Virginia
BREAKING Supreme Court Rules Virginia Can Resume Purge of Possible Non-Citizen Voter Registrations
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday that the state of Virginia is allowed to resume its purge of non-citizen voter registrations. The state has said its goal is to ensure that people who aren’t U.S. citizens don’t vote illegally.
Virginia’s attorney general had asked the Supreme Court to intervene – just days ahead of the general election – to allow the state to move forward with its removal of roughly 1,600 alleged non-citizens from its voter rolls.
The request came after a federal appeals court upheld a federal judge’s order Sunday to restore the registrations of those questionable voters.
Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed an executive order in August requiring daily checks of DMV data against voter rolls to identify non-citizens.
But the U.S. Department of Justice and a coalition of private groups sued Youngkin claiming the removal violated a provision of the National Voter Registration Act, which requires states to complete programs of removing ineligible voters from registration lists up to 90 days before federal elections.
The Justice Department also claimed that the canceled registrations were, in fact, citizens and they were removed because of bureaucratic errors or mistakes like a mischecked box on a form.
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But state officials argue the canceled registrations followed careful procedures that revealed people who explicitly identified themselves as non-citizens to the Department of Motor Vehicles. They point out that federal law does not provide voting rights to non-citizens who by definition can’t vote in federal elections.
U.S. District Judge Patricia Giles granted an injunction Friday saying Youngkin’s program was illegal and ordered the restoration of the voters’ registrations.
“It should never be illegal to remove an illegal voter,” Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares said in response to the ruling. “Yet, today a Court – urged by the Biden-Harris Department of Justice – ordered Virginia to put the names of non-citizens back on the voter rolls, mere days before a presidential election. The Department of Justice pulled this shameful, politically motivated stunt 25 days before Election Day, challenging a Virginia process signed into law 18 years ago by a Democrat governor and approved by the Department of Justice in 2006.”
A three-judge panel of a federal appeals court struck down Virginia’s challenge to Judge Giles’ ruling stopping the practice Sunday.
Now the Supreme Court has granted Virginia officials’ request for emergency relief after they argued the 90-day provision does not apply to the removal of non-citizens from the voter rolls.
Miyares’ had also argued that requiring Virginia to restore the voter registrations of non-citizens is a “violation of Virginia law and common sense.”
Last week, a federal judge also ordered Alabama to restore eligibility to the more than 3,200 voters who were deemed ineligible non-citizens.
As CBN News reported, although non-citizen voting in federal elections is already illegal, there is evidence that state officials’ concerns over election integrity are not entirely unfounded.
In a 2016 post-election audit report, the state of North Carolina discovered 41 instances where immigrants who were not yet U.S. citizens voted in state elections.
Eloy Alberto Zayas-Berrier, an immigrant from Cuba, told the Washington Times he can’t qualify for U.S. citizenship and Cuba has refused to take him back.
But even without a green card, he showed up to early voting in North Carolina on Nov. 5, 2016, was invited to register, and cast a ballot.
Juan Francisco Landeros-Mireles joined a line of people at a food pantry and ended up registering to vote. His lawyer, James Todd Jr., said Landeros-Mireles cast a ballot in the 2012 and 2016 elections.
“The fact of the matter is, when you go to vote in person, you are asked your name and your residence and then you’re asked to sign on the list there. There’s no questions about citizenship at that point,” Todd explained.
Earlier this year, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA), Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX), and Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) introduced the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act to bolster efforts to ensure that only U.S. citizens vote in federal elections by requiring proof of citizenship to register.
“We all know, intuitively, that a lot of illegals are voting in federal elections, but it’s not been something that is easily provable,” Johnson said.
Johnson’s legislation would have required voters to provide a form of I.D. including a U.S. passport, military I.D., birth certificate, naturalization certificate, or a government-issued photo I.D. card showing that the applicant’s place of birth was in the United States.
And if someone was voting by mail, they must go to an election official’s office to show proof of citizenship by a certain deadline.
“Proof of citizenship as a requirement to vote in our elections should not be controversial – it is our responsibility to protect the integrity of our electoral process,” Sen. Roger Marshall (R-KS) said.
Virginia
VSP issues senior alert for missing 63-year-old
(WSET) — Virginia State Police has issued a senior alert on behalf of the Campbell County Sheriff’s Office on Thursday.
According to VSP, the Campbell County Sheriff’s Office is looking for Gregory Dale Jordan.
VSP describes Jordan as white, sex: male, age: 63 years old, height: 6’0”, weight: 210 lbs., with green eyes and white hair.
According to VSP, Jordan was last seen on Wednesday on Sunburst Road in Campbell County. His clothing description is unknown. He has a long white beard. He is believed to be on foot.
SEE ALSO: Bullet found in stray dog’s neck during surgery at Lynchburg Humane Society
The missing senior suffers from a cognitive impairment, and the disappearance poses a credible threat to their health and safety, as determined by the investigating agency, VSP said.
You’re asked to contact the Campbell County Sheriff’s Office [24/7 dispatch] with any information regarding their whereabouts at (434) 332-9574, VSP said.
Virginia
West Virginia commit announces decision by blasting ‘Country Roads,’ lighting a couch on fire
A big moment in any student-athlete’s career is announcing what school they’re committing to, and I don’t think you’re going to find an announcement better than one we’ve got coming from one of the newest West Virginia Mountaineers.
What’s that smell? It… it smells like a couch burning to the sounds of the Mountaineers’ beloved John Denver “Take Me Home, Country Roads.”
You bet your sweet a– that’s what it is.
There’s a growing chance that any recruit who lights a couch on fire is going to end up wearing one of these. (Photo by Kevin Abele/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Ethan Lawson is a 6’6″, 300-lb offensive lineman and part of the 2027 recruiting class.
THE 2007 MOUNTAINEERS REMAIN COLLEGE FOOTBALL’S GREATEST ‘WHAT-IF’ STORY NEARLY TWO DECADES LATER
According to Sport Illustrated he has fielded offers from a bunch of programs including Appalachian State, Liberty, Air Force, Army, Navy, Duke, Wake Forest, UConn and more.
But, they all missed out because Lawson posted his decision on X, and well… I think he was always West Virginia material.
Bobcat Goldthwait was burning couches on camera before it was cool.
But, alright, there’s no doubt about it: someone is about to sell some jerseys.
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON’T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
And if there’s not a furniture store in Morgantown that brings in Lawson and fellow offensive line recruit Kevin Brown (who also lit a couch on fire because that’s becoming a thing) for an ad, then… then, well, I don’t know what, but it would be quite the missed opportunity.
It’s early, but Rich Rodriguez’s West Virginia Mountaineers lead college football in recruits burning couches. (Ben Queen-Imagn Images)
Hey, like it or not, sometimes in the age of NIL it can be a popularity contest. If fans like you, it could mean greater visibility and more lucrative deals. Perhaps that was the mission here, and we all know it worked.
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I refuse to believe any Mountaineers fans saw that video, heard the song and then didn’t reflexively raise a beer (even if they didn’t realize they were drinking one and say, “Hell yeah, brother.”)
We’ll see if the sort of thing translates onto the field, but even if it doesn’t, I feel like there’s money to be made making appearances and lighting furniture on fire at frat parties.
Virginia
Crews put out house fire in Bristol, Virginia
BRISTOL, Va. (WCYB) — Crews put out a house fire in Bristol, Virginia, on Wednesday morning, according to officials.
The Bristol, Virginia Fire Department was dispatched at 3:09 a.m. for the fire in the 900 block of Vermont Avenue. The house was unoccupied at the time fire crews arrived on the scene.
Firefighters encountered heavy smoke and flames in the front of the house. They were able to quickly extinguish the fire under challenging conditions. The fire scene remains active and an investigation is underway. No injuries have been reported.
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