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Boston BLM leader and her husband hit with federal fraud, conspiracy charges

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Boston BLM leader and her husband hit with federal fraud, conspiracy charges

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Monica Cannon-Grant, a Black Lives Matter (BLM) chief in Boston, and her husband, Clark Grant, had been hit with an 18-page federal indictment for fraud and conspiracy on Tuesday.

Federal authorities allege that Cannon-Grant and Grant have defrauded a big sum of donor {dollars} out of over $1 million in grants and donations given to their nonprofit, Violence in Boston, which goals to assist violence survivors within the metropolis.

Cannon-Grant, a distinguished BLM organizer, was arrested exterior of her Beantown house Tuesday and declined to remark on the courthouse after being launched on private recognizance, that means she’ll stay free with out bail however with a written promise to look in courtroom.

LEFT-WING ACTIVIST ALLEGEDLY DEFRAUDED $450G USING ‘BLACK LIVES MATTER OF GREATER ATLANTA’ FACEBOOK PAGE

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Monica Cannon-Grant, entrance left, leads demonstrators as they march from Nubian Sq. to Boston Police headquarters, April 21, 2021, in Boston, as they have a good time the conviction of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin and demand for an finish to police brutality. Federal prosecutors stated in a press release Tuesday, March 15, 2022 that Cannon-Grant, and her husband Clark Grant, of Taunton, Mass., have been charged in an 18-count indictment with wire fraud, conspiracy, and making false statements to a mortgage lending enterprise. (Erin Clark/The Boston Globe through AP)

The BLM activist has claimed innocence on-line and, underneath the phrases of her launch from Choose Judith Dein, is allowed to proceed to work at her nonprofit twice per week however can not deal with the funds. She might be arraigned subsequent week.

Prosecutors didn’t say how a lot cash was allegedly taken by the couple.

Cannon-Grant’s legal professional, Robert Goldstein, stated “we’re extraordinarily disenchanted the federal government rushed to judgment right here” in a press release exterior the courthouse.

“VIB (Violence in Boston) and Monica have been absolutely cooperating, and their manufacturing of information stays ongoing,” Goldstein stated. “Drawing conclusions from an incomplete factual document doesn’t signify the honest and absolutely knowledgeable course of a citizen deserves from its authorities, particularly somebody like Monica who has labored tirelessly on behalf of her group.”

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Michael Harris protests in front of the Glenn County Courthouse

Michael Harris protests in entrance of the Glenn County Courthouse
(Matt Leach/Fox Digital)

“We stay absolutely assured Monica might be vindicated when a whole factual document emerges,” he continued.

Grant was arrested final October by federal brokers who raided the couple’s house and was beforehand charged with mendacity on a mortgage assertion and amassing pandemic unemployment advantages illegally.

The prolonged indictment alleges Cannon-Grant and her husband engaged in three totally different fraud schemes: mendacity on a mortgage utility, defrauding donors and illicitly amassing roughly $1 million in pandemic-related unemployment advantages.

The couple is accused of utilizing a $6,000 grant meant for a visit for at-risk younger males for private expenditures.

A woman holds a Black Lives Matter flag during an event in remembrance of George Floyd and to call for justice for those who lost loved ones to police violence outside the Minnesota State Capitol on May 24, 2021, in Saint Paul, Minnesota. 

A girl holds a Black Lives Matter flag throughout an occasion in remembrance of George Floyd and to name for justice for individuals who misplaced family members to police violence exterior the Minnesota State Capitol on Might 24, 2021, in Saint Paul, Minnesota. 
(Kerem Yucel/AFP through Getty Photos)

In response to a visit proposal, the enterprise was “to offer these younger males publicity to communities exterior of the violence-riddled neighborhoods that they navigate each day.”

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As an alternative, the pair spared no expense on a trip, based on federal authorities, consuming a meal at a Bubba Gump Shrimp Co., shopping for merchandise at Walmart and taking visits to a nail salon amongst different expenditures.

Prosecutors additionally allege that Cannon-Grant advised each the state legal professional common’s workplace and the IRS that she took no wage from her nonprofit whereas paying herself $2,788 per week starting in October 2020.

Cannon-Grant, 41, is the founding father of Violence in Boston and was beforehand named “Bostonian of the Yr” by Boston Globe Journal. 

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Video: Inside the Oval Office Meeting With South Africa’s President

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Video: Inside the Oval Office Meeting With South Africa’s President

John Eligon, Johannesburg bureau chief, recounts what he witnessed in the Oval Office when President Trump confronted the visiting President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa with an elaborate presentation attempting to falsely prove a “genocide” against white Afrikaners.

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Adam Schiff tells EPA's Lee Zeldin he’ll cause cancer after shoutfest: ‘Could give a rat’s a–'

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Adam Schiff tells EPA's Lee Zeldin he’ll cause cancer after shoutfest: ‘Could give a rat’s a–'

The typically calm confines of the Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW) Committee were the site of several clashes Wednesday between Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin and Democrats on the panel adjudicating his annual budget request.

Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., rattled off a list of cancers he claimed Zeldin’s actions at the agency could cause, remarking the New York Republican must be proud of how many regulations he’s slashed in such a short time. 

“Your legacy will be more lung cancer — it’ll be more bladder cancer, more head and neck cancer. There’ll be more breast cancer, more leukemia and pancreatic cancer, more liver cancer, more skin cancer, more kidney cancer, more testicular cancer, or colorectal cancer — more rare cancers of innumerable varieties. That will be your legacy. … My kids are gonna be breathing that air just like yours,” he said.

“If your children were drinking the water in Santa Ana, Mr. Zeldin… maybe you would give a damn,” he said after holding up a glass of water and claiming the EPA’s move toward streamlining its grants and expenditures will lead to a panoply of bad outcomes.

KASH PATEL ENRAGES SCHIFF IN CLINTONIAN BATTLE OVER THE WORD ‘WE’ AND A JANUARY 6 SONG

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“You need the money for a tax cut for rich people because you’re totally beholden to the oil industry,” Schiff fumed, accusing Zeldin of unlawful termination of congressionally appropriated grants.

“You could give a rat’s a– about how much cancer your agency causes,” Schiff said, raising his voice as Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., banged the gavel to note his time was up.

Earlier in the hearing, Zeldin clashed with Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., over grant reviews and claimed the administrator couldn’t “get [his] story straight.”

Whitehouse appeared to make the claim that the EPA was not individually reviewing each of the grants it was canceling and cited court testimony from Zeldin official Travis Voyles that he had conducted an “individualized review” as of February.

FLASHBACK: SCHIFF, WHO REPEATEDLY CLAIMED EVIDENCE OF RUSSIAN COLLUSION, DENOUNCES DURHAM REPORT AS ‘FLAWED’

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Lee Zeldin, left, Adam B. Schiff, center, Sheldon Whitehouse, right (Getty Images)

“You guys are gonna have to start getting your story straight because there are three completely different statements, and they cannot all be true. It cannot be that Voyles personally himself conducted—”

“He did,” Zeldin cut in.

“… the review of 781 grants—” Whitehouse continued.

“He did; I did,” Zeldin cut in again.

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“… and that [Deputy Administrator Daniel] Coogan saw to it that it was individually done,” Whitehouse said as the two men talked over each other.

After some more back-and-forth, Zeldin told Whitehouse that it must be a “crazy concept” for him to consider that more than one person could review the hundreds of grants in question and for more than one per calendar day.

Zeldin said he and his EPA colleagues have been “busting their a–” to identify waste and abuse and that Whitehouse was only interested in scoring political points.

“I’m using the facts as your employees stated them,” Whitehouse claimed.

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“We’re on it every single day, because we have a zero-tolerance policy towards wasting dollars,” Zeldin shot back.

“You don’t care about wasting money,” he went on, adding that he had promised committee member Sen. Pete Ricketts, R-Neb., at a prior hearing that he would make reviewing grants in this way a priority of his tenure. “I have to come back here in front of Sen. Ricketts today, and even though you don’t care about wasting tax dollars, Sen. Ricketts does.”

Fox News Digital reached out to Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.V., chair of the Committee on Environment and Public Works for comment, but did not hear back by press time.

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Column: The 'One, Big, Beautiful Bill' is a big, ugly mess

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Column: The 'One, Big, Beautiful Bill' is a big, ugly mess

The “One Big Beautiful Bill” is one big, ugly mess.

We’ve seen false advertising in naming laws before — the Democrats’ 2022 Inflation Reduction Act jumps to mind. Yet no legislation has been as misbranded as the Republican tax and spending cuts that President Trump, the branding aficionado himself, is pushing along a tortuous path in Congress.

Trump’s appeal to many Americans has always been his purported penchant for “telling it like it is.” But he’s doing the opposite by labeling as the “One Big Beautiful Bill” a behemoth that encompasses just about everything he can’t even try to do by unilateral executive orders — deeper tax cuts, more spending on the military and on his immigration crackdown and, yes, Medicaid cuts. His so-called beauty is a beast so frightening that ratings firm Moody’s saw the details last week, calculated the resulting debt and on Friday downgraded the United States’ sterling credit rating for the first time in more than 100 years. That likely means higher interest costs for the nation’s increased borrowing ahead.

And yet, in another example of the gaslighting at which Trump and his party are so adept, the White House and House Republican leaders dismissed the rebuke of their bill. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said it would spur economic growth — the old, discredited “tax cuts will pay for themselves” argument. Speaker Mike Johnson said the Moody’s downgrade just proved the urgent need to pass the big, beautiful bill with its “historic spending cuts.” Which only proved that Johnson didn’t read Moody’s rationale, explaining that spending cuts would be far exceeded by tax cuts, thereby reducing the government’s revenues and piling up more debt.

The Republican Party, which postures as the fiscally conservative of the two parties despite decades of evidence to the contrary, would add about $4 trillion in debt over the next 10 years if its bill becomes law, according to Moody’s. Other nonpartisan analyses — including from the Congressional Budget Office, the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget and the Penn Wharton Budget Model of the University of Pennsylvania, similarly project additional debt in the $3-trillion-plus to $5-trillion range, more if the tax cuts are made permanent as Trump and Republicans want.

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No surprise: Trump, after all, set a record for the most debt in a single presidential term: $8.4 trillion during Trump 1.0, nearly twice what accrued under his successor, President Biden. Most of Trump’s first-term red ink stemmed from his 2017 tax cuts and spending, which predated the COVID-19 pandemic and the government’s costly response.

“This bill does not add to the deficit,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt insisted to reporters on Monday, showing yet again why such a facile dissembler was chosen to speak for the habitually prevaricating president.

“That’s a joke,” Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky responded.

Worse, it’s a lie.

And no surprise here, either, but Trump’s tariffs — another economic monstrosity that he’s declared “beautiful” — aren’t paying for this bill despite his claims. Yet the president repeated that falsehood on Tuesday (along with others), when he visited the Capitol to strong-arm Republican dissidents, including Massie, into supporting the measure ahead of a House vote. (Inside a closed caucus with House Republicans, the president reportedly called for Massie to be unseated; the Kentuckian remains opposed.)

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“The economy is doing great, the stock market is higher now than when I came to office. And we’ve taken in hundreds of billions of dollars in tariff money,” Trump told reporters at the Capitol. Every point a lie.

(This week provided yet more evidence that he’s utterly wrong to keep insisting that foreign countries pay his tariffs, not American consumers. After Walmart, the largest U.S. retailer, said late last week that it would have to raise prices, Trump posted that it should “ ‘EAT THE TARIFFS.’ ” He added: “I’ll be watching, and so will your customers!!!” This after a Walmart exec said that “the magnitude of these increases is more than any retailer can absorb.”)

While details of the budget bill shift as Republican leaders dicker with their dissidents, here’s the ugly general outline, according to Penn Wharton:

Extending and expanding Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, which otherwise expire this year, would cost nearly $4.5 trillion over 10 years, $5.8 trillion if the cuts are permanent. (Mandating that tax cuts expire after a time, as Trump did in 2017, is an old budget gimmick to understate a bill’s cost. The politicians know they’ll just extend the tax breaks, as we’re seeing now.) The bill’s proposed spending increases for the military, immigration enforcement and deportations would cost about $600 billion more.

Spending cuts over 10 years, mostly to Medicaid as well as to Obamacare, food stamps and clean-energy programs, would save about $1.6 trillion. That offsets as little as one-quarter of the cost of Trump’s tax cuts and added spending.

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Also, the bill is inequitable. The tax cuts would disproportionately favor corporations and wealthy Americans. Its spending cuts, however, would mostly cost lower- and some middle-income people who benefit from federal health and nutrition programs. Changes to Medicaid, including a work requirement (92% of recipients under 65 already work full or part-time, according to the health research organization KFF), and to Obamacare would leave up to 14 million people without health insurance.

Penn Wharton found that people with household income less than $51,000, for example, would see their after-tax income reduced if the bill becomes law, and the top 0.1% of income-earners would get hundreds of thousands of dollars more over the next 10 years. Beyond that time, Penn Wharton projected, “all future households are worse off” given the long-term impact of spiraling debt and a tattered safety net.

“Don’t f— around with Medicaid,” Trump told Republicans at the Capitol, according to numerous reports. How cynical, given that he was pressuring them to vote for a bill that would do just that.

All of which recalls an acronym that’s popular these days: FAFO.

@jackiekcalmes

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