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Putin front-and-center in new attack ad in North Carolina’s divisive GOP Senate primary

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Former North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory is focusing on GOP Senate major rival Rep. Ted Budd in a brand new marketing campaign industrial that spotlights parts of feedback the congressman made about Russian chief Vladimir Putin.

Within the advert, McCrory’s first in his bid for the Republican nomination within the race for the Senate seat held by retiring GOP Sen. Richard Burr in the important thing swing state of North Carolina, the previous governor costs that “whereas Ukrainians bled and died… Congressman Budd excused their killer.” 

LIVE FOX NEWS UPDATES ON RUSSIA’S INVASION OF UKRAINE

The 30-second spot then makes use of clips of Budd from a Feb. 26 Fox Information interview saying “There are strategic the explanation why he [Putin] would wish to defend his southern and western flank. We perceive that.”

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Putin launched Russia’s lethal invasion of neighboring Ukraine two days earlier, on Feb. 24. 

McCrory’s industrial, which was first reported by Politico, additionally features a fast soundbite of Budd from a Feb. 28 interview with a CBS Information affiliate in North Carolina saying that Putin’s “a really clever actor.”

CLICK HERE FOR THE LATEST FOX NEWS REPORTING FROM THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL

“Budd’s votes have been pleasant in the direction of Russia,” McCrory costs in his advert. “He voted in opposition to sanctions on Russia. These are severe occasions and we’d like severe senators. I don’t praise our enemies. I stand for fact and freedom.”

However within the Fox Information interview, Budd additionally referred to as Putin’s assault on Ukraine “evil.” And he went on to emphasise that “this can be a sovereign nation within the Ukraine and we stand with the Ukraine individuals.”

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And within the interview with the CBS affiliate, Budd once more referred to as Putin “evil” and an “worldwide thug.”

Budd’s marketing campaign took intention at McCrory.

NORTH CAROLINA SENATE CANDIDATE MARK WALKER TURNED DOWN TRUMP, AND IT’S PAID OFF SO FAR

“Governor McCrory has an extended track-record of underestimating the opposition, which is why he’s already misplaced twice and is about to lose once more,” Budd adviser Jonathan Felts instructed Fox Information in an announcement, as he pointed to McCrory’s 2008 gubernatorial defeat and his unsuccessful 2016 reelection bid.

Former President Donald Trump, proper, declares his endorsement of N.C. Rep. Ted Budd, left, for the 2022 North Carolina U.S. Senate seat as he speaks on the North Carolina Republican Conference Saturday, June 5, 2021, in Greenville, N.C. (AP Picture/Chris Seward)
(AP )

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Budd landed the endorsement final yr of former President Donald Trump, who stays very fashionable and influential with GOP voters in North Carolina and across the nation. Trump tried to persuade one other conservative rival, former Rep. Mark Walker, to drop out of the Senate major and run for a Home seat, which might have benefited Budd. 

However Walker defied Trump and stayed within the race. Walker, who steered the conservative Republican Research Committee for a part of his tenure on Capitol Hill, instructed Fox Information Digital final month that “I’m the number-one America First-rated candidate” within the race.

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New Florida law establishes safe space in sheriff's office parking lots for child custody exchanges

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A new law creating designated areas at sheriff’s offices for separated parents with split custody to safely exchange children is going into effect in Florida on Monday.

Purple signs at sheriff’s offices across the Sunshine State will designate child exchange zones where parents can drop off their children without fear of harm to themselves or their children. The color purple represents domestic violence awareness.

The designated parking lot, which will be accessible at all times of the day, will have a purple light or sign identifying the area for parents to hand off their children in accordance with their custody plan while deputies watch on camera.

H.B. 385, titled Safe Exchange of Minor Children, requires adequate lighting and video surveillance that records continuously for 24 hours a day and seven days a week.

CASSIE CARLI: SLAIN FLORIDA MOM’S EX-BOYFRIEND EXTRADITED TO ALABAMA ON ABUSE OF CORPSE CHARGE

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A new law will go into effect in Florida on Monday that creates designated areas at sheriff’s offices where separated parents who share custody can safely exchange their children. (Indio Police Department)

At least one camera must be pointed at the parking lot and be able to record the area in the vicinity of the purple light or sign during both day and night, capture pictures that clearly and accurately display the time and date, and retain video surveillance recordings or pictures for at least 45 days.

The law was named for Florida mother Cassie Carli, who vanished in 2022 after meeting her child’s father in a restaurant parking lot during a custody exchange. Her body was discovered buried in Alabama weeks later. 

The child’s father, 35-year-old Marcus Spanevelo, was indicted in connection with her death.

SLAIN FLORIDA MOTHER CASSIE CARLI’S CAUSE, MANNER OF DEATH RULED ‘UNDETERMINED’ 6 MONTHS LATER

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cassie carli posing for photo and marcus spanevelo mugshot

Cassie Carli (left) vanished in 2022 after meeting her child’s father, Marcus Spanevelo (right), in a restaurant parking lot during a custody exchange before her body was discovered buried in Alabama weeks later. (Photo courtesy Carli family; Santa Rosa County Sheriff)

The legislation also requires parents who share custody of their children to establish a parenting plan approved by a court that details how they will share the daily responsibilities of raising the child.

The plan must include time-sharing schedule arrangements that specify the time the child shares with each parent. It will also designate which parent is responsible for the child’s health care, education and other activities.

H.B. 385 was signed into law by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis last month.

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Supreme Court dismisses state challenges to red state restrictions on social media platforms

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The Supreme Court  on Monday dismissed challenges to Florida and Texas laws that restrict how large social media companies moderate user content. 

Each law would require Big Tech companies like X (formerly Twitter) and Facebook to host third-party communications but prevent those businesses from blocking or removing users’ posts based on political viewpoints.

In a unanimous ruling, the court said lower courts did not properly analyze the First Amendment issues at play in the case. As a result, each case will go back to its respective Circuit Court of Appeals.

“Today, we vacate both decisions for reasons separate from the First Amendment merits, because neither Court of Appeals properly considered the facial nature of NetChoice’s challenge. The courts mainly addressed what the parties had focused on. And the parties mainly argued these cases as if the laws applied only to the curated feeds offered by the largest and most paradigmatic social-media platforms—as if, say, each case presented an as-applied challenge brought by Facebook protesting its loss of control over the content of its News Feed,” the court wrote.

GOP SENATOR URGES SCOTUS TO REIN IN BIG TECH’S CONTENT CENSORSHIP THAT DEFIES ‘LOGIC’

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Sprinklers water the lawn in front of the U.S. Supreme Court on April 29, 2024. (Getty Images )

“But argument in this Court revealed that the laws might apply to, and differently affect, other kinds of websites and apps. In a facial challenge, that could well matter, even when the challenge is brought under the First Amendment,” the court added.

There were no dissenting opinions; five justices filed separate concurring or concurring in judgment opinions as well. They included Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Clarence Thomas.

In almost four hours of oral arguments in February, the justices weighed whether to offer a sweeping ruling on the First Amendment implications of the state laws, or a more limited approach that might have the lower courts take another look at how those content moderation policies would be applied.

The Florida law blocked a social media platform from engaging in censoring, prioritizing, or so-called “shadow banning” that is “based on the content.” Texas’ law was broader.

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JAN 6 RIOTERS, ABORTION, GUN RIGHTS: A LOOK AHEAD AT LANDMARK CASES SCOTUS WILL HEAR IN 2024

Social media applications

Florida’s social media law blocked a social media platform from engaging in censoring, prioritizing, or so-called “shadow banning” “based on the content.”  (Matt Cardy/Getty Images)

It would have also prevented “willfully deplatforming a candidate” for public office for material posted by or about that candidate.

Both Florida and Texas would also require those companies to notify a user when their content has been modified or edited, along with an explanation for that action.

GOP AGS ASK SUPREME COURT TO PEEL BACK CONTENT MODERATION FROM BIG TECH IN LANDMARK FIRST AMENDMENT CASES

Supreme Court members

Members of the Supreme Court, from left, Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Neil M. Gorsuch, Sonia Sotomayor, and Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., and Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson, Samuel A. Alito, Jr., Elena Kagan, and Brett M. Kavanaugh on Sept. 30, 2022, in Washington, D.C. (Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States via Getty Images)

Trade groups representing big tech companies argue that the laws violate their free speech rights to decide what content meets their policies — saying their forums should not be an open-ended portal for offensive or dangerous speech — including school bullying, harassment, terrorist ideology, racial hatred, medical misinformation and voter fraud.

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The laws were supported by Republicans in Congress and over a dozen GOP-led states, who filed amicus briefs in the case. 

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., said the platforms wanted to keep liability protections granted by Congress for content on their sites, while simultaneously asking for unfettered ability to censor content, citing their First Amendment liberties.

“Despite decades arguing for this position, today the tech platforms take precisely the opposite line. They claim that their content hosting and curation decisions are in fact expressive — expressive enough that they enjoy First Amendment protection,” the lawmaker argued.

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Missing Georgia firefighters found dead in baffling circumstances: police

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The bodies of two Georgia firefighters who recently broke off their relationship were found on Sunday in Tennessee, more than one week after they went missing, officials said.

The Hinesville Police Department confirmed the discovery of Raegan Anderson, 25, and her ex-boyfriend, Chandler Kuhbander, 24, in Cocke County, about 450 miles north of their hometown. Their bodies were found in Anderson’s vehicle.

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Kuhbander’s mother, Jane Kuhbander, told Court TV last week that they had been together for more than seven years before ending the “toxic” union.

Anderson, Jane said, struggled to accept the end of the relationship and repeatedly threatened to kill herself.

FLORIDA FIREFIGHTER KILLS NEW WIFE IN MURDER-SUICIDE AFTER OMINOUS FACEBOOK POST

The bodies of Georgia firefighters Raegan Anderson and Chandler Kuhbander were found Sunday in Tennessee, more than a week after the pair went missing. (Hinesville Police Department)

Her son, she said, had gone on a date with another woman on June 23, the day before he disappeared, and Anderson allegedly found his car and keyed it.

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She was arrested for the crime and later bonded out. Anderson believed she was likely to lose her job with the fire department and expressed her spiraling fears to Kuhbander.

The following day, Kuhbander went to work out at a Crunch Fitness center in Savannah, Georgia, and planned to later attend his younger sister’s birthday party.

Surveillance cameras show Anderson circling the parking lot outside several times while he was inside, the mother said.

GEORGIA DAD FREED AFTER HOT CAR SEAT DEATH OF SON PUT HIM IN PRISON FOR MURDER

Young woman with her brother outside.

Aurora Kuhbander with her older brother, Chandler Kuhbander, left, whose body was found in Tennessee on Sunday. (Facebook)

He eventually exited the gym and began heading to his car, the video shows.

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However, the mother said she believes he got into her 2017 Ford Focus under “duress” – and was never heard from again.

Prior to the discovery of the bodies, she told the network that Anderson was not in the right “head space” and wrote a suicide note to her son the day before they vanished.

In a Facebook post, she described Anderson as a “danger to herself and [her son] is believed to not be with her willingly.”

Despite their breakup, Kuhbander continued to try to comfort Anderson but was sometimes forced to plead with her to stop harassing him.

JUDGE ARRESTED AT ATLANTA NIGHTCLUB REMOVED FROM OFFICE FOR ‘JUDICIAL MISCONDUCT’

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Split of Chandley Kuhbander in his firefighter unform.

Firefighters Chandler Kuhbander and Raegan Anderson, whose bodies were found Sunday in Tennessee. (Facebook)

“He’s very driven to do the right thing and make sure people are safe,” she told Court TV. “He really does care about Raegan.”

Days later, they were both found dead.

An autopsy will be performed on the Liberty County firefighters to determine their manner of death.

“Details pertaining to the discovery of their bodies, vehicle and events leading to their deaths are not available at this time,” police said after the bodies were found.

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Chandler Kuhbander with his mom, Jane Kuhbander.

Chandler Kuhbander with his mom, Jane Kuhbander. (Facebook)

Kuhbander’s shattered sister wrote a tribute to her sibling on Facebook.

“Trying to find the words to say goodbye but i can’t. It’s tearing me apart to even think about not having you here. Never in my life did I think I would have to be doing life without you,” she wrote. “It’s always been my two big brothers but now it’s just me and Xander. We will honor you in every way possible. No one will ever not know who you are and how good of a person you are. I love you forever bub.”

Ashley Papa contributed to this report.

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