A man was killed and a 5-year-old injured in a shooting at a youth football game at Potomac High School on Saturday morning.
Washington
Barack Obama’s role in Joe Biden’s 2024 reelection bid takes shape
Former President Barack Obama’s developing role in President Joe Biden’s 2024 reelection effort was highlighted in a new tweet from Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff on Sunday.
“Do you want to meet Presidents @JoeBiden and @BarackObama?” he asked. “Chip in whatever you can to support Joe and Kamala’s campaign and you’ll be automatically entered for a chance a win.”
HERE’S WHY BIDEN IS TARGETING AI, SEMICONDUCTORS AND QUANTUM COMPUTERS IN CHINA
The tweet directed viewers to a landing page from ActBlue for the Biden Victory Fund, the president’s joint fundraising committee.
According to the fund’s page, by donating, people have the chance to win a trip to meet Obama and Biden — who once served as Obama’s vice president. The travel and hotel stay will be covered, and the winner will get to meet both men, memorializing it with a photo.
Obama reportedly promised to do everything in his power to boost Biden to reelection during a lunch meeting at the White House in June, per the Washington Post.
During the meeting, he also allegedly warned Biden of former president Donald Trump’s political prowess and stranglehold on the Republican Party. Trump is the front-runner in the Republican primary race, besting each competitor by double digits.
In a statement to the Washington Post, Obama Senior Adviser Eric Schultz said, “We place a huge emphasis on finding creative ways to reach new audiences, especially tools that can be directly tied to voter mobilization or volunteer activations.”
“We are deliberate in picking our moments because our objective is to move the needle,” he added.
As Biden enlists the help of prominent Democrats across the country, the help of Obama is likely the most beneficial. Obama, who survived his own reelection bid in 2012, is the most famous former president, according to a 2023 survey from YouGov.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
He is also the eighth most popular, behind only former presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, George Washington, John F. Kennedy, and most popular, Abraham Lincoln.
Obama is also the most popular politician in the country, per YouGov’s second quarter of 2023 rankings. Biden’s Vice President, Kamala Harris, is sixth on the list, and the current president himself is 11th.
Washington
Man dead, child injured at Prince George’s football game shooting
Both were transported to the hospital where the man was pronounced dead. The 5-year-old is receiving treatment for non-life-threatening injuries.
Aziz said that the two people in the altercation knew each other and the dispute was over something that had happened outside the game. “And [they] brought it to a game where young people, 7-year-olds, were playing a football game, out enjoying this beautiful day with their families,” Aziz said.
He said the homicide unit is investigating the shooting.
“The work we have to do in this moment is not just reactive,” County Executive Angela D. Alsobrooks (D) said at the news conference. “We really have to continue as a community, and we have to do so in partnership with neighboring jurisdictions, to make sure we are doing everything in our power to remove guns from our communities.”
Washington
Deputy fatally shoots seven starving, abandoned dogs
The Apache County Sheriff’s Office, which serves roughly 65,000 people, maintains that the deputy did nothing wrong that day in September. Chief Deputy Roscoe Herrera said that since the county has no animal control service, deputies have discretion to handle animal issues as they see fit. The deputy, Jarrod Toadecheenie, declined to comment.
But the incident in Adamana, Ariz. — an unincorporated community about 100 miles east of Flagstaff — has outraged local animal advocates who say that shooting the dogs was the wrong solution and that the area desperately needs to address animal hoarding and abandonment. Some residents have launched Facebook groups to try to find homes for abandoned dogs and to expose people who illegally hoard animals.
“The Apache County Sheriff’s Office won’t do anything to fix the problem,” said Teresa Schumann, founder of the nonprofit Northern Arizona Animal Search and Rescue. “Animals are dying everywhere in the county.”
Molly Ottman, executive editor of the Mountain Daily Star, first obtained the body-camera footage of the incident and shared it with The Washington Post.
The dogs who were shot were owned by a divorcing couple who had abandoned the property, Toadecheenie wrote in the incident report. He wrote that he visited the home several times over a span of three weeks after neighbors called to complain about the canines.
On the first visit, he counted 10 dogs, “all of which seemed to be in good health.” A few days later, the deputy wrote, he responded to a call that the dogs had chased a neighbor’s donkey.
Toadecheenie contacted Schumann, who said she was struggling to find new owners for the dogs when the deputy called and said he would “handle it.” Schumann said she told him the dogs may need to be euthanized if they were feral.
On Sept. 22, Schumann told Toadecheenie that she hadn’t been able to find new homes for the dogs. After telling his supervisor that he planned to shoot the dogs, the deputy bought dog food and a tray, and collected water from a fire station.
Then he went to the couple’s property, corralled the dogs with the food and water, put on headphones and began to shoot the canines, the body-camera footage shows. Toadecheenie shot one dog two additional times as it continued to move.
Two dogs ran away uninjured and hid under a shed. They were later brought to a local animal shelter by Schumann. One died of parvovirus shortly after arriving, and the other was adopted, said Brandon Smigiel, a supervisor at Holbrook Animal Care and Control.
In the incident report, Toadecheenie recommended that the couple who allegedly abandoned the dogs be charged with animal cruelty. No charges had been filed as of Friday, according to county records.
Herrera, the sheriff’s chief deputy, acknowledged that the situation had caused the community “distress.”
“This tragic decision was made under extremely difficult circumstances due to a combination of limited resources, the willful neglect and abandonment of the dogs by their original owners, and the considerable amount of time spent seeking assistance from outside resources,” he said in a statement to The Post.
In a separate statement provided to KPNX 12 News on June 6, the sheriff’s office seemed to blame a lack of funding.
“Apache County does not have an animal care and control department. In the unincorporated areas that responsibility is left up to the deputies and actions taken vary and are considered on a case-by-case basis. We do not have the infrastructure or budget to support such a department.”
Schumann, who runs the rescue nonprofit, said she never thought the deputy would shoot the animals.
“It infuriates me when the sheriff’s office says they don’t have the resources” to handle animal situations differently, she said. “There are plenty of people who are trying to help.”
The Arizona Humane Society called the situation “entirely preventable” and lamented that the sheriff’s office had not asked it for help.
“This awful incident lacked all compassion and judgement,” Jennifer Armbruster, a spokeswoman for the humane society, said in a statement. “And what is most clear is that establishing an animal care and control service in Apache County is an absolute necessity to prevent something like this from happening in the future.”
Animal hoarding is at “epidemic levels” in Arizona, creating dangerous situations, said Terri Hoffman, founder of Animal Rights Champions of Arizona. Last summer, three mixed-breed pit bulls mauled a 2-year-old Apache County girl to death. Still, Hoffman said that she wants the deputy to be held accountable and that killing abandoned dogs is not an appropriate solution to hoarding.
“I’ve been to homes where there’s over 53 dogs,” Hoffman said. “Some people hoard horses and goats out here, too. I’ve seen dogs with open wounds, severe infections. Animals are dying.”
Washington
Woman dies after dog attack, Baltimore police say
On arriving, officers “were informed” that the stray pit bulls had attacked three victims and that one, the 50-year old woman, “succumbed to her injuries,” the statement said.
No information was available about the condition of the other two victims.
Two officers fired shots, and one dog was hit, the police said.
Both dogs were seized by the police and by the city’s animal control department, the police said.
The site is a residential street, lined with many two-story rowhouses with the traditional white marble steps leading from the sidewalk to their front doors. It is in the Mondawmin neighborhood, five or six miles northwest of the Inner Harbor.
-
News1 week ago
Israel used a U.S.-made bomb in a deadly U.N. school strike in Gaza
-
World1 week ago
France to provide Ukraine with its Mirage combat aircraft
-
World1 week ago
World leaders, veterans mark D-Day’s 80th anniversary in France
-
World1 week ago
Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 833
-
News1 week ago
Nonprofit CFO Accused of 'Simply Astonishing' Fraud
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago
Insane Like Me? – Review | Vampire Horror Movie | Heaven of Horror
-
Politics1 week ago
George Clooney called White House to complain about Biden’s criticism of ICC and defend wife’s work: report
-
Politics1 week ago
Newson, Dem leaders try to negotiate Prop 47 reform off California ballots, as GOP wants to let voters decide