Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Beto publicly blindsides Abbott at massacre briefing

 

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Tell Congress to implement a national red flag law!

BREAKING NEWS

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‘This is on you': O'Rourke disrupts shooting briefing to confront Texas governor

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Beto O'Rourke interrupted a news conference on the Uvalde school shooting Wednesday to confront Texas leaders about the state's lax gun laws, prompting a heated exchange with lawmakers. Gov. Greg Abbott had just finished delivering remarks and began to introduce Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick when O'Rourke approached the stage and called Abbott out for focusing his comments on mental health in response to the massacre instead of acknowledging the role guns played. The former congressman said the shooting was "predictable and preventable."… [more]


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WATCH: Furious Beto O’Rourke interrupts Greg Abbott’s press conference, gets escorted out

The Democrat candidate held the governor's feet to the fire for enabling widespread murder while collecting NRA blood money.


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Republicans pull VILE stunt over baby formula shortage

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Unreal.






Senator destroys GOP on guns in speech of the year

 

OD Action:

It's Our Democracy!

Tell Congress to pass gun reforms to make sure the Texas school massacre never happens again!
Today’s Action: Pass gun safety laws NOW!

Today's Top Stories:

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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Democrat Chris Murphy just gave the speech of the year amid today's tragedy in Texas

The Senator who led the failed Republican-stymied effort to pass gun reforms after Sandy Hook issued a passionate speech imploring his colleagues to finally take action.

Take Action: Tell prosecutors to charge parents who give kids unsupervised access to guns BEFORE they hurt someone!


19 children, 2 teachers murdered in Uvalde, Texas mass shooting
Yet another unfathomable atrocity has befallen the innocent while the Republican elite bathes itself in the blood and grief of American butchery, consigning our children to the ground once again to slake their unquenchable and unholy thirst for power.

Take Action: Call on cities to pass laws proven to mitigate gun violence!


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Republicans pull VILE stunt over baby formula shortage

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Unreal.


New evidence indicates Shireen Abu Akleh was killed in targeted attack by Israeli forces
Contrary to Israeli protestations, the evidence indicates that beloved Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was deliberately killed by the Israeli army.

Take Action: Tell Biden to condemn Israel’s murder of a Palestinian-American journalist!


Trump's revenge candidate and Bush scion eat shit in GOP primaries, nailbiter in progressive vs. conservative Democratic race
Brad Raffensberger, who famously refused to interfere in the 2020 Georgia runoff elections, successfully fended off the Trump-backed Jody Hice, deranged psychopath Ken Paxton easily swatted aside a halfwit Bush failson in Texas, and the race between anti-choice NRA favorite Henry Cuellar vs. progressive Democrat Jessica Cisneros is still too close to call. Stacey Abrams easily won her primary and will seek to win the governorship away from vote-suppressor Brian Kemp.

Take Action: Tell Congress to break the school-to-prison pipeline!


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Brave young woman confronts Indiana pastor about sexually assaulting her as a teen in front of the whole congregation

Pastor John B. Lowe II resigned his post and gave a speech to the congregation in which he admitted to "adultery" — but wasn't ready for his victim to come forward there and then.


Southern Baptist leaders plan to release a secret list of accused sex abusers
After a public outcry, the hidden evidence of a decade of abuse will finally be revealed — and hopefully a reckoning will begin.


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Republicans are going to gut the rules to let their corporate cronies pollute our communities

EDF Action Votes: Can you help us kick the Republicans out of Congress and foil their heinous plans?


Extremist lunatic Rep. Paul Gosar spreads appalling misinformation, falsely blaming trans person for Uvalde massacre
In a since deleted tweet, the KKKaucus member promoted right-wing conspiracy that the shooter was a "transsexual leftist illegal alien," complete with pictures of a random person who will now spend the next few weeks barraged with death threats and hate mail from his rabid, moronic supporters.


Indiana lawmakers override GOP governor's veto to enact anti-trans sports ban
The radicals in the Indiana statehouse defied their GOP governor to cruelly target and dehumanize trans kids.


Iraqi citizen living in Ohio arrested after allegedly plotting to assassinate former President George W. Bush, says FBI
Given the FBI's long and disgraceful history of enticing and entrapping Muslim immigrants in terrorism stings, we have a LOT of questions.


North Korea fires three missiles into the sea
Come on. Kim Jong-un, please, not now. Read the room, would you?


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Some much-needed levity

Now time for rage

Hope...


Today’s Action: Pass gun safety laws NOW!

A decade after Sandy Hook, we still haven’t passed enough gun safety laws in place to prevent another mass shooting at an elementary school. Instead of enacting common sense gun laws, Americans have spent the past decade teaching students how to build barricades, run for their life, and fight back against active shooters — effectively embedding the possibility of gun violence into everyday life. Where we could have had gun reform, we instead have legislators with even more blood on their hands. 

By four months into 2022, pages of mass shootings had been added to the Gun Violence Archive. Just in the past few weeks? The NYC Subway shooting, resulting in 29 injuries; the Tops supermarket shooting in Buffalo, resulting in 10 deaths; and yesterday, the shooting at a Texas elementary school that left at least 18 children dead. How much mass trauma must working America experience before our elected officials step up and do something?

Call (202.224.3121) or email your members of Congress and demand comprehensive, common-sense gun safety laws, including universal background checks, age limits, and expanded waiting periods!

In the face of unthinkable trauma, violence, and suffering that has only escalated over the course of the pandemic, we are still waiting for meaningful, sensible gun reform. It’s well past time for fundamental change. 

There were 693 mass shootings in the United States in 2021 alone. Excluding suicide, there were 20,726 gun deaths by the end of last year, as well. In total, more than 40,000 gun deaths have occurred just during the Biden presidency alone. Despite months of virtual, online schooling last year, there were still 42 acts of gun violence on K-12 campuses. According to the Washington Post, a child is shot every hour in America. Despite these startling numbers, an estimated 18.8 million guns were still sold last year, and six states passed permit-free concealed-carry laws. We have had more mass shootings in 2022 so far than there have been days — something's got to give. 

There were 693 mass shootings in the United States in 2021 alone. Excluding suicide, there were 20,726 gun deaths by the end of last year, as well. In total, more than 40,000 gun deaths have occurred just during the Biden presidency alone. Despite months of virtual, online schooling last year, there were still 42 acts of gun violence on K-12 campuses. According to the Washington Post, a child is shot every hour in America. Despite these startling numbers, an estimated 18.8 million guns were still sold last year, and six states passed permit-free concealed-carry laws. We have had more mass shootings in 2022 so far than there have been days — something's got to give. 

Email or call (202.224.3121) your representatives and demand common-sense gun safety laws broadly supported by Americans from both sides of the aisle!

PS — Please don't forget to sign the petition to tell Congress to pass gun reforms to make sure the Texas school massacre never happens again, and be sure to follow OD Action on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.






How Crypto Is Using the Behavioral Dynamics of Bernie Madoff’s Fraud

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How Crypto Is Using the Behavioral Dynamics of Bernie Madoff’s Fraud

By Pam Martens: May 23, 2022 ~

Bernie Madoff

Bernie Madoff

On June 18, 1991 I was having lunch with two of my new investment clients on the outdoor patio of their private country club on Long Island. As their friends stopped by the table, the married couple introduced me as their investment advisor and recommended me to their friends. One friend said to my astonishment: “Can you guarantee me the same 13 percent annual return as Bernie Madoff?”

If one is a reputable, licensed broker, guaranteeing a 13 percent return – or any guaranteed return on a stock portfolio – is a flagrant violation of the rules of the investment industry. It can also strip you of your license, your career, and get you perp walked.

Stock investing is a volatile endeavor. Stocks can go into a bear market and deliver a negative return for years. That is why it is illegal to guarantee to an investor any specific return on a stock portfolio.

I had been reading the Wall Street Journal for years at that point and the name Bernie Madoff did not ring a bell. I asked my clients if they knew this Bernie Madoff. My clients stunned me further by telling me that Madoff had been making good on his promise of a 13 percent return since 1978 – not to just my clients but to numerous other members of this country club.

My cognitive processes sized up the situation like this: if this man is willing to brazenly break the law by guaranteeing stock returns, if he has delivered 13 percent returns steadily for more than a decade – including during years in which the S&P 500 had a negative return — then it is highly likely he is running a Ponzi scheme.

I shared my concerns with my clients and asked to see their account statements. A few days later the husband brought multiple years of these statements to my office. The statements showed negative returns in some years and nothing resembling a consistent 13 percent annual return. I provided my analysis to my client and asked him if I might call Madoff, if I didn’t give Madoff the client’s name. He said I could.

Madoff immediately took my call and was highly indignant at my suggestion that he was running a scam. I was working at the time for a large, old investment firm and I thought it might frighten him to know that I had his statements and was about to turn them over to the sleuths in our compliance department. I don’t know what action the compliance department took.

In late 1995 I left the old investment firm and joined an even older investment firm, one whose founder had been Assistant Treasury Secretary under Abraham Lincoln. Years after joining the new firm I noticed that new order tickets had been printed and the name “Madoff Securities” had been added to the venues that a broker could route his stock orders, alongside the New York Stock Exchange.

I ran to my manager’s office and breathlessly spilled out the story of what had occurred at the country club luncheon. I then decided to call a member of the Executive Committee of the Board of Directors, who was well respected and had an attentive ear. This gentleman, who was located in St. Louis, informed me that he would look into the matter but that he had never heard about Bernie Madoff managing money for investors. He believed his only business was a trading firm called Madoff Securities.

It was not until December 2008 – at the height of the financial crash when everyone was pulling money out of stocks and putting it in safe havens – that Madoff’s Ponzi scheme collapsed. Madoff confessed his Ponzi scheme to his two adult sons who turned him into authorities. Madoff died in federal prison on April 14 of last year at age 82. He was serving a 150-year prison sentence.

I was not the only person to have had suspicions about Madoff and requested investigations. On November 7, 2005, Harry Markopolos sent a 21-page document to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).  The letter followed a five-year effort by Markopolos to get the SEC to open an investigation of Madoff.

Here’s how the SEC characterized the letter from Markopolos in a January 4, 2006 memo: “The staff received a complaint alleging that Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, a registered broker-dealer in New York (“BLM”), operates an undisclosed multi-billion dollar investment advisory business, and that BLM operates this business as a Ponzi scheme. The complaint did not contain specific facts about the alleged Ponzi scheme…”

In reality, the Markopolos letter was intensely fact-filled, stating in part:

“I am a derivatives expert and have traded or assisted in the trading of several billion $US in options strategies for hedge funds and institutional clients…(Highly Likely) Madoff Securities is the world’s largest Ponzi Scheme…The [Madoff] family runs what is effectively the world’s largest hedge fund with estimated assets under management of at least $20 billion to perhaps $50 billion…The third parties organize the hedge funds and obtain investors but 100% of the money raised is actually managed by Madoff Investment Securities, LLC in a purported hedge fund strategy. The investors that pony up the money don’t know that BM [Bernie Madoff] is managing their money…Some prominent US based hedge fund, fund of funds, that “invest” in BM in this manner include: A. Fairfield Sentry Limited (Arden Asset Management) which had $5.2 billion invested in BM as of May 2005…Access International Advisors…which had $450 million invested with BM as of mid-2002…Tremont Capital Management, Inc…Tremont oversees on an advisory and fully discretionary basis over $10.5 billion in assets.

“ Clients include institutional investors, public and private pension plans, ERISA plans, university endowments, foundations, and financial institutions, as well as high net worth individuals…Madoff does not allow outside performance audits. One London based hedge fund, fund of funds, representing Arab money, asked to send in a team of Big 4 accountants to conduct a performance audit during their planned due diligence. They were told ‘No, only Madoff’s brother-in-law who owns his own accounting firm is allowed to audit performance’…Only Madoff family members are privy to the investment strategy. Name one other prominent multi-billion dollar hedge fund that doesn’t have outside, non-family professionals involved in the investment process. You can’t because there aren’t any…There are too many red flags to ignore. REFCO, Wood River, the Manhattan Fund, Princeton Economics, and other hedge fund blow ups all had a lot fewer red flags than Madoff and look what happened at those places…”

An SEC memo of November 21, 2007 revealed the following about its investigation:

“The staff found no evidence of fraud…All files have been prepared for closing…Termination letters have been sent to Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, Bernard L. Madoff, and Fairfield Greenwich Group. The staff has no objection to the eventual destruction of the files and has no knowledge of any impediment to such a disposition.”

This was not the first time that the SEC had let Madoff slip through its grasp. In 1992, the SEC settled an investigation against two Florida accountants, Frank Avellino and Michael Bienes. The pair had started raising money for Bernie Madoff to manage in 1962. Avellino and Bienes had sold over $440 million in unregistered notes to thousands of people. Madoff was not charged in the matter.

Representing Avellino and Bienes in that matter was attorney Ira Lee Sorkin, the former head of the SEC region in New York City. Sorkin also represented Bernie Madoff when he was finally charged in 2008. Put in charge as trustee of the Avellino and Bienes funds and records was Lee Richards. In 2009, the SEC again put Mr. Richards in place as a receiver and document custodian in the Madoff Ponzi scheme, overseeing the London black hole operation known as Madoff Securities International Ltd.

When the news broke all over TV in December 2008 about Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, the SEC was making it sound like the fraud had only been in operation for a brief number of years. I knew that to be a lie. Although I had retired from Wall Street at that point, I still had my old desk calendars. I dug them out, located the exact date of my luncheon in 1991 at the Long Island country club, and called Susan Antilla, a reporter at the time for Bloomberg News. Antilla made it clear in her syndicated reporting about my experience at the country club that the fraud was decades old. The SEC thereafter changed its story line.

Madoff and crypto share an extensive number of behavioral dynamics. Madoff had prominent clients of swank country clubs vouching for him. Madoff also had celebrity clients, including famous Hollywood Director, Steven Spielberg, actor Kevin Bacon, and former New York Mets owner Fred Wilpon.

Crypto’s celebrity endorsers have included Matt Damon, Spike Lee, Tom Brady, Alec Baldwin, and numerous others. (Check out the scrolling celebrity names at the FTX crypto exchange under the banner: “Join some of the world’s biggest names who trust FTX.”)

Madoff and crypto also exploited the behavior instinct known as FOMO – or “fear of missing out.” Otherwise rational individuals at the Long Island country club were being told by prominent friends they trusted that Madoff had been delivering 13 percent returns reliably year after year for more than a decade. They didn’t want to miss out. The seduction of a promise of outsized returns has a long history of trumping common sense. We have been comparing crypto to the Tulip Bubble since 2014.

Both Madoff and crypto also enjoyed the benefits of an inexplicable hands-off policy from the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC has been missing in action as millions of investors have been seduced to invest in crypto and thousands of others have been looted.

It is this final aspect, a watchdog that repeatedly fails its mandate to protect investors, that requires a long overdue criminal investigation.

Related Article:

JPMorgan and Madoff Were Facilitating Nesting Dolls-Style Frauds Within Frauds

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POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Wu’s crucial next few weeks

 

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BY LISA KASHINSKY

PUT TO THE TEST — From Mass and Cass to the Boston Public Schools, Mayor Michelle Wu’s six-month-old administration is facing a series of pivotal moments. How she navigates the coming weeks could significantly shape her next three-and-a-half years in office.

Wu is grappling with the state over the future of BPS after a blistering report into the school system upped the threat of receivership, just as new superintendent interviews are set to begin next week. The search for the city’s next police commissioner is proceeding along a similar timeline. Wu on Tuesday also unveiled new plans to tackle the ongoing violence and drug and homelessness issues at Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard as warmer weather brings increased activity to the area.

The mayor and her allies implored state education officials at Tuesday’s Board of Elementary and Secondary Education meeting, where the new BPS audit dominated the day, to give her nascent administration a chance to fix the schools.

Some people also questioned the timing of a potential state takeover: “Why, after mayor after mayor, superintendent after superintendent, do we take the time to see three women of color leading the charge in Boston Public Schools and say that this is the time to consider a state takeover?” asked Boston City Councilor Kendra Lara, a BPS alum and parent.

Education Commissioner Jeffrey Riley is holding off on receivership — at least for now. Riley said he wants to give the mayor “time and space to see if she’s willing to provide us assurances that things are going to improve” and expressed hope they could come to an agreement on “next steps.” But he also issued dire warnings about the state of the district he once worked in and said the state needs Wu to “step up.”

The mayor is aiming to file a counter proposal to the state by the end of the week, calling receivership “counterproductive” for a district in transition that’s already working with the state to improve. She made progress on one key issue — transportation — when the school bus drivers’ union voted last night to approve a new contract with the district’s private transit contractor.

But BPS isn’t Wu’s only problem: The mayor is losing her Mass and Cass czar at the end of the month in a planned departure, per the Boston Herald’s Sean Philip Cotter. That means she’ll be searching for another key administration official at a crucial time for the troubled area.

Wu inherited these issues. But she’s now responsible for finding solutions to all of them. While her plans for the schools, police and Mass and Cass have all been in the works for some time, her decisions these next few weeks could set the course for the rest of her first term.

GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. PROGRAMMING NOTE: Massachusetts Playbook will not publish on Friday, May 27 or Monday, May 30. I’ll be back in your inbox on Tuesday, May 31. Send your tips and scoops to lkashinsky@politico.com.

TODAY — Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito makes a MLSC capital grant announcement at 9:30 a.m. in Worcester and presides over a noon Governor’s Council meeting at the State House. AG Maura Healey announces action related to PFAS contamination at 9:45 a.m. at her Ashburton Place office. Wu attends a Back Bay coffee hour at 9:30 a.m. and announces summer safety initiatives and programming at 11 a.m. at the BCYF Tobin Center. Lara and neighboring city councilors speak against a proposed ballot initiative to classify gig-economy drivers as independent contractors at 11 a.m. at Boston City Hall. Rep. Jim McGovern convenes an early college panel at Worcester State University at 2:30 p.m. Rep. Katherine Clark joins Google officials in Cambridge at 1:15 p.m. to announce a new investment in Massachusetts.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
FROM THE DELEGATION

— CALL TO ACTION: The Uvalde, Texas, mass school shooting has prompted renewed frustrations and calls for action on gun control from Massachusetts’ all-Democratic delegation and other Bay State pols.

Rep. Jake Auchincloss called to disband the NRA. Sen. Ed Markey tweeted to “abolish the filibuster and pass gun safety legislation now.”  

“I'm disgusted by this senseless violence — and by the fact that some in Congress care more about the NRA's money than about kids getting shot at school. Thoughts & prayers aren't enough. We need ACTION!” Rep. Jim McGovern declared.

“The breakdown of the political process has never been clearer than when we can’t even act to keep our own children safe,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren lamented.

ON THE STUMP

— MONEY MATTERS: The Environmental League of Massachusetts Action Fund’s super PAC is out with a mailer in support of Andrea Campbell for state attorney general, just days after she said on WCVB’s “On the Record” that the PAC “might” get involved in her race.

Super PACs can raise and spend unlimited sums but can’t coordinate with candidates. Campbell’s campaign told Playbook on Tuesday that the former Boston city councilor “didn’t know” about the mailer, including when she taped OTR.

The ELM Action Fund IEPAC spent $4,479 on the mailer in support of three candidates — Campbell for attorney general, AG Maura Healey for governor and Chris Dempsey for auditor — that’s being sent out ahead of the Democrats’ June 4 nominating convention.

“This expenditure, as with all previous expenditures by the ELM AF IE PAC, is in full compliance with OCPF and IRS regulations. We do not coordinate with candidates, their campaigns or their agents,” Elizabeth Henry , the super PAC’s treasurer, said in a statement to Playbook.

Campbell insisted there was “no super PAC money in the AG race” on OTR and again during Monday night’s debate . She also accused her rivals of spreading “misinformation” and “lies” about super PAC involvement in the race. At the same time, she has declined to join Shannon Liss-Riordan and Quentin Palfrey in signing a “People’s Pledge” to limit third-party spending in the contest.

“With the emergence of this super PAC, the same one she predicted may support her, we know why she was playing games and citing scheduling conflicts as the reason for not signing the People’s Pledge,” Jordan Meehan, Liss-Riordan’s campaign manager, said in a statement to Playbook.

“It is disappointing that Andrea Campbell continues to refuse to sign the People’s Pledge and seems to be encouraging outside spending in the AG race,” Palfrey, who proposed the pledge, said in a statement to Playbook.

— DEBATING DEBATES: A spokeswoman for Geoff Diehl’s campaign is dismissing Chris Doughty’s call for six pre-primary debates between the gubernatorial hopefuls and four debates between the lieutenant governor hopefuls as “not a serious challenge.”

“Weeks ago, Geoff Diehl offered to debate Chris Doughty twice, and he will do so. Leah [Cole] Allen will debate Kate Campanale twice before the primary,” Diehl campaign manager Amanda Orlando said in a statement. “Neither Geoff nor Leah are interested in providing assistance to their opponents in promoting themselves.

— STAFF SHAKEUP: NAACP Boston Branch President Tanisha Sullivan has a new campaign manager in her bid for secretary of state. Less than three months after announcing Mehreen Butt as her campaign manager, Sullivan’s campaign said voting rights advocate Cheryl Clyburn Crawford is taking the helm.

In a press release, Sullivan said her new campaign manager is “well seasoned in the local and national political eco-system; and she brings the strategic lens, community based relationships, and sense of urgency we need to win this race.” Butt is no longer with the campaign, Sullivan’s team said, but did not provide further details.

— NEW this AM: Governor’s Councilor Eileen Duff has endorsed state Sen. Diana DiZoglio for state auditor. Duff had intended to run for the seat herself until a family matter caused her to change course.

— “Reproductive Equity Now backs AG Maura Healey for Massachusetts governor with Roe v. Wade on the brink of being overturned,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey, brandishing her record as an abortion rights advocate with the Supreme Court on the cusp of overturning Roe v. Wade, secured an endorsement Tuesday from Reproductive Equity Now. … Yet without mentioning Healey’s opponent, state Sen. Sonia Chang-Díaz, by name, Reproductive Equity Now acknowledged that ‘Massachusetts is lucky to have two pro-reproductive equity candidates in the gubernatorial Democratic primary.’”

THE LATEST NUMBERS

— “Boston-area COVID wastewater data drops: A ‘very positive change’ as virus cases decline 21%,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The closely watched Boston-area COVID wastewater tracker has revealed a ‘very positive change’ in recent days as virus sewage data started to take a downward turn. Meanwhile, state health officials on Tuesday reported 2,693 new COVID cases, another drop in infections while virus hospitalizations ticked up.”

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “Senate staff union push in limbo,” by Christian M. Wade, Eagle-Tribune: “Senate employees pushing to unionize are in limbo as they await a decision from Senate President Karen Spilka's office on their proposal. … Shelly MacNeill, chief of staff to Sen. Michael Moore, D-Millbury, said organizers of the Massachusetts State House Employee Union are still waiting for the results of [Senate counsel’s] legal review.”

— “Sheriffs don't think $20 million will cover their revenue loss of making jail calls free,” by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News: “As the state legislature begins considering a proposal to make prison phone calls free, sheriffs around the state say they are not opposed to the idea — but it's going to cost more than the $20 million currently being discussed to reimburse the prison system for the lost revenue.”

— "Mass. legislators weigh creating another health care school to relieve worker shortage," by Kirk Carapezza, GBH News: "On a recent morning, security guards made their rounds in black SUVs crisscrossing the idle campus of UMass Amherst Mount Ida in Newton. Four years after the state’s flagship university bought this prime property, dozens of Adirondack chairs glowed empty in the sun and 1,200 dorm beds remained vacant. ... [State Rep. John] Lawn sees a new life for this dead space as a potential training ground for the next generation of healthcare workers, including nurses and physician assistants."

 

HAPPENING TODAY—A WOMEN RULE TALK ON THE MIDTERMS : Join POLITICO’S Women Rule for a conversation with the women running the midterm campaigns and how they are shaping messaging and strategy for their candidates. The program will look into what a win for either party could mean for access to reproductive health care, economic advancement of women, and how the final stages of the Covid-19 pandemic are managed. REGISTER HERE.

 
 
VAX-ACHUSETTS

— “People who rebound with COVID-19 after Paxlovid may be highly contagious, new studies suggest,” by Kay Lazar, Boston Globe: “Federal health regulators on Tuesday issued a warning that COVID-19 patients who have taken the antiviral treatment, Paxlovid, may experience a rebound and test positive again two to eight days after initial recovery. The warning comes more than a month after droves of patients began swapping accounts on social media of COVID rebounds after taking Paxlovid.”

FROM THE HUB

— “Mayor Wu announces ‘warm weather’ plan to address humanitarian crisis at Mass. and Cass,” by Milton J. Valencia and Sahar Fatima, Boston Globe: “Mayor Michelle Wu announced an expanded effort Tuesday to address the humanitarian crisis in the area known as Mass. and Cass with an 11-point focus on housing, health care, and public safety programs, amid concerns that crime and vagrancy have persisted and will grow worse as summer approaches and more people tend to stay on the streets. Called the ‘Warm Weather Program,’ the plan involves directing more health care workers and police officers to the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard, guiding people to support services and housing options, and arresting those engaging in drug dealing, prostitution, and violent crime.”

— “Mayor Michelle Wu says she has now read full Patrick Rose report,” by Emma Platoff, Boston Globe: “Boston Mayor Michelle Wu on Tuesday said she has now read the full, unredacted internal affairs report of Patrick M. Rose, the former Boston police officer and union president, who last month pleaded guilty to molesting half a dozen children over several decades.”

— “Money, projects starting to flow at Suffolk Downs,” by Catherine Carlock, Boston Globe: “Developers at Suffolk Downs, the 161-acre former horse racing track that straddles East Boston and Revere, have landed major financing deals to move forward with a lab and biomanufacturing facility and several thousand housing units.”

— “Suffolk DA unveils pilot restorative justice program in Roxbury, Chelsea, and Charlestown,” by Ivy Scott, Boston Globe: “Suffolk District Attorney Kevin Hayden Tuesday announced the launch of a new restorative justice program that aims to bring victims, offenders, and community members together to resolve cases outside of the traditional sentencing process.”

DAY IN COURT

— “State police chief's son faces charge of improper weapons storage after hearing in Barnstable,” by Sarah Carlon, Cape Cod Times: “The son of the state police Superintendent, Christopher Mason, will face charges relating to improper weapons storage, Lawrence District Court Clerk-Magistrate Keith McDonough ruled at a public show cause hearing Tuesday in Barnstable District Court.”

— “The Jasiel Correia corruption case is nearly over. One more defendant will be sentenced,” by Jo C. Goode, Herald News: “The last of the five defendants in the notorious fraud and corruption case of former Fall River mayor Jasiel Correia II was set for sentencing this week, but for the 10th time Westport resident and local businessman David Hebert received a delay from learning his fate.”

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

— “ExxonMobil must face AG Healey’s climate lawsuit, Massachusetts supreme court rules,” by Dharna Noor, Boston Globe: “The Massachusetts Supreme Court on Tuesday struck down ExxonMobil’s bid to dismiss a lawsuit brought by Attorney General Maura Healey, alleging that the company knew its products were contributing to dangerous changes in the climate yet hid that information from Massachusetts consumers and investors.”

FROM THE 413

— “Greenfield cuts $400,000 from police budget, leaving 8 new officers without jobs, after jury finds discrimination against Black officer,” by Will Katcher, MassLive: “Greenfield City Councilors have voted to reduce the city police’s budget by $400,000, cutting the money from officer salaries in the wake of a jury verdict that found the police department had discriminated against a Black former officer. Some councilors hoped the budget cut would push Mayor Roxann Wedegartner to fire the police chief and other officers involved in a lawsuit brought by the former officer. But due to police union rules that stipulate that the first officers to lose their jobs will be those who were most recently hired, the cuts will lead to eight newly-hired officers being laid off, acting Police Chief William Gordon said.”

— “Intruder drills in Pittsfield schools postponed due to Texas shootings,” by Larry Parnass, Berkshire Eagle: “Pittsfield schools are postponing drills this week designed to help students and staff prepare to respond to violent intruders, out of respect to the lives lost in Tuesday’s school shooting in Texas.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “Rallies against racism signal a shift in Everett,” by Liz Neisloss, GBH News: “After years of simmering anger over racist behavior by Everett city officials, and no action by the largely white city government, it seemed the ground suddenly shifted on Monday. Two city officials resigned on the same day high school students staged an afternoon walkout and residents gathered for an early-evening protest outside Everett City Hall. … Paula Sterite, one of the organizers of the residents’ rally, said people ‘finally feel like they were heard.’ But she added that the resignations were ‘just the beginning’ of needed action, an opinion echoed at both rallies.”

— RIP: to Stephenson Aman of Somerville, a disabilities advocate, youth sports coach and City Hall community coordinator.

MEANWHILE IN RHODE ISLAND

— “Legislators vote to legalize recreational marijuana in Rhode Island,” by Edward Fitzpatrick, Boston Globe: “The House and Senate on Tuesday voted overwhelmingly to make Rhode Island the 19th state to legalize recreational marijuana. … The legislation now heads Governor Daniel J. McKee, who plans to sign it into law at 3:15 p.m. Wednesday on the south lawn of the State House.”

SPOTTED — at Gov. Charlie Baker’s book launch event with co-author and former chief of staff Steve Kadish at Harvard Kennedy School: Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, HHS Sec. Marylou Sudders, former EEA Sec. Kathleen Theoharides, former Economic Development Sec. Jay Ash and former MassDOT CEO/Sec. Stephanie Pollack. 

As to why Baker's new book is a how-to guide and not a memoir: “I’m not actually that interesting,” Baker told the room, to laughter. “So a memoir would be more boring than this book.”

TRANSITIONS — Jason McCord is now COO of Mintz Levin. He most recently was chief HR and administrative officer at Morrison & Foerster.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Emma Sims-Biggs.

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