vox.com

Featured Stories:

Pam Bondi ‘fired’ as attorney general: report



President Donald Trump has reportedly already fired Attorney General Pam Bondi.

According to Fox News correspondent Katelyn Caralle, the president met with Bondi on Wednesday night to inform her that her time was up. The meeting was said to have taken place ahead of his speech to the nation on the war in Iran.

"One of those sources said that by the time Trump took his place behind the podium for the address, Bondi had already lost her job and was on her way back to Florida," the report claimed.

Trump was reportedly considering EPA chief Lee Zeldin for Bondi's job, according to various reports.

Trump ousts Bondi as AG

https://www.youtube.com/embed/8VMu9J73Jbw

MAGA county clerk will get new sentence in 2020 election plot



An appeals court tossed out a nine-year sentence for discredited Colorado election clerk Tina Peters.

The Donald Trump ally will be re-sentenced by a district court judge after the Colorado Court of Appeals upheld her conviction but found that Mesa County District Court Judge Matthew Barrett had wrongly based part of his sentence on Peters’ exercise of her right to free speech, reported the Denver Post.

“Notwithstanding the fact that some of the trial court’s considerations were tied to proper sentencing considerations, when the court’s comments are viewed in their totality, it is apparent that the court imposed the lengthy sentence it did because Peters continued to espouse the views that led her to commit these crimes,” the opinion states.

The "tenor" of Barrett's original sentencing order indicates that he "punished" Peters for her persistence in insisting the 2020 election had been fraudulent and that keeping her in prison was necessary to prevent her from espousing views the judge felt were "damaging," and the appeals court sent the case back to him for a resentencing.

The appellate court found there was sufficient evidence to convict Peters and that she was not immune to state prosecution, and the judges also found that a purported pardon from Trump carried no authority under Colorado law.

The court denied Peters' request that a new judge resentence her, saying that issue should be raised in a lower court, and ruled that a prosecutor’s description of her case during closing arguments had no impact on the verdict.

“The evidence of her knowledge of the illegality of her conduct is so overwhelming, we simply cannot say that the prosecutor’s statement (even if improper) had any impact on the verdict, let alone an impact so great as to cause serious doubt about the reliability of the judgment of conviction,” the panel found.

Peters, now 70, was convicted by a Mesa County jury of four felony and three misdemeanor crimes for plotting to sneak unauthorized individuals into a secure area to examine voting equipment to look for evidence of voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election.

17 movies to watch out for in 2023

Priya Kansara in Polite Society. | Sundance Institute From the sinister to the exuberant, the films you don’t want to miss. In January, while Oscars discourse roils and people are still catching up on last year’s best mo...

We can’t grieve what we can’t remember

Augusto and Paulina in The Eternal Memory. | Sundance Institute Two blistering, beautiful new docs show the brutality of repressing our collective memories. There’s a liminal space just adjacent to grief. It’s where you ...

Why traffic stops can be so dangerous for Black Americans like Tyre Nichols

People attend a candlelight vigil in memory of Tyre Nichols at the Tobey Skate Park on January 26, 2023, in Memphis, Tennessee. | Scott Olson/Getty Images Nichols died from a brutal beating that followed a traffic stop. ...

In the last 48 hours, violence in Israel and Palestine has spiked

Israeli police investigate after 7 people were killed in an armed attack in a Jewish settlement at East Jerusalem on January 27, 2023. | Mostafa Alkharouf/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images A shooting in Jerusalem and a rai...

Jeff Bezos wants the world to know he’s a philanthropist

Amanda Northrop/Vox The Amazon founder has committed to giving most of his money to charity — and he’s got roughly $120 billion to burn. How’s he doing? During a CNN interview last fall, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos revea...

Mexico’s top cop is on trial along with the war on drugs

Mexican President Felipe Calderon, right, and Secretary of the Mexican Federal Police Genaro Garcia Luna, left, prepare to inaugurate a new police intelligence center, in Mexico City, on November 24, 2009. | Alfredo Estrella/AFP...

Popular articles

Pam Bondi ‘fired’ as attorney general: report



President Donald Trump has reportedly already fired Attorney General Pam Bondi.

According to Fox News correspondent Katelyn Caralle, the president met with Bondi on Wednesday night to inform her that her time was up. The meeting was said to have taken place ahead of his speech to the nation on the war in Iran.

"One of those sources said that by the time Trump took his place behind the podium for the address, Bondi had already lost her job and was on her way back to Florida," the report claimed.

Trump was reportedly considering EPA chief Lee Zeldin for Bondi's job, according to various reports.

Trump ousts Bondi as AG

https://www.youtube.com/embed/8VMu9J73Jbw

MAGA county clerk will get new sentence in 2020 election plot



An appeals court tossed out a nine-year sentence for discredited Colorado election clerk Tina Peters.

The Donald Trump ally will be re-sentenced by a district court judge after the Colorado Court of Appeals upheld her conviction but found that Mesa County District Court Judge Matthew Barrett had wrongly based part of his sentence on Peters’ exercise of her right to free speech, reported the Denver Post.

“Notwithstanding the fact that some of the trial court’s considerations were tied to proper sentencing considerations, when the court’s comments are viewed in their totality, it is apparent that the court imposed the lengthy sentence it did because Peters continued to espouse the views that led her to commit these crimes,” the opinion states.

The "tenor" of Barrett's original sentencing order indicates that he "punished" Peters for her persistence in insisting the 2020 election had been fraudulent and that keeping her in prison was necessary to prevent her from espousing views the judge felt were "damaging," and the appeals court sent the case back to him for a resentencing.

The appellate court found there was sufficient evidence to convict Peters and that she was not immune to state prosecution, and the judges also found that a purported pardon from Trump carried no authority under Colorado law.

The court denied Peters' request that a new judge resentence her, saying that issue should be raised in a lower court, and ruled that a prosecutor’s description of her case during closing arguments had no impact on the verdict.

“The evidence of her knowledge of the illegality of her conduct is so overwhelming, we simply cannot say that the prosecutor’s statement (even if improper) had any impact on the verdict, let alone an impact so great as to cause serious doubt about the reliability of the judgment of conviction,” the panel found.

Peters, now 70, was convicted by a Mesa County jury of four felony and three misdemeanor crimes for plotting to sneak unauthorized individuals into a secure area to examine voting equipment to look for evidence of voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election.

Joe Scarborough Warns Trump’s Iran Speech Sounded A Lot Like Putin

“Who does that sound like? Vladimir Putin going into Ukraine? See, we live in the age of asymmetrical warfare."

The post Joe Scarborough Warns Trump’s Iran Speech Sounded A Lot Like Putin first appeared on Mediaite.