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Who is Behind the Organized Chaos Now Torching Our Nation?

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Protesters rally as Philadelphia Police officers and Pennsylvania National Guard soldiers look on, Monday, June 1, 2020 (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

Chaos, fear and anarchy have enveloped a nation still gasping for breath trying to extricate itself from  the lethal, imported Chinese virus. Within the past few weeks, well led groups of young people, male and female, both white and black, have suddenly appeared from out of nowhere, apparently from rat holes in the ground to transform this nation into a war zone. Those of us with memories of the attack on Pearl Harbor recall that at that time we were not fearful, as we are today, for the future of our country. We knew then that we would persevere by joining together, fighting together and standing shoulder to shoulder to conquer our foreign enemies. Not so today.

Our nation is in the throes of internal collapse. We are in the midst of a financial hole created by the virus. Our system is struggling to reconstitute itself.  People just starting to emerge from self containment, to go shopping, to enjoy the beaches, to just get out to meet friends again, must now face the threat of riots, turmoil and what appears to be the threat of total revolution currently taking place in major cities from coast to coast….. in our own nation fostered by our own people. We will soon be in another lock-down. We cannot afford, nor do we deserve this.

In our nation’s capital, the president had to seek safety in the White House bunker. Preparing for an air raid? No. To safeguard himself, his family and key advisers from mobs intent on destruction. We watched with deep concern and horror as the historic St. John’s church in that city was intentionally torched. Who and what groups are responsible?

 

We’ll lay it out, as MSNBC,PBS, CNN, ABC, NPR, the NYT and other Progressive propaganda outlets don’t do. Let’s cast the blame on Black Lives Matter, ANTIFA, The Occupy Movement, Dream Defenders, all of whom are intent on using race and riots to divide and destroy this nation. Who is behind this revolution? Who is funding it? Candace Owens, an outspoken black conservative accused the Soros funded groups of fueling the riots in Minneapolis. “My guess: as he did with ANTIFA, George Soros has these thugs on payroll. He is funding the chaos via his Open Society Foundation,” she tweeted.

 

But, in our own city, we have none other than the Mayor’s daughter, Chiara de Blasio, being arrested downtown, during the riots this past week end. According to The New York Post, she was part of a group of unruly demonstrators. One observer at the scene was quoted: “That was a real hotspot, police cars were getting burned there, people were throwing and yelling, fighting with cops. there were thousands of people in that area at that time.” The city’s first daughter gave her residence as Gracie Mansion where we suppose the 26 year old college graduate still lives in the premises paid for by taxpayers. A white out-of-town agitator she is not.

 

We are calling for a complete investigation by federal, state and city law enforcement to determine who and what organizations are behind these deadly riots. We must root these sources out, prosecute them and, if found guilty, put them behind bars. If the nation could endure a two and one half year, 31 million $ inquiry into the fictional “treasonous” behavior of President Trump, we can do the right thing and bring these domestic terrorists, whose goal is to destroy our nation to justice. We owe it to those millions who have given their lives to maintain and keep alive our freedoms and democracy. Let’s clean house and start life as we knew it….again….before it’s too late.

 

NYers Wait Hours to Access Unemployment Benefits Through KeyBank ATM

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New Yorkers want their unemployment money, which explains the monstrous line forming every day at a Key Bank ATM on East 22nd Street. Photo Credit: wallethub

By: Howard Riell

New Yorkers want their unemployment money, which explains the monstrous line forming every day at a Key Bank ATM on East 22nd Street.

 

The line routinely stretches around a block and keeps money-hungry citizens waiting for as long as two hours, according to those standing and waiting.

 

“The weary individuals risk catching the coronavirus, in part, because the state issued them — and thousands of other city residents — debit cards for unemployment benefits through KeyBank, which has only a single branch and ATM in the entire city. The branch in Flatiron is closed due to COVID-19, but one ATM is open,” the New York Post reported. “Some said they endured the line and rolled the dice on their health to avoid getting gouged with surcharges at out-of-network banks. Others said the KeyBank machine was the only one where they could get a daily maximum withdrawal of $1,500. And some simply didn’t know that the bank was part of a network of 1,000 ATMs — because neither the state nor the bank told them when they sent the “Key2Benefits” cards.”

 

“No one could have predicted the wave of unemployment applications that crashed over the United States because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and every state is struggling — but New York has moved faster than any other state to address our backlog and get money into New Yorkers’ hands. To date, we have paid out over $10 billion dollars during this crisis, compared to just $2.1 billion in total last year,” NYS Labor Commissioner Roberta Reardon said late last month. “Those claims that have been outstanding for weeks are ones that we simply cannot process — we have already attempted to contact all of these New Yorkers, and we will continue to try get in touch with everyone who applied so we can connect them with the benefits they are eligible for.”

 

Dissatisfaction is rampant, and with good reason. cbs6albany.com in Albany quoted many residents in calling the state’s unemployment division a “broken system! That’s what many New Yorkers are saying about the New York State’s unemployment process. It’s estimated thousands of unemployed New Yorkers who filed when the pandemic first started still have not seen unemployment benefits.”

 

During a recent press conference, NY Governor Andrew Cuomo offered a variety of alibis for the slow processing. For example, he said that part of the reason that payments for New Yorkers were taking so long is the caution being exercised to see to it the state does not get cheated. “It’s all on the other side of a computer, and you are giving out billions of dollars in this country. So be careful that you are not being subjective to some kind of computer fraud in responding to ‘Susie Smith,’ but there is no ‘Susie Smith.’ Susie Smith is really a computer terminal in some other country.”

 

NYS Troopers Blast Cuomo for “Zero” Support During Floyd Protests

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New York State’s Governor Andrew Cuomo is taking heat from police union head, who criticized him for giving “zero support for us” by failing to tackle repeated attacks on state troopers during the George Floyd-inspired rioting. Photo Credit: AP

By: Emily MacIntire

New York State’s Governor Andrew Cuomo is taking heat from police union head, who criticized him for giving “zero support for us” by failing to tackle repeated attacks on state troopers during the George Floyd-inspired rioting.

State Troopers PBA president Thomas Mungeer charged publicly that the governor has promised to “diminish the rights of your NYS Troopers” by throwing his support behind a measure that would expose the disciplinary records of officers to the light of day. He also blamed Cuomo for preventing cops from working closely with federal law enforcement under the Green Light Law that permits illegal aliens to get driver’s licenses.

“I find it appalling that you have not condemned the violence directed at your New York State Troopers during the riots across the state. In fact, during your daily briefing today you repeatedly used the word ‘ugly’ to describe recent events but did not acknowledge that the Troopers under your command have been responding to riots with unwavering loyalty to public safety,” Mungeer said in a letter to Cuomo, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Post.

According to Mungeer’s letter, “What Troopers are being called upon to respond to across the state are not peaceful protests or voices of reason urging societal changes, these are violent riots taking place around the state including New York City, Syracuse, Buffalo, Rochester and Albany, just blocks from the Executive Mansion. Peaceful protestors do not arrive with hammers and Molotov cocktails, burn police cars, smash the windows of businesses or spray graffiti on St. Patrick’s Cathedral — criminal opportunists and vandals do. Peaceful protestors do not start fires in the streets or to businesses — arsonists do. Peaceful protestors do not gather en masse to openly disregard laws, create havoc and impede on the rights of the general public — rioters do.”

For his part, Cuomo has called for standardized police misconduct policies across America. The Governor said federal and state governments should pass laws requiring police misconduct investigations be conducted by independent, outside agencies – not by local prosecutors. He called on the federal government to define excessive force by a police officer by one standard all across the nation.

In advocating for the release of disciplinary records of officers who are accused of misconduct, Cuomo argued every public school should provide the same level of funding for each child so there are not two education systems – one for the rich and one for the poor.

“The real issue is the continuing racism in this country and it is chronic and it is endemic and it is institutional and it speaks to a collective hypocrisy,” Cuomo said. “We’re very good in this country at telling other people how they should live their lives and how they should act, but we still discriminate on the basis of color of skin. That is the simple, painful truth – but this is a moment for truth. Our challenge today is to use this moment, use this energy constructively and demand real positive change. And articulate what the change is that we want. George Floyd must not have died in vain. Mr. Floyd’s killing must be a moment in which this nation actually learned and grew and progressed to make this place a better place.”

Sobering US nursing home death report as lockdowns ease

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Preston Griffin, who runs First Class Mortuary Transport, wear protective gear as he leaves area nursing home with a body in Philadelphia, Pa. on May 7, 2020. (David Maialetti/The Philadelphia Inquirer via AP)

By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR and CURT ANDERSON

At least a quarter of the COVID-19 deaths in the United States were among nursing home residents, a new report said, a disclosure that came as coronavirus restrictions eased Monday even as U.S. protests against police brutality sparked fears of new outbreaks.

The Florida Keys welcomed visitors for the first time in two months, the Colosseum opened its ancient doors in Rome, ferries restarted in Bangladesh and golfers played in Greece. But as tourist destinations worldwide reopened for business, new rules were in place to guard against the virus’ spread.

“Bring facial coverings, gloves, hand sanitizer, reef-safe sunscreen and personal essential medicines. If you’re feeling unwell, please stay home,” the Monroe County Tourist Development Council, which includes the tourist-dependent Keys, said on its website.

Electronic signs warned travelers to two of the world’s largest casinos about COVID-19 on the first day they partially reopened over Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont’s objections. “Avoid Large Crowds, Don’t Gamble With COVID,” flashed the signs near Foxwoods Resort Casino and Mohegan Sun as cars — many with Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New York license plates — passed by.

Meanwhile, the scope of the devastation in the nation’s nursing homes became clearer in a report prepared for U.S. governors that said nearly 26,000 nursing home residents have died from COVID-19 — a number that is partial and likely to go higher.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 60,000 cases of coronavirus illness among nursing home residents, according to a copy of a letter addressed to the governors and an accompanying chart provided to The Associated Press.

The data was based on reports received from about 80% of the nation’s 15,400 nursing homes as of May 24. But some states with high rates of nursing home deaths appeared to have low levels of response to the survey, intended as a first step toward developing policy changes.

“This data, and anecdotal reports across the country, clearly show that nursing homes have been devastated by the virus,” wrote CDC Director Robert Redfield and CMS Administrator Seema Verma.

The U.S. has seen over 104,000 deaths and nearly 1.8 million infections in the pandemic, both count’s the highest in the world.

And although the first wave of the pandemic may be easing in much of the U.S., that doesn’t mean nursing homes are in any less danger: Experts say in a virus rebound they can again become the stage for tragic scenes of death and despair, as well as a risk for the broader community.

“What is going on in a nursing home can be a barometer for where the virus is,” said Tamara Konetzka, a research professor at the University of Chicago, who specializes in long-term care issues.

Roadblocks were taken down shortly after midnight near Key Largo, the northernmost island in the Florida chain, where almost half of all workers are employed by hotels, bars and other hospitality industries, and many of the rest are involved in commercial and sport fishing.

But even as the Keys reopened, Miami-Dade County kept its beaches closed because of protests in South Florida and across the country over the May 25 death of George Floyd, a black man pinned at the neck by a white police officer in Minneapolis.

Richard Stanczyk, owner of Bud N’ Mary’s marina in Islamorada, said the 76-year-old business’ fishing boats have had virtually no customers for weeks and welcomed the reopening.

“There has been a real uptick in phone calls. There have been more charter bookings,” Stanczyk said. “We are encouraged. It’s going to come back.”

Countries around the Mediterranean Sea also tentatively kicked off a summer season where tourists could bask in their beaches with distancing measures in place.

“We are reopening a symbol. A symbol of Rome, a symbol for Italy,” said Alfonsina Russo, director of the Colosseum’s archaeological park. “(We are) restarting in a positive way, with a different pace, with a more sustainable tourism.”

Macy’s Hit as New York Imposes Curfew Amid Floyd Protests

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People run out of a smoke shop with smoking instruments after breaking in as police arrive on Monday in New York. Protests were held throughout the city during the weekend over the death of George Floyd. (Wong Maye-E/The Associated Press

By BRIAN MAHONEY and JENNIFER PELTZ

New York City imposed a late-night curfew Monday that failed to prevent another night of destruction, including arrests after a break-in at the iconic Macy’s store on 34th Street, following protests over George Floyd’s death.

As the 11 p.m. deadline to get off the streets approached, bands of protesters marched peacefully through Manhattan and Brooklyn, but police simultaneously responded to numerous reports of roving groups of people smashing their way into shops and emptying them of merchandise.

The doors of Macy’s flagship Manhattan store were breached. Police pulled two handcuffed men out and put them in a van.

People rushed into a Nike store and carried out armloads of clothing. Near Rockefeller Center, storefront windows were smashed and multiple people arrested. Bank windows were smashed. Wreckage littered the inside of an AT&T store.

Video posted on social media showed some protesters arguing with people breaking windows, urging them to stop, but instances of vandalism and smash-and-grab thefts mounted as the night deepened.

“We worked hard to build up the business, and within a second, someone does this,” said the owner of a ransacked Manhattan smoke shop, who identified himself only by the name Harri. “Really bad.”

New York joined other cities around the country in imposing a curfew after days of unrest. It comes on top of months of restrictions on public gatherings already imposed because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Enough mayhem happened before the curfew took effect that Mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted that it would move up to 8 p.m. Tuesday. The curfew lifts at 5 a.m.

De Blasio and Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the outbreaks of violence the previous two evenings — which left stores ransacked and police vehicles burned — gave them no choice to impose a curfew and boost police presence, even as they insisted they stood with the throngs of peaceful demonstrators who have spoken out for several days against police brutality and racial injustice.

“We can’t let violence undermine the message of this moment,” de Blasio said in a statement. He and Cuomo are Democrats.

Big crowds rallied in Times Square and Brooklyn on Monday afternoon and marched through the streets for hours. As in previous days, the demonstrations in daylight were peaceful, with officers mostly keeping their distance from marchers. A nighttime march through Brooklyn was also peaceful, and police let it continue for hours after the 11 a.m. curfew passed.

But midtown Manhattan descended into chaos as night fell. There were dozens of arrests, police said.

De Blasio tweeted at 1 a.m. that there were also “real problems” in the Bronx, which had largely escaped previous nights of unrest unscathed.

Video posted on social media showed multiple piles of rubbish on fire on a debris-strewn street and people smashing into stories.

Another video showed a group of men beating a police officer who was alone and down on the ground, smashing him with pieces of wreckage until he pulled his gun and they ran.

After the curfew took effect, police moved more actively to clear the streets, chasing after and knocking down some people who wouldn’t comply as they streamed toward Times Square.

At the same time, the city’s elected public advocate, Jumaane Williams, and some other officials held a news conference in Brooklyn criticizing the curfew.

“In the black community, every time we ask for resources or assistance, they send police,” said Williams, a Democrat.

Earlier in the day, one Times Square demonstrator, Giselle Francisco, considered the curfew necessary.

“There are people who have ulterior motives, and they’re trying to hijack the message,” the New Yorker said.

Police Commissioner Dermot Shea expressed doubts earlier Monday about whether a curfew would be heeded. Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, a retired police captain whose borough has been a focal point for demonstrations and some damage, also had doubts.

“There are real deep, legitimate wounds, and if we’re not going to put the same level of energy into correcting those wounds as we’re going to put into telling people not to come out at 11, then we’re going to fail, and this is going to prolong the problem,” said Adams, a Democrat.

Bystander Sean Jones, who watched as people ransacked luxury stores in Manhattan’s chic Soho neighborhood Sunday night, explained the destruction this way: “People are doing this so next time, before they think about trying to kill another black person, they’re going to be like, ’Damn, we don’t want them out here doing this … again.’”

Monday marked the fourth night in a row of mainly peaceful daytime demonstrations, chaotic nights, hot spots of violence and arrests, with the mayor’s daughter among those arrested over the weekend.

Chiara de Blasio, 25, refused to leave a Manhattan street officers were clearing Saturday because people were throwing things. She was released with a court summons.

Her father said Monday she told him she’d behaved peacefully and believed she had followed officers’ instructions.

Thousands of people have taken to the streets around the nation to express outrage over Floyd’s May 25 death and other killings of black people, particularly by police. Floyd, who was black, died after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed a knee on his neck.

On Sunday, some New York City police officers knelt with protesters. But officers have also clashed with demonstrators.

Shea said the department is investigating officers’ behavior in about six confrontations, including one in which two police vehicles plowed through a group of protesters Saturday in Brooklyn.

During Sunday night’s demonstration, video posted to social media showed a police officer pulling a gun and pointing it at demonstrators on a debris-littered Manhattan street moments after a protester used an object to deliver a crushing blow to another officer’s head a few yards away.

“That officer should have his gun and badge taken away today,” de Blasio said.

Cuomo said some officers had exacerbated tensions with some “very disturbing” actions. Police union president Patrick Lynch said Cuomo was ”wrongly blaming the chaos on the cops.”

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Trump warns of Military Action; Floyd’s Brother Wants Peace

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An emotional Terrence Floyd, second from right, is comforted as he sits at the spot at the intersection of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn., where his brother George Floyd, encountered police and died while in their custody, Monday, June 1, 2020. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

 

 (AP) President Donald Trump threatened on Monday to deploy the United States military unless states quickly halted the violent protests that have convulsed cities from coast to coast, hours after George Floyd’s brother pleaded for peace, saying destruction is “not going to bring my brother back at all.”

The competing messages — one conciliatory, one bellicose — came as the U.S. braced for another round of violence at a time when the country is already buckling because of the coronavirus outbreak and the Depression-level unemployment it has caused.

Trump said he was recommending that governors deploy the National Guard in sufficient numbers to “dominate the streets.” If governors fail to take action, Trump said, he will deploy the United States military and “quickly solve the problem for them.”

As Trump spoke in the Rose Garden, tear gas canisters could be heard exploding as police and National Guard soldiers aggressively forced back hundreds of protesters who gathered in Lafayette Park, across the street from the White House, and chanted peacefully against police brutality and the death of George Floyd.

Trump deplored the violence that broke out in the nation’s capital Sunday night and warned that Washington’s 7 p.m. curfew would be strictly enforced.

But in Minneapolis, Floyd’s brother, Terrence, made an emotional plea for peace at the site where Floyd was pinned to the pavement by an officer who put his knee on the handcuffed black man’s neck until he stopped breathing.

“Let’s switch it up, y’all. Let’s switch it up. Do this peacefully, please,” Terrence Floyd said.

The crowd chanted, “What’s his name? George Floyd!” and “One down, three to go!” in reference to the four officers involved in Floyd’s arrest. Officer Derek Chauvin has been charged with murder, but protesters are demanding that his colleagues be prosecuted, too. All four were fired.

The gathering was part rally and part impromptu eulogy as Floyd urged people to stop the violence and use their power at the ballot box.

“If I’m not over here messing up my community, then what are you all doing?” he said. “You all are doing nothing. Because that’s not going to bring my brother back at all.”

The country has been beset by angry demonstrations for the past week in some of the most widespread racial unrest in the U.S. since the 1960s. Spurred in part by Floyd’s death, protesters have taken to the streets to decry the killings of black people by police.

On Monday, police fired tear gas at hundreds of protesters who spilled onto an interstate highway in the heart of Philadelphia just before a 6 p.m. curfew took effect.

While most of the demonstrations have been peaceful, others have descended into violence, leaving neighborhoods in shambles, stores ransacked, windows broken and cars burned, despite curfews around the country and the deployment of thousands of National Guard members in at least 15 states.

Earlier Monday, Trump told the nation’s governors in a video conference that they they “look like fools” for not deploying even more National Guard troops. “Most of you are weak,” he said.

He added: “You’ve got to arrest people, you have to track people, you have to put them in jail for 10 years and you’ll never see this stuff again.”

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, a Democrat, dismissed Trump’s comments as the “rantings of an insecure man trying to look strong after building his entire political career on racism.”

Former Vice President Joe Biden, the Democratic presidential candidate, vowed to address institutional racism in his first 100 days in office. He met in person with black leaders in Delaware and also held a virtual meeting with big-city mayors.

Biden said hate emerges “when you have somebody in power who breathes oxygen into the hate.”

Meanwhile, an autopsy commissioned for Floyd’s family found that he died of asphyxiation from neck and back compression, the family’s attorneys said.

That distinguishes it from the official autopsy, which said he died from the effects of being restrained along with underlying health problems and potential intoxicants in his system. The official autopsy found nothing “to support a diagnosis of traumatic asphyxia or strangulation.”

The second autopsy was done by a doctor who also examined the body of Eric Garner, a New York man who died in an officer’s chokehold six years ago.

Authorities in many cities have blamed the violence on outside agitators, though have provided little evidence to back that up.

But on Monday, federal authorities arrested a 28-year-old Illinois man, Matthew Lee Rupert, saying he had posted self-recorded video on his Facebook page last week that showed him in Minneapolis handing out explosive devices and encouraging people to throw them at law enforcement officers. The video also showed him attempting to light a business on fire, and looting, according to an FBI affidivit. Early Sunday, he posted more videos of himself in and around Chicago, saying “let’s start a riot.”

He was arrested in Chicago for violating the city’s curfew.

As they girded for more violence, Washington and New York joined other cities in announcing curfews. The move followed a chaotic Sunday night in New York, where groups broke into Chanel, Prada and Rolex boutiques and electronics stores.

Hours before Washington’s 7 p.m. curfew was to go into effect, nearly a dozen National Guard vehicles rumbled through the White House grounds and exited opposite Lafayette Park, where crowds had gathered for another night of protests. On Sunday, police fired tear gas and stun grenades into a crowd of protesters in the park. They scattered to light fires in nearby streets.

At least 4,400 people nationwide have been arrested over the past week for such offenses as stealing, blocking highways and breaking curfew, according to a count by The Associated Press.

Police officers and National Guard soldiers enforcing a curfew in Louisville, Kentucky, killed a man early Monday when they returned fire after someone in a large group shot at them, police said. In Indianapolis, two people were reported dead in bursts of downtown violence over the weekend, adding to deaths recorded in Detroit and Minneapolis.

While police in places tried to ease tensions by kneeling or marching in solidarity with the demonstrators, officers around the country were accused of treating protesters with the same kind of heavy-handed tactics that contributed to the unrest in the first place.

Cities struggled to keep police in line.

In Fort Lauderdale, Florida, an officer was suspended for pushing a kneeling woman to the ground during a protest. In Atlanta, two officers were fired after bashing in the window of a car and using a stun gun on the occupants. In Los Angeles, a police SUV accelerated into several protesters, knocking two people to the ground.

In New York, the police commissioner said about six incidents were being investigated by the department’s internal affairs bureau, including a weekend confrontation in Brooklyn in which two police vehicles appeared to plow through a group of protesters. In another incident, an officer pointed a gun at protesters, drawing condemnation from the mayor.

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Is It Worth Two Million Dollars For a Summer in the Hamptons?

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LongHouse Reserve Benefit in East Hampton

Photos and Article: Lieba Nesis

LongHouse Reserve Benefit in East Hampton

As summer imminently arrives, the Hamptons has become an increasingly attractive option to thousands of city dwellers. The influx to the South Fork began in mid-March, during the incipient stages of pandemic hysteria.  The Hamptons has been minimally impacted by the virus with only 1,871 coronavirus deaths in all of Suffolk County-a paltry number compared to the 22,000 in the Big Apple.  Clamoring for houses has consequently picked up steam as desperate New Yorkers seek a safe oasis with rental prices increasing nearly 50 percent.  Brokers began their busy season three months earlier than normal as wild stories of exorbitant prices being paid rapidly circulated.

Average rental prices are currently  running from $100,000 to $200,000 a summer as inventory is quickly running out.  A Jersey City couple recently rented a fisherman’s shack in Southampton for $10,000 a month.  Most properties endure multiple bidding wars as desperate real estate brokers scour the enclave for inventory.  One renter, a textile tycoon, shelled out two million for developer Joe Farrell’s 10 bedroom Bridgehampton home from April through September.  The house, referred to as the Sandcastle, contains a bowling alley, basketball court, baseball field, spa, and 60-foot indoor pool.  Past renters have included Jay-Z, Justin Bieber and Beyonce.  Last year Trump’s summer fundraiser was held at this luxurious estate.  Farrell, the largest developer in the Hamptons, is currently offering homes ranging from $65,000 to $700,000 from now until Labor day.

Southampton Beach

The neighboring town of Southampton experienced a surge in dwellers from 60,000 to 100,000 at the end of March.  This past Memorial Day weekend saw out of control crowds on Southampton beaches.  Littering, public urination, and flouting of social distancing laws prompted Town Supervisor Jay Schneiderman to close the beaches to out-of-towners and restrict parking in beach lots and roads through June 5th. This order will likely be extended for the indefinite future.  East Hampton’s Board recently wrote to Governor Cuomo requesting a halt to the opening of hotels due to concern of “renewed outbreaks.” As the tony City crowd overwhelms the Hamptons it’s only natural they would hire helicopter service Blade to fetch some of their essentials from Manhattan.  Weekly helicopter deliveries between Manhattan and East Hampton are made available every Friday afternoon, to fetch clothing, electronics and special food for these VIP’s.  Blade temperature checks and monitors the oxygen levels of its pilots, employees and passengers to assuage the frazzled nerves of its clients.  Cabins are electrostatically decontaminated, middle seats left empty, and masks required on all flights.  Prices begin at $795 a seat for the 40-minute ride-a real Hamptons bargain.

Remote hedge funding and school closures have goaded financial hotshots to purchase homes to reside in the Hamptons year round.  In fact starting in August 2020 elite private school Avenues is opening a location in the Hamptons to cater to out of school youth.  With an annual tuition of $48,000 students can meet in the Hamptons for events and group project work, with all classes held online.  Many New Yorkers have been evaluating sending their kids to Hampton schools as the less crowded classrooms and ability to avoid public transportation make it a more attractive option.  While home sales plummeted from 74 to 20 in April-a whopping 73.7%- much of that was due to the inability to conduct showings during the pandemic.  The demand for show-stopping properties for displaced families remains high as hedge fund chief Barry Rosenshein recently sold his 1.5-acre East Hampton home for $37 million. Lest you feel sorry for the activist investor, he has a nearby property he purchased for $137 million in 2014.  Some other astronomical sales include the sprawling home of Union Pacific chairperson, James Evans, which went for $45 million to an unidentified buyer in April.

Michael Milken in Southampton Parrish Museum

As for the busy gala season that occupies most Hamptonites from June through Labor Day, they are cancelled.  Drive-in-movies have become the norm as it was recently announced a charity to benefit food pantries in East Hampton and Bridgehampton will be taking place on a Bridgehampton farm on June 12th and 13th.  The Waxman Cancer Foundation  is carefully weighing a smaller charity benefit in August while Southampton Hospital  is holding its annual benefit via Zoom.  The Surf Lodge, one of the hottest concert venues in Montauk, has been holding virtual performances in partnership with Governors Ball and Bumble.  Maybe Rihanna can participate as it was recently revealed she eyed an $800,000 rental property in Sagaponack before it got snatched up.  The 32-year-old fashion mogul is seeking a permanent Hamptons hideaway-preferably on the Ocean.  She is in good company as fellow fashion billionaire Mary Kate Olsen,  who recently fled from a nasty divorce, rented a $325,000 luxe Hamptons home for the duration of the summer.

If you are in search of spirituality the Southampton Chabad and other synagogues and churches will be open provided masks are worn and parishioners spread apart.  Many of these institutions will be eliminating the food and socialization portion of their gatherings.  Not to worry, the Hamptons will have hundreds of restaurants open for dining and delivery.  New York bistros, The Smith and Carbone, are offering delights such as spicy rigatoni and veal parmigiana to desperate New York customers according to the New York Post.  Sent in a refrigerated truck the items will be shipped 90-miles to the Hamptons with instructions on how to complete halfway cooked items.  Surprisingly, there are no Jewish delis in the Hamptons.  Consequently, if desperation for a corned beef sandwich sets in you can phone the Hamptons Jitney (bus service).  For $35 to $55, a large slab of meat will be delivered to your abode allowing you to forget for a brief moment why you endlessly long for New York.

 

 

 

Scores of Secret Service Agents Injured During Washington Riots

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AP image

(WIN) More than 60 Secret Service special agents were injured over the weekend as violent rioters took to the streets in Washington, D.C. to protest the death of George Floyd, an African-American man who was killed in Minneapolis by police last week.

Protesters threw “bricks, rocks, bottles, fireworks and other items” at agents and were “kicked, punched, and exposed to bodily fluids,” according to a statement from the Secret Service. Eleven agents were sent to a local hospital and treated for non-life threatening injuries.

he Secret Service also said no one crossed the White House fence and no agent was ever in any real danger.

Seven people rioting near the White House were reportedly arrested by the Secret Service and at least 4,000 people were arrested throughout the city by police over the weekend.

On Saturday, President Donald Trump tweeted that many Secret Service agents were “just waiting for action” and ready to unleash “the most vicious dogs, and the most ominous weapons, I have ever seen.”

In contrast with the president’s tweets, the Secret Service said it “respects the right to assemble and we ask that individuals do so peacefully for the safety of all.”

The protests that began on Friday originally started off peacefully but quickly turned violent as demonstrators set fires, attacked police, and vandalized buildings.

Fires and break-ins were being reported near the White House on Sunday night and NBC Washington captured an aerial view of black smoke engulfing the area around the president’s residence.

To help control the riots, the National Guard was activated by the secretary of the Army at the request of local police.

In addition, Trump was briefly escorted to a secret bunker for protection.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Police: Rioters Set Fire to Home with Child Inside, Then Block Firefighters

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AP image

BY KATHERINE RODRIGUEZ(BREITBART)

The chief of the Richmond, Virginia, police department said Sunday that rioters set fire to a multi-family home with a child inside while blocking access for firefighters to get through to save the child.

“One incident that is particularly poignant, that truly illustrates the seriousness of the issues we’re facing,” Chief Will Smith told reporters. “Protesters intentionally set fire to an occupied building on [West] Broad Street. This is not the only occupied building that has been set fire to in the last two days.”

They prohibited us from getting on scene,” the police chief continued. “We had to force our way to make a clear path for the fire department.”

Luckily, officers found a way to access the building, saving the child and the rest of the family.

“Protesters intercepted that fire apparatus several blocks away with vehicles and blocked that fire department’s access to the structure fire,” Smith said. “Inside that home was a child.”

“Officers were able to,” Smith said, with his voice overcome with emotion, “help those people out of the house.”

Protests and riots began popping up in places such as Detroit, Michigan; St. Louis, Missouri; and Oakland, California, to demonstrate against the manner in which George Floyd died after a Minneapolis police officer pinned his neck using his knee for nearly ten minutes.

Four officers were fired since that incident, and one of the officers, Derek Chauvin, was charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter less than 50 minutes after his arrest was made public.

AG Barr Sends Riot Teams to DC, Miami to Aid Police With Protests

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AP

By Marisa Herman

Attorney General William Barr is sending federal riot teams to Washington, D.C., and Miami to give local law enforcement agencies some help in handling violent George Floyd protests, USA Today reports.

A senior Justice Department official told the newspaper that riot teams from the federal Bureau of Prisons are being deployed to help cities facing civil unrest in the wake of the death of a black man at the hands of a white police officer. The official also said that the FBI deployed its Hostage Rescue Unit to help in Washington.

The newspaper reports that the federal prison squad arrived in Miami on Sunday. Miami placed a citywide curfew in effect between 8 p.m. and 5 a.m. after protests turned violent and destructive.

Miami Assistant Police Chief Manny Morales told USA Today that “instigators” turned a peaceful protest into a violent one on Saturday night. Protesters threw rocks and bottles at cops, and five police cars were set on fire, he said.

“These were not the demonstrators, but criminals who were taking advantage that some of the police were tied up,” Morales said, adding there were 58 arrests made. “The vast majority of the protesters are law-abiding citizens that are exercising their constitutional rights.”

Morales said he wasn’t aware that federal riot teams had been deployed to Miami.

He said the protests on Sunday were much more peaceful, except for a few incidents involving graffiti. Peaceful protesters even blocked “some agitators” from breaking into a CVS pharmacy, he added.

In the nation’s capital, 88 people were arrested after large parts of the city were looted and police officers and Secret Services agents were injured.

Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser put a 7 p.m. curfew in place on Monday that would last for two days. She told USA Today the area around the White House was significantly damaged.

“There is significant damage in the downtown areas, especially in the blocks immediately around Lafayette Square,” Bowser said. “Smashed windows and looting are becoming a bigger story than the broken system that got here.”

Police Chief Peter Newsham told USA Today that 44 of the 88 people arrested Sunday were charged with felony rioting.

He called the looting and damage to businesses extensive and said he anticipates there will be more arrests as police review security footage of rioters.

“I anticipate there will be more arrests,” Newsham said, also warning that curfew violations will be enforced. “That is a warning.”

Newsham is offering up to $1,000 rewards for anyone who can identify people involved in violence during the weekend protests.

New York City imposes 11 p.m. curfew amid Floyd protests

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Protesters start fires along the SoHo shopping district on Sunday, May 31, 2020, in New York. Protests were held throughout the city over the death of George Floyd, a black man in police custody in Minneapolis who died after being restrained by police officers on Memorial Day. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

New York City imposed an 11 p.m. curfew Monday as the nation’s biggest city tried to head off another night of destruction erupting amid protests over George Floyd’s death.

New York is joining other cities around the country in imposing curfews after days of violence. Its curfew will last from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m., Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio said.

New York’s mayor said Monday he was considering putting the nation’s biggest city under curfew after nights of destruction followed three days of largely peaceful protests over George Floyd’s death.

Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat, had previously rejected imposing a curfew, as many other cities across the U.S. have done to try to curb violence that erupted amid demonstrations over Floyd’s May 25 death, police brutality and racial injustice.

But de Blasio said Monday he was talking with Police Commissioner Dermot Shea and Gov. Andrew Cuomo about the idea. The mayor emphasized that no decision had been made on a curfew, and “there are advantages and disadvantages.”

Earlier Monday, Shea said he didn’t think curfew would work.

“The problem is: People need to listen to a curfew, and that’s not going to happen. If people think it will, they don’t understand what’s going on,” Shea said on NBC’s “Today.”

The deliberations came as workers swept up broken glass outside luxury stores in Manhattan’s chic SoHo neighborhood, where people smashed windows and plundered shops overnight. “Hundreds and hundreds” were arrested, Shea said.

A 21-year-old man was shot in the neighborhood around 12:30 a.m. and was taken to a hospital, police said. They said his injuries were not life-threatening.

Groups of people poured down the sidewalks in Soho and other neighborhoods including Union Square, breaking into Rolex, Kate Spade and Prada boutiques and electronics stores that have been shuttered for over two months because of the coronavirus.

“People are doing this so next time, before they think about trying to kill another black person, they’re going to be like, ’Damn, we don’t want them out here doing this … again,’” New York City resident Sean Jones said as he watched the destruction.

It was the third night in a row of mainly peaceful daytime demonstrations, chaotic nights, hotspots of violence and arrests, with the mayor’s daughter among those arrested over the weekend.

An arrest report obtained by the New York Post said Chiara de Blasio, 25, refused to leave a Manhattan street that officers were clearing Saturday because people were throwing things. Chiara de Blasio, who is black, was later given a court summons and released.

Her father said Monday that he didn’t learn of her arrest until media reports emerged Sunday. He said his daughter told him she didn’t do anything wrong.

“She was very clear that she believed she was following the instructions of police officers and doing what they were asking… absolutely, she was abundantly clear she was peacefully protesting, not doing anything that would provoke a negative response,” he said, adding that he admired her for peacefully “trying to change something that she thought was unjust.”

Thousands of people have taken to the streets around the nation to express outrage over Floyd’s death and other killings of black people, particularly by police. Floyd, who was black, died after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee on Floyd’s neck.

On Sunday, New York City police made some gestures of solidarity with marchers during the day. Some officers knelt with protesters in an intersection as an organizer called out the names of people killed by police.

But the police department has come under criticism for confrontations with demonstrators over the weekend. Shea said the department is investigating officers’ behavior in about six incidents, including one in which two police vehicles plowed through a group of protesters Saturday in Brooklyn.

De Blasio, who said Saturday that the officers acted while under attack, shifted his tone Monday, saying, “it is still not acceptable for our officers to ever drive into a crowd.”

On Sunday, video posted to social media showed a police officer pulling a gun and pointing it at demonstrators on a debris-littered Manhattan street. The officer holds the gun up for about five seconds, people to hurry away, and then a supervisor comes over and ushers the officer away.

De Blasio called for the department to strip the officer of his gun and badge immediately, though the mayor noted that he didn’t know all the circumstances surrounding the moment captured on video.

“It is not the place of an officer to pull a gun on a crowd knowing that there are peaceful protesters in that crowd,” de Blasio said.

 

Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm, Former Chancellor of Yeshiva University, Dead at 92

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- On Sunday May 31, Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm, the longtime leader of Yeshiva University, passed away at the age of 92. The Modern Orthodox communal leader, scholar, and prolific author died in his daughter’s home in Englewood, N.J., as confirmed by his son Joshua. Photo Credit: blogs.yu.edu

By: Hadassa Kalatizadeh & Fern Sidman

On Sunday May 31, Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm, the longtime leader of Yeshiva University, passed away at the age of 92.   The Modern Orthodox communal leader, scholar, and prolific author died in his daughter’s home in Englewood, N.J., as confirmed by his son Joshua.

Rabbi Lamm was the third president of Yeshiva University, based in Washington Heights.  He served for 37 years as either the president or chancellor. He was associated with the private Jewish school for close to 70 years.  In July 2013, he had retired as Chancellor.

Rabbi Lamm was elected president in 1976, and became well-known for championing the notion of Torah U’madda — leading a life that combines rigorous adherence to Jewish law while also pursuing worldly knowledge and engagement in the outside world.  “He gave modern Orthodox Jews a special sense of their own legitimacy vis-à-vis the other Jews in the Orthodox world,” said Jeffrey Gurock, professor of Jewish history at Yeshiva.  It was his vision that made it possible for Modern Orthodox graduates to attain roles of nationwide importance, such as Senator Joseph I. Lieberman who ran for Vice President of the U.S., and Jack Lew  who served as Secretary of the US Treasury.

As reported by the NY Times, Rabbi Lamm is credited for saving the school, which has four New York City campuses, from the brink of bankruptcy.  When he was a new president in the mid-1970s, there was a national recession which threatened to topple the private institution’s finances.  It was Rabbi Lamm who was able to attract non-Orthodox donors to graciously support the institution, in hopes that the graduates would excel in the secular world.  The Yeshiva’s endowment was $25 million in the 1970s, and grew to $875 million by 2001when he moved from being president to Chancellor.

Born in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, Rabbi  Lamm was a devoted student and confidante of HaGaon HaRav Yosef Dov (Joseph Ber) Soloveitchik, ZT’L who conferred rabbinic ordination on him at the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary in 1951. He also attended Mesivta Torah Vodaath and received a doctorate in Jewish philosophy.

As was reported by Arutz Sheva, he was a prolific speaker and also penned 10 books, and edited or co-edited more than 20 volumes. His book entitled “The Religious Thought of Hasidism” won the National Jewish Book Award in Jewish Thought.  He also launched the Torah U-Madda Journal.    “The greatest asset of his leadership was leadership through ideas — through speaking and through writing. He wasn’t afraid to take a stand,” said Lamm’s son-in-law, Rabbi Mark Dratch, who is the executive vice president of the Rabbinical Council of America.

“He was a real model of a sophisticated Orthodoxy at a time when Orthodoxy was sorely lacking sophistication,” said Rabbi J.J. Schachter, a professor of Jewish history and Jewish thought at Yeshiva University. “He set the bar for what an elegant sermon should be. He was a master darshan [preacher], and of course he carried that over as president of Y.U. in all the speeches he gave.”

Rabbi Lamm’s maternal grandfather was HaGaon HaRav Yehoshua Baumol ZT’L (1880–1948) who authored the Responsa Emek Halakha. In that work, HaRav Baumol cited several insights from his young grandson, and even included responsa addressed to him.

Rabbi Lamm’s wife, Mindella, died on April 16 of COVID-19, at the age 88.  They are survived by two sons, Shalom and Joshua Lamm, and a daughter, Chaye Warburg. His daughter Sara Lamm Dratch passed away in 2013.  Lamm is also survived by 17 grandchildren and numerous great-grandchildren.

“The purpose of Torah is neither some kind of arbitrary spiritual exercise, nor the beating of man into submission in order to aggrandize the divine ego. Rather, Torah is the divine instrument for man’s spiritual welfare and fulfillment,” Rabbi Lamm had said in a 1971 sermon. “The Torah is God’s formula for man’s moral development. The prescriptions may be difficult, they may entail discipline and renunciation, but the purpose of Torah and commandments is the good of mankind.”

Rabbi Mendy Mirocznik, executive vice-president of the Rabbinical Alliance of America stated, “The Jewish world lost a pillar and a leader. As President of Yeshiva University and Rosh HaYeshiva of the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary, Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm helped elevate spirituality in America and save American Judaism. Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm was part of the devoted group of post-war educators who worked tirelessly to ensure that Orthodox Judaism thrived in a world that in many ways was hostile to religion in general and Judaism in particular. The Jewish world has lost a dedicated advocate. As a community, we owe Rabbi Dr. Lamm a debt of gratitude that we will always appreciate and be thankful for.”

Rabbi Moish Schmerler, director of the Rabbinical Alliance of America, a graduate of Yeshiva University and of the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary stated, “My years learning in Yeshiva were enhanced by the presence of Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm, ZT’L. I was privileged as a yeshiva student to benefit from the great yeshiva and university that Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm saved from bankruptcy nearly a half a century ago. This relationship is personal to me. Rabbi Dr. Lamm saved the yeshiva where my wife’s father, HaRav Shmuel Borenstein, ZT’L, served as a Rosh Mesivta at MTA-YUHB, and my wife’s grandfather, HaRav Noach Borenstein, ZT’L, served as a Rosh Yeshiva at the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary. Interacting with Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm helped me develop personally, and has had a profound impact on me for the better.”

May Rabbi Lamm, ZT’L serve as a heavenly advocate, a Meilitz Yosher, for his family, the Jewish community and the entire world. May his memory be a blessing.

 

 

 

 

Iran and China Seize on Riots to Blast American Leaders

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Iranian President Hassan Rouhani on May, 27, 2020. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

Nations around the world have watched in horror at the five days of civil unrest in the United States following the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after a white police officer pressed his knee on his neck until he stopped breathing.

While thousands gathered in London, Berlin, and other European locales, the state-controlled media in countries with authoritarian regimes have been highlighting the chaos and violence of the U.S. demonstrations, in part to undermine American officials’ criticism of their own nations.

In China, the protests are being viewed through the prism of U.S. government criticism of China’s crackdown on anti-government protests in Hong Kong.

Hu Xijin, the editor of the state-owned Global Times newspaper, tweeted that U.S. officials can now see protests out of their own windows: “I want to ask Speaker Pelosi and Secretary Pompeo: Should Beijing support protests in the U.S., like you glorified rioters in Hong Kong?”

Hua Chunying, a Chinese Foreign ministry spokeswoman, pointed out America’s racial unrest by tweeting “I can’t breathe,” which Floyd said before his death.

In Iran, which has violently put down nationwide demonstrations by killing hundreds, arresting thousands and disrupting internet access to the outside world, state television has repeatedly aired images of the U.S. unrest.

One TV anchor discussed “a horrible scene from New York, where police attacked protesters.” Another state TV message accused U.S. police agencies in Washington of “setting fire to cars and attacking protesters,” without offering any evidence.

Russia accused the United States of “systemic problems in the human rights sphere.” It denounced Floyd’s death as the latest in a series of police violence against African-Americans.

“This incident is far from the first in a series of lawless conduct and unjustified violence from U.S. law enforcement” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement. “American police commit such high-profile crimes all too often.” (AP)

 

 

Atlanta Mayor: 2 Officers Fired in ‘Excessive Force’ Arrests

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Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announces a 9 p.m. curfew as protests continue over the death of George Floyd, Saturday, May 30, 2020, in Atlanta. Protests were held in U.S. cities over the death of Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapolis police officers on May 25. (Ben Gray/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP)

By: Kate Brumback (AP)

Two police officers have been fired and three others placed on desk duty over excessive use of force during a protest arrest incident involving two college students, Atlanta’s mayor said Sunday.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said at a news conference that she and police Chief Erika Shields made the decision after reviewing body-camera footage of a Saturday night incident that first gained attention from video online and on local news.

“Use of excessive force is never acceptable,” Bottoms told reporters. Shields called the footage “really shocking to watch.”

Police on Sunday night identified the fired officers as Investigator Ivory Streeter, who was hired in December 2003, and Investigator Mark Gardner, who was hired in August 1997.

The video, shown on TV as captured by local reporters, shows a group of police officers in riot gear and gas masks surround a car being driven by a man with a woman in the passenger seat. The officers appear to fire a stun gun at the woman and then pull her from the car. They then use a stun gun on the man. They use zip-tie handcuffs on the woman on the ground. The couple did not appear to be fighting police.

TV reporters said the police had earlier broken glass on the car and flattened the tires.

Bottoms said the woman, Taniyah Pilgrim, was released without charges. She said the man, Messiah Young, was released, too, and she’s ordering the charges against him dropped. She didn’t specify what charges he faced. A police report says Young was charged with attempting to elude police and driving with a suspended license.

The mayor said she’d delayed the news conference several hours to review all the body-camera footage because she and Shields wanted to be certain about what happened.

“I really wanted to believe that the body-worn camera footage would provide some larger view that could better rationalize why we got to this space,” Shields said. “And having spent most of the afternoon with the mayor, reviewing the footage exhaustively, I knew that I had only one option, and that is to terminate the employees.”

Bottoms said she had spoken to leaders at Spelman College and Morehouse College, where she said the the young people were students. She said she’d also spoken to representatives for the students but hadn’t yet spoken directly to them.

Shields offered an apology and said she knows the officers’ behavior was unacceptable and caused further fear.

“Sometimes the best thing, the only thing you can do as a police chief is come in and clean up the mess that’s before you,” Shields said.

“When wrong is wrong, we have to, as law enforcement, start dealing with it in the same manner that we would deal with it with non-law enforcement,” Shields said. “For some reason, we’ve fallen into a gray area where there’s a separate set of rules for law enforcement, and if we want to get out of this space that we’re in now we have to change how we manage internally.”

Shields said she experienced a broad range of emotions as just a few hours before she saw the video, another of her officers was seriously injured. A preliminary investigation indicates the officer was in an intersection on foot to block traffic from passing into an area where there were protesters when a person on an ATV approached at a high rate of speed and hit him.

The officer suffered significant injuries to his legs and remained in the intensive care unit Sunday evening, Shields said, adding that she hopes he’ll be able to walk again. The ATV rider was taken into custody at the scene and to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

Police were investigating the cause of the collision.

Bottoms imposed a 9 p.m. curfew for Saturday and Sunday. Gov. Brian Kemp authorized up to 3,000 National Guard troops to be deployed in cities across the state to respond if needed to protests over the deaths of George Floyd in Minnesota and Ahmaud Arbery in coastal Georgia.

Atlanta police said Sunday they had arrested more than 150 people as protesters threw rocks at officers and broke windows in the downtown area. The curfew was initially imposed after demonstrations Friday night turned violent with people setting fires and smashing windows at businesses and restaurants. (AP)

Entire D.C DC National Guard Summoned to Protests, Brief Fires Near W.H, De Blasio’s Daughter Arrested, Updates Nationwide

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Late Breaking : The daughter of New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, Chiara de Blasio, was arrested at a Saturday night protest in Manhattan, according to the New York Post.

Chiara de Blasio, 25, was taken into custody around 10:30 p.m. after cops declared an unlawful assembly at 12th Street and Broadway in Lower Manhattan, the sources said.

“That was a real hotspot, police cars were getting burned there, people were throwing and yelling, fighting with cops. There were thousands of people in that area at that time,” the source said.

She gave 181 East End Avenue as her address, otherwise known as Gracie Mansion, the mayor’s Upper East Side residence. –New York Post

 Protesters started fires near the White House as tensions with police mounted during a third straight night of demonstrations held in response to the death of George Floyd at police hands in Minnesota.

 

An hour before the 11 p.m. curfew, police fired a major barrage of tear gas stun grenades into the crowd of more than 1,000 people, largely clearing Lafayette Park across the street from the White House and scattering protesters into the street.

Protesters piled up road signs and plastic barriers and lit a raging fire in the middle of H Street. Some pulled an American flag from a nearby building and threw it into the blaze. Others added branches pulled from trees. A cinder block structure, on the north side of the park, that had bathrooms and a maintenance office, was engulfed in flames.

Several miles north, a separate protest broke out in Northwest D.C., near the Maryland border. The Metropolitan Police Department says there were break-ins at a Target and a shopping center that houses Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue Men’s Store, T.J. Maxx, a movie theater and specialty stores. Police say several individuals have been detained.

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WASHINGTON — The entire Washington, DC National Guard is being called in to help with the response to protests outside the White House and elsewhere in the nation’s capital.

That’s according to two Defense Department officials.

Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said Sunday that she had requested 500 DC Guardsman to assist local law enforcement. Later on Sunday, as the protests escalated, Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy ordered the rest of the Guardsman — roughly 1,200 soldiers — to report.

The officials insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the matter.  By James LaPorta

At least 4,100 people have been arrested over days of protests across the country since George Floyd’s death Monday, according to a tally compiled by The Associated Press.

Arrests ranged from looting and blocking highways to breaking curfew.

The arrest figures include those from demonstrations in New York and Philadelphia on the East Coast, Chicago and Dallas in the Midwest and Southwest, and Los Angeles on the West Coast as protests take place all over the county.

In Dallas, police began sweeping downtown streets with arrests to enforce a curfew that went into effect at 7 p.m.

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BOSTON — A Sunday afternoon of mostly peaceful protests in Boston broke at nightfall when protesters clashed with officers, throwing rocks and lighting a police vehicle on fire.

Thousands of mostly mask-wearing demonstrators marched peacefully through Boston in several protests during the day, lending their voices to the nationwide anger over the death of George Floyd while in Minneapolis police custody.

The largest protest of several thousand started Sunday night in the historically black neighborhood of Roxbury. Protesters, carrying “Black Lives Matter” signs and chanting, “The people united will never be defeated,” made their way slowly for several miles to the Massachusetts Statehouse. The diverse crowd was flanked by police officers on bikes and was peaceful.

But as the march ended around 9 p.m., protesters clashed with police in downtown Boston. At least two police cruisers were heavily damaged — including one whose rear window was smashed by a skateboarder. Police also tweeted that their officers were pelted with bricks, rocks and glass bottles. Several storefronts, including a bank, were damaged.

Protesters appeared to be clearing by about 10:30 p.m.

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ATLANTA — Riot police firing volleys of tear gas dispersed hundreds of demonstrators as a curfew took hold Sunday night, scattering a crowd that had protested for hours in downtown Atlanta over the deaths of George Floyd in Minnesota and Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia.

Hundreds of police, National Guard troops and other forces lined up in positions around downtown Centennial Park, a focal point of the weekend of protests.

An overnight curfew took hold at 9 p.m. as some on the fringes of what was a largely peaceful afternoon protest were setting off fireworks and burning construction materials near the park. An Associated Press photographer saw police then begin firing many 40 millimeter canisters of tear gas toward the crowd. People were choking, gasping and some throwing up as they scattered, leaving only a few still in the streets.

As police and National Guard troops took up positions with plastic shields on major streets, crowds melted away. WSB-TV showed footage about an hour later of officers taking people who lingered in the streets into custody, using plastic ties to handcuff them on street corners.

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WASHINGTON — Secret Service agents rushed President Donald Trump to an underground bunker Friday, as hundreds of protesters gathered outside the White House, some throwing rocks and tugging at police barricades just outside the executive mansion.

That’s according to a Republican close to the White House not authorized to publicly discuss private matters and confirmed by another official. The abrupt decision by the agents underscored the rattled mood inside the White House, where the chants from Lafayette Park could be heard all weekend and Secret Service agents and law enforcement officers struggled to contain the crowds.

The Friday protests, triggered by the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after he was pinned at the neck by a white Minneapolis police officer, turned violent and appeared to catch officers by surprise. It sparked one of the highest alerts on the White House complex since the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001. In the days since, security at the White House has been reinforced by the National Guard and additional personnel from the Secret Service and the U.S. Park Police.

On Sunday, the Justice Department also deployed members of the U.S. Marshals Service and agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration to supplement national guard troops outside the White House, according to a senior Justice Department official. The official could not discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

— By Jonathan Lemire and Zeke Miller

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bizarre scene unfolded in the Southern California city of Long Beach when people stealing from a clothing store became trapped.

A woman’s voice was heard screaming inside and then a man suddenly kicked his way out a window and dropped to the sidewalk. He was quickly followed by more than a half-dozen others, with one man throwing out an armload of clothes and then gathering them from off the ground and running off.

As the thieves clambered out, a group of police stood nearby but didn’t attempt to make arrests.

About a half-mile away, people swarmed into stores at The Pike Outlets to steal items. A large Forever 21 store was a favored target and a steady stream ran in and then emerged carrying armloads of clothing. Some brought garbage bags to carry the pilfered goods. A few stopped outside to change into stolen items.

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BIRMINGHAM, Alabama — Police didn’t intervene Sunday night as a crowd of protesters attempted to pull down a 52-foot-tall stone obelisk honoring Confederate veterans with a pickup truck. The state has blocked legal attempts by the city to remove the memorial.

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PHILADELPHIA — The focus of Saturday night’s unrest in Philadelphia was downtown, but on Sunday there were pockets of rioting in several neighborhoods.

Hundreds of protesters congregated in West Philadelphia where people smashed police car windows, stole items from the empty vehicles and pushed them so they rammed into other cruisers.

After people in the crowd threw rocks at police lining the streets, officers in a large SWAT vehicle fired tear gas and rubber bullets.

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Hundreds of people on Sunday marched down historic Route 66 into downtown Albuquerque, protesting the death of George Floyd in Minnesota.

Protesters in New Mexico’s largest city held signs, wore masks and chanted “Say his name: George Floyd” and “Hands up, don’t shoot.”

When the crowd arrived on the western edge of downtown Albuquerque, they stopped and held a moment of silence for Floyd that was followed by cheers. Some protesters marched back to where they started and others dispersed. Police kept their distance and kept the streets clear in what appeared to be a peaceful event.

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DALLAS — Police in Dallas began arresting people for being on the street shortly after a 7 p.m. curfew went into effect.

The night-time curfew will last for the next several days, police Chief U. Reneé Hall said Sunday.

Dallas County also closed several downtown civil buildings for Monday, including a civil courthouse and county administration building.

Dallas police tweeted pictures of officers making arrest sweeps on downtown streets shortly after the curfew began. Dallas reported about 75 arrests over the first two days of protests Friday and Saturday.

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MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A group of protesters succeeded at getting onto Interstate 55 in Memphis and stalling traffic on the route that leads into neighboring Arkansas.

Officers wearing riot gear blocked the group at first from getting on the lanes of the interstate near downtown Memphis. But protesters then circumvented the line of officers and made it onto the interstate, walking past vehicles stuck in traffic.

Some vehicles were honking their horns as the protesters chanted “Black Lives Matter.”

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LOS ANGELES — A news helicopter captured a scary moment during a protest in downtown Los Angeles when a police SUV accelerated into several people on the road, hitting and knocking two people to the ground.

Witnesses advanced on the patrol car, prompting the officer to quickly back up and speed away as protesters chased after the vehicle. The protesters who were hit got off the ground and ran onto the sidewalk.

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CHICAGO — While Chicago officials took extraordinary steps Sunday to patrol and restrict access to the city’s downtown in the hopes of preventing further chaos after a night of protests over the death of George Floyd, reports of vandalism and unrest cropped up throughout the day in the city’s neighborhoods and suburbs.

Vandals smashed store windows at a shoe store and cellphone shop in the heavily-Mexican Little Village neighborhood. Multiple suburban shopping malls were closed out of caution, including in North Riverside where police reported a “large disturbance.”

The unrest spread from downtown Chicago after a weekend of chaos, as peaceful protests devolved into violence and destruction. By Sunday, six people were shot in Chicago, one fatally, and 240 people were arrested in connection with the demonstrations, police said.

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BELLEVUE, Wash. — The mayor of Bellevue, Washington, declared an emergency Sunday evening because of violence and looting and said she was enacting a 5:30 p.m. curfew for the downtown area of the city east of Seattle.

Bellevue Police said dozens of people broke into Bellevue Square, a large shopping mall. Officers entered the facility and chased looters out. Police urged people to avoid the area.

Mayor Lynne Robinson said people were stealing merchandise from storefronts and that she requested help from other police agencies. Earlier the Washington State Patrol said it was sending units to help quell unrest.

Bellevue’s downtown is home to large offices of many tech companies, including Microsoft and Amazon.

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AUSTIN, Texas — During a demonstration in Austin, officers reportedly fired rubber bullets at protesters throwing water bottles at them. One of the rubber rounds hit a woman in the abdomen, according to the Austin American-Statesman, and she writhed on the ground, crying, “My baby, my baby.”

Officers reportedly pushed through the crowd to carry her away on a stretcher. Police did not immediately respond to questions about the incident.

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San Diego police say officers have fired tear gas to disperse a crowd of demonstrators that was pelting them with rocks and bottles.

Hundreds of people, many with facial masks to protect against the coronavirus, marched through downtown chanting “George Floyd” with signs, including some saying “I Can’t Breathe,” a reference to Floyd’s dying words when a Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee on the back of his neck. Some demonstrators dropped to one knee at times.

The demonstration took an ominous turn several hours after beginning peacefully at 10 a.m. San Diego police said on Twitter that a crowd of 100 to 200 people was throwing rocks but stopped. Authorities said multiple vehicles were vandalized.

After the tear gas stopped, two groups formed on Broadway, a main thoroughfare, separated by police in riot gear.

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MINNEAPOLIS — Officials in Minnesota say no protesters appear to have been hit after a semitrailer drove into a crowd demonstrating on a freeway near downtown Minneapolis.

The Minnesota State Patrol says the incident is being investigated as a criminal matter. The patrol says the driver was injured and taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. Gov. Tim Walz says the driver is out of the hospital and in police custody.

It wasn’t clear how the driver was hurt. TV footage showed protesters swarming the truck, and then law enforcement quickly moving in.

Other TV footage showed the tanker truck moving rapidly onto the bridge and protesters appearing to part ahead of it.

Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington said traffic cameras appear to show the truck was already on the freeway before barricades were put in place to shut it down at 5 p.m.

The protesters were demonstrating against the death of George Floyd.

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MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz says Attorney General Keith Ellison will take the lead in any prosecutions in the death of George Floyd.

Floyd, who was black, was in handcuffs when a white Minneapolis police officer kneeled on his neck for several minutes earlier this week. Bystander video showed Floyd pleading that he was unable to breathe and eventually no longer moving.

Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman earlier Sunday said he had asked Ellison to help in the prosecution. Freeman has been criticized by civil rights activists and some city officials, who say there is a history of mistrust between Freeman’s office and members of the community.

Walz told reporters Sunday that Ellison “needs to lead this case.” He said he made the decision after speaking with Floyd’s family who “wanted to believe that there was a trust, and they wanted to believe that the facts would be heard.”

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ATLANTA — Atlanta’s mayor says two police officers have been fired and three placed on desk duty pending review over excessive use of force during a protest incident Saturday night.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said at a news conference Sunday that she and police Chief Erika Shields made the decision after reviewing body-camera footage. Shields called it “really shocking to watch.”

Officials say the incident came to light via video that circulated online.

It shows a group of police officers in riot gear and gas masks surround a car being driven by a man with a woman in the passenger seat. The officers pull the woman out and appear to use a stun gun on the man. They use zip-tie handcuffs on the woman on the ground. The couple did not appear to be fighting police on the video.

Bottoms said charges have been dropped against the woman, and the man has been released.

Local reporters, who captured footage of the incident, said the police had earlier broken the glass on the car. A reporter said police also flattened the tires.

The city is under curfew again Sunday night. As curfew approached, protesters were using construction materials, portable toilets and other items to create a makeshift barrier from police in downtown Atlanta. Some people threw fireworks in the general area or in officers’ direction.

Officers and the National Guard walked in a line toward protesters and the barrier and threw tear gas at the crowd minutes before the 9 pm curfew.

Some protesters kicked the tear gas cans back toward officers.

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SAN FRANCISCO — In San Francisco, more than 1,000 people marched through the streets, carrying signs and chanting “George Floyd,” “Black Lives Matter.”

Aliasiah Allah, 22, wore a shirt that said “I feel like the last black man,” a reference to last year’s movie The Last Black Man in San Francisco.

“We’re here because George Floyd was murdered in cold blood. … We are sick of the countless injustices on black and brown lives, mostly black lives,” she said. “The cup is overflowing at this point. We want the cops arrested, but we want it to end, we want it to stop.”

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LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles County declared a 6 p.m. curfew to prevent a repeat of violence that broke out after protests over the killing of a black man by a white Minneapolis police officer.

The county and city of Los Angeles declared states of emergency Sunday after a night of looting, vandalism and arson that followed mostly peaceful protests.

Beverly Hills, which was hit with violence on Saturday, and Santa Monica, which experienced looting Sunday, were under curfew orders at 4 p.m. The city of San Francisco declared an 8 p.m. curfew.

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Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, said he made a visit Sunday to the site of protests in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, the previous night.

A photo posted to Biden’s Facebook page showed the former vice president, wearing a mask, kneeling to speak with a man and his small child.

“The only way to bear this pain is to turn all that anguish to purpose,” Biden wrote. “And as president, I will help lead this conversation — and more importantly, I will listen.”

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WASHINGTON — Officials are implementing a curfew in the nation’s capital after a night of violent demonstrations with rioters setting fires, smashing windows and breaking into businesses and left dozens of police officers injured.

District of Columbia Mayor Muriel Bowser said the curfew would begin at 11 p.m. Sunday night and extend until 6 a.m. on Monday. She said members of the National Guard would also be on hand to assist the Metropolitan Police Department.

More than 1,000 protesters had already gathered Sunday evening at Lafayette Park across from the White House to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

Officials said they would have an increased police presence and additional federal agents were called in on Sunday.

The protest Saturday night turned violent as darkness set in. Protesters set fires, smashed windows and sprayed graffiti.

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TAMPA, Florida — Protests were largely peaceful across Florida on Sunday, with some organizers doubling safety efforts to counteract the violence of Saturday night.

In Tampa, Black Lives Matter organizers had nearly 100 safety marshals in fluorescent vests patrolling their march, trained in de-escalation tactics and ordered to be on the lookout for antagonists.

The group also had medics, used walkie-talkies to quickly squelch outbursts and enlisted lawyers and those with legal training to watch out for protesters’ rights from the sidelines.

“We wanted to be able to provide a safe space for their voice and rage to be heard within a controlled environment. It’s part of their amendment rights for them to be able to express themselves,” said Chaikirah Parker, who helped organize the event.

The veteran activist said they purposely held the event early Sunday, despite sweltering heat, because it brought a more peaceful demographic.

After the event was over, a young crowd held another protest and she said the veteran activists felt obliged to help.

“We really feel it’s our duty to pass the torch and teach the kids how to organize,” she said. “They’re cocky and then they realize the rapid response organization is a whole other level.”

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Several hundred people marched through downtown Boston on Sunday carrying signs and chanting in a peaceful protest over the death of George Floyd.

Street protests have been held for days around the country in response to the death of Floyd, a black man who died Monday after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee on his neck until he stopped breathing.

In Boston they chanted, “No justice no peace,” “black lives matter” and silence is violence” as they walked by City Hall, the State House, and the Public Garden, with the crowd closing off a two-lane city street. There was a light police presence and no signs of the violence that has erupted in other cities in recent days.

“They keep killing our people. I’m so sick and tired of it,” said Mahira Louis, 15, who was at the protest with her mother. “On the news, every time we say black lives matter they keep silencing us,” she said adding that things are going to change. “They’re not going to kill black people for no reason,” she said.

Most protesters wore face coverings amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“It isn’t comfortable to be at home but it’s really uncomfortable to be here, too, and know you’re doing this in the face of the COVID-19 crisis,” said Vivian Lee, 22, who participated with her sister and parents. “But it requires some discomfort for change,” she said.

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Michael Brown Sr., the father of Michael Brown who was killed by police in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014, joined the protest on Sunday, telling demonstrators to continue the movement.

He said he drove to Minneapolis from Ferguson even though being a part of another demonstration against the killing of a black man, “tears my heart” as it reminded him of his son.

“I understand what this family is feeling. I understand what this community is feeling,” he said.

SpaceX’s Historic Encore: Astronauts Arrive at Space Station

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- This photo provided by NASA shows Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, far right, joining the crew at the International Space Station, after the SpaceX Dragon capsule pulled up to the station and docked Sunday, May 31, 2020. The Dragon capsule arrived Sunday morning, hours after a historic liftoff from Florida. It's the first time that a privately built and owned spacecraft has delivered a crew to the orbiting lab.(NASA via AP)

By: Marcia Dunn(AP) 

SpaceX delivered two astronauts to the International Space Station for NASA on Sunday, following up a historic liftoff with an equally smooth docking in yet another first for Elon Musk’s company.

With test pilots Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken poised to take over manual control if necessary, the SpaceX Dragon capsule pulled up to the station and docked automatically, no assistance needed. The hatches swung open a few hours later, and the two Dragon riders floated into the orbiting lab and embraced the three station residents.

Unlike the SpaceX and NASA flight control rooms, where everyone was spaced well apart, there was no social distancing or masks needed in orbit since the new arrivals had been in quarantine for many weeks.

“The whole world saw this mission, and we are so, so proud of everything you have done for our country and, in fact, to inspire the world,” NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said in a call from Mission Control in Houston.

Hurley credited SpaceX and added, ““It’s great to get the United States back in the crewed launch business.”

It was the first time a privately built and owned spacecraft carried astronauts to the space station in its more than 20 years of existence. NASA considers this the opening volley in a business revolution encircling Earth and eventually stretching to the moon and Mars.

“NASA is not going to purchase, own and operate rockets and capsules the way we used to,” Bridenstine said. “”We’re going to partner with commercial industry.”

The docking occurred barely 19 hours after a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket blasted off Saturday afternoon from Kennedy Space Center, the nation’s first astronaut launch to orbit from home soil in nearly a decade and drawing a Washington delegation led by President Donald Trump. NASA said peak viewership online hit 10 million.

Despite the coronavirus pandemic, thousands jammed surrounding beaches, bridges and towns as SpaceX ended a nine-year launch drought for NASA. The achievement, years in the making, is expected to drive down launch costs so more people might be able to afford a ticket to space in the coming years.

Behnken told the welcoming committee at NASA’s Johnson Space Center that the Dragon was “a slick vehicle” and said he was surprised at how rough the ride was on the latter part of ascent, compared with the space shuttle, which he and Hurley rode twice.

“Dragon was huffing and puffing all the way into orbit,” he said.

Two Texas members of Congress at Johnson for the docking — Sen. Ted Cruz and Rep. Brian Babin — said the flight offered inspiration and hope during a particularly tough time of protests and pandemic.

“Having it go off without a hitch was a tremendous blessing for our country,” Babin told the astronauts.

Gleaming white in the sunlight, the Dragon was easily visible on NASA TV from a few miles away from the space station, its nose cone open and exposing its docking hook as well as a blinking light. Hurley and Behnken took over the controls and did a little piloting less than a couple hundred yards (meters) out as part of the test flight, before putting it back into automatic for the final approach.

Once on board the space station, Hurley said the capsule, newly named Endeavour after the retired shuttle, handled extremely well. He was the pilot on the last U.S. spaceship to visit the space station — the last shuttle flight, by Atlantis, in July 2011.

Restoring American launch capability nine years later, he noted, “is just one effort that we can show for the ages in this dark time that we’ve had over the past several months to kind of inspire, especially the young people in the United States, to reach for these lofty goals.”

There was one small glitch: Hurley bumped his head entering the space station and frequently wiped his forehead during the welcoming ceremony.

NASA turned to private industry to pick up the slack following the shuttle fleet’s retirement, hiring SpaceX and Boeing in 2014 for space station taxi services. Boeing’s first astronaut flight isn’t expected until next year.

Until Saturday, SpaceX had launched only space station supplies or satellites. The company’s employees took to calling the astronauts “dads” to drive home the fact that two lives were at stake in this highly technical effort.

Clearly relieved, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine tweeted a big “welcome home” to the Dragon fliers — “America’s two favorite dads.”

NASA has yet to decide how long Hurley and Behnken will spend at the space station, somewhere between one and four months. While they’re there, they’ll join NASA’s Chris Cassidy and two Russian station residents in performing experiments and possibly spacewalks to install fresh station batteries. (AP)