661 less per person in the areas near their offices.

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Georgia hero cop Alexis Callaway saves choking baby: bodycam

A Georgia cop is being applauded for her heroic efforts in saving a choking baby from dying.

Dramatic body cam footage shows Senoia Police Officer Alexis Callaway spring into action when a four-week-old baby suddenly began to choke.

“No hesitation. I saw the baby. Saw that it was the grandmother that had the baby,” Callaway told FOX 5 Atlanta. “I took it. Made myself at home and started going.”

The cop, who joined Senoia police in 2020, rushed into the child’s home and snapped up the baby before administering first aid.

“I’ve been certified since the age of 16 and working with kids and stuff like that,” Callaway told the outlet.

After performing first aid, which included repeatedly patting the baby’s back and turning him, bodycam footage showed the child successfully spit out the obstructing liquid and begin to breathe normally.


Officer Alexis Callaway hurries to the scene and runs into the home where the infant was choking.
Senoia Police Department

“It is supposed to release anything that could be obstructing the airway,” Callaway said of the life-saving technique. “And you are supposed to have them angled kind of downward to help get them lodged out.”

Callaway’s act of bravery did not go unnoticed. She will be receiving the Senoia Police Department’s lifesaving award in a ceremony next month.

“It’s rewarding, I think he was one month old, now gets the rest of his life,” she added.


Officer Alexis Callaway administers the lifesaving technique on the choking infant, as family members nervously watch.
Senoia Police Department

The officer urged others to learn the basics of CPR and first aid in case they, too, could one day save a life.

“Prevent what could have been a disastrous outcome in that even during that time of mayhem, she brought just a sense of calm to that entire incident,” Senoia Police Department’s Captain Jason Ercole said of Callaway’s actions.

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