Wednesday, March 22, 2023

FOCUS: Timothy Snyder | Putin's Legal Troubles

 

 

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Vladimir Putin at a meeting at the Kremlin, Dec. 2022. (photo: Mikhael Klimentyev/Sputnik)
FOCUS: Timothy Snyder | Putin's Legal Troubles
Timothy Snyder, Timothy Snyder's Substack
Snyder writes: "Even as Americans prepare for the spectacle of Donald Trump's various arrests and trials, his patron Vladimir Putin finds himself confronted by a far more demanding set of legal predicaments."  

A quick survey of recent and drastic problems

Even as Americans prepare for the spectacle of Donald Trump's various arrests and trials, his patron Vladimir Putin finds himself confronted by a far more demanding set of legal predicaments. In the past few days, a number of very interesting things have happened, which I thought I would signal in this post. The wheels of justice may turn slowly, and certainly it is easy to be frustrated when obvious atrocities are not met with immediate formal condemnation. That said, it is hard to think of many moments when so much legal attention was paid over a short period to a single dictator. So, a quick and incomplete rehearsal might be useful:

1. The creation of a group of more than thirty states preparing the way for a special tribunal for the crime of aggression. A working group will meet tomorrow, March 21st. Aggression is one of the core crimes to be tried by the International Criminal Court at the Hague, and is defined by "the planning, preparation, initiation or execution, by a person in a position effectively to exercise control over or to direct the political or military action of a State, of an act of aggression which, by its character, gravity and scale, constitutes a manifest violation of the Charter of the United Nations."

The crime so defined is committed by individuals rather than states, so it would seem to apply to Vladimir Putin and other high political and military officials of the Russian Federation. Of all the crimes committed in and with respect to Ukraine, this one is generally regarded as the simplest to try and prosecute. The formidable legal mind Philippe Sands has lent his support to just this approach. At Just Security you can find a selection of articles on the topic.

2. The appearance, on 16 March, of the "Report of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine" to the Human Rights Commission of the United Nations. It documented "willful killings, unlawful confinement, torture, rape, and unlawful transfers of detainees from the areas that came under the control of Russian authorities in Ukraine." These include a "widespread pattern of torture and inhuman treatment committed by Russian authorities against the people they detained" as well as "cases of sexual and gender-based violence involving women, men, and girls, aged from 4 to 82, in nine regions of region, and in the Russian Federation." The report specified that rapes "were committed at gunpoint, with extreme brutality and with acts of torture, such as beatings and strangling. Perpetrators at times threatened to kill the victim or her family, if she resisted."

3. The issuance by the International Criminal Court, on 17 March, of an arrest warrant for Putin for war crimes, the first charge being the abduction of children from Ukraine. This has been one of the ghastlier Russian practices, one to which I and others have been trying to draw attention for a year. The issuance of an arrest warrant by the ICC is the most politically consequential of recent events, since it defines Putin as a wanted suspected war criminal subject to arrest by any country that acknowledges the ICC (which is most of them). It is also not a signal that can be ignored by Russian elites as they ponder he future of their country. It will hinder Putin's international travel, and not only in the obvious sense. Henceforth he will have to wonder, every time he gets into an airplane, whether the pilot might just deliver him somewhere where he is subject to arrest.

The kidnapping of tens (or more likely hundreds) of thousands of children is certainly a war crime, but it is worth noting that some war crimes are also genocide. The 1948 genocide convention specifically defines it as such. Genocide is thought to be a harder crime to prosecute, because the convention also specifies that the actions must be accompanied by an intent to destroy a group. This war is historically unusual, however, in that Russian authorities and propagandists have provided a constant, public flow of evidence of intent.

4. The public collapse of Russia's victimhood narrative. In addition to flooding the zone with so much atrocity advocacy that we are meant to take it for granted and not notice, Russian authorities and propagandists have pursued another preemptive defense strategy: to claim that the real problem is the "russophobia" of Ukrainians, which somehow justified the invasion and all of the crimes. This defense strategy seems to reveal awareness of guilt — among many other problems.

As I took part in a 14 March session called by the Russian Federation at the Security Council on “russophobia”, I could not help but notice that no one, even the Chinese, believed that anything of this sort was taking place. Almost every diplomat who spoke make the obvious point that a critique by one country of the politics of the other is not a reason for an invasion and for war crimes.

In my own briefing, I tried to make a couple of basic points: (1) that if we were truly concerned about harm to Russians, we would attend to the policies of the Russian Federation itself; and (2) that the claim that Ukrainians have an illness called "russophobia" is a typical colonial effort to displace the actual experiences of the victims of an imperial war. In context, the claim of "russophobia" by Russian officials and propagandists is part of a panoply of hate speech directed against Ukrainians and designed to justify mass crimes, including mass murder. In that sense it should be understood as an element of ongoing Russian war crimes, which in my opinion include genocide.

Given this specific abuse of its place on the UN Security Council, and against all this backdrop, it is grotesque to imagine that Russia is about to assume the chair of the Security Council. Although one might believe that the United Nations does not matter, or get lost in the tangle of its various agencies, the UN has in fact provided a platform for Russian propaganda for the past year and more. Chairing the Security Council gives Russia the opportunity to set agendas and make appointments that will at the very least consume needed time and at the very worst divert public discussion away from obvious crimes.

Interestingly, a good case can be made that Russia has no right to chair the Security Council at all, since the Russian Federation never formally joined the United Nations. The Soviet Union was a permanent member of the Security Council; but the Soviet Union is not Russia, and ceased to exist more than thirty years ago. All of the other post-Soviet states were either already members of the UN as Soviet republics (Ukraine or Belarus) or went through the application procedure to join. Russia never in fact did this. Ukrainian diplomats refer to Russia as "occupying the seat of the Soviet Union," and this formulation is precise. There is no doubt that Russia's formal role at the UN has provided cover for its crimes, so the crimes are as good a reason as any to reconsider that formal role.

PS I will have to be offline for a bit, so the presentation of the next two lectures on Ukrainian history will be delayed by a week.

TS 20 March 2023



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Jordan Klepper Takes on a Handful of Trump Arrest Protesters | The Daily Show

 


Jordan Klepper chats with the handful of Trump supporters who actually turned out to protest the former president's predicted arrest.




MAGA Fanboys: Trump's Calls to Protest Are A "Trap"

 


Trump called for his supporters to protest him potentially be arrested but many are hesitant because they think it might be a trap. Ana Kasparian and Cenk Uygur discuss on The Young Turks. Watch TYT LIVE on weekdays 6-8 pm ET.

"The far-right can’t seem to agree on how they should respond to a potential indictment of former president Donald Trump this week—and many fear getting caught up in a mass-arrest repeat of Jan. 6. Trump wrote on TruthSocial over the weekend that the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office was gearing up to indict him on charges linked to hush money paid out to adult film star Stormy Daniels prior to the 2016 election. He’s trying to cast himself as a victim of political persecution, and repeatedly urged his followers to take to the streets on his behalf."


Trump TROUBLES: NY AG Tish James, Georgia DA Willis, NY DA Bragg ALL breathing down Trump's neck

 


Former president Donald Trump is facing a trifecta of huge legal problems. New York District Attorney Alvin Bragg is poised to bring the first indictment in our nation's history against a criminal former president of the United States. Fulton County, Georgia, District Attorney Fani Willis is not only said to be finalizing her indictments, but it's being reported that she is considering bringing racketeering and conspiracy charges against Trump and others. And today, Judge Arthur Engeron, the New York State court judge presiding over Trump's civil fraud trial, brought against him by New York state Attorney General Leticia James, said Trump's October trial date is "set in stone," denying Trump's request to delay the trial. Will NY AG Tish James, Georgia DA Fani Willis, and NY DA Alvin Bragg turn out to be the trifecta of justice?


BREAKING: Jack Smith Delivers FATAL BLOW in Trump Investigation

 


Michael Popok of Legal AF reports on new bombshell appellate decision against Trump, upholding trial judge’s finding that Trump likely committed crime regarding handling of Mar a Lago documents, waiving any attorney client privilege, and compelling his attorney Evan Corcoran to appear again before the grand jury to testify and to produce to the DOJ his attorney notes and phone call transcripts immediately. Will Trump appeal next to the Supreme Court?


BREAKING: MAJOR update on Trump indictment in New York

 




Tucker begs Biden for help in pathetic Trump plea

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Tucker Carlson begs Biden to stop Trump indictment "for the sake of the country"

For the good of the country! For our grandchildren, for gosh sakes, in the name of all that is holy! Rule of law MUST be ignored! The comically disingenuous plea for President Biden to somehow intervene in a state-level criminal proceeding and save Trump — which he cannot do, for the record — is beyond parody.

Take Action: Tell the Special Counsel to indict Donald Trump!


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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Trump’s call for protests backfires in humiliating fashion

The MAGA cult might finally be on life support if the results of Trump's recent call for protests against his looming indictment are any indication. Barely anyone showed up.

Take Action: Tell Congress to protect the 80,000 Afghan refugees!


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Watch the incredible story of how one woman transformed how we access our money

Perkins School for the Blind: This women's history month, Perkins School for the Blind is celebrating their work with Kim Charlson who, like Hellen Keller before her, learned the skills or become an inspirational leader at their school. Please consider supporting their incredible work with a donation of any size HERE.


Special counsel claims Trump deliberately misled his attorneys about classified documents
Prosecutors in Special Counsel Jack Smith's office have presented compelling preliminary evidence that Trump knowingly and deliberately misled his own attorneys about his retention of classified materials after leaving office — and attorney-client privileges may now be voided.

Take Action: Tell President Biden to free Native activist Leonard Peltier!


Judge rejects Trump's request to delay New York AG's civil trial
Legal troubles are gathering over Trump Tower like a storm. On top of the fact that Donnie appears to be on the verge of an indictment for his hush-money payment to Stormy Daniels, his desperate attempt to postpone New York Attorney General Letitia James' $250 million civil fraud lawsuit against him has now been rejected.

Take Action: Tell Congress to cut the Pentagon's budget and help the people!


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California city pays $750,000 after cops accused of painting swastika on man’s car

Once again, we see taxpayers left holding the bag for detestable "peace officers" who apparently just can't resist the urge to be horrifyingly racist. Here's an idea: let's start making cops pay for settlements out of pocket. If there's a chance that they might lose their savings, pension, or house for engaging in some casual Nazism, they might actually think twice about doing it.

Take Action: Remove Marjorie Taylor Greene from her committees!


Oklahoma Supreme Court finds "limited right" to abortion in state constitution
Oklahoma's top court ruled that the state constitution includes "an inherent right of a pregnant woman to terminate a pregnancy when necessary to save her life." While this is a welcome development, it doesn't go nearly far enough. A life-threatening medical condition should NOT be a prerequisite for securing abortion care in a modern, secular society.


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Republicans make fatal mistake amid impending Trump indictment

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: What a dumb move...

🚨 Brian Tyler Cohen launched a Spanish YouTube channel! The left has a huge problem reaching Spanish speaking audiences, and our vote share among Spanish speakers is actually declining, so please spread the Democrats' message by subscribing to his channel (and watch some videos to get them going in the algorithm) by clicking here.


Pistol used in deadly kidnapping of Americans in Mexican border city was purchased in the US
Because of course it was. The utterly psychopathic American firearm manufacturing industry is one of the leading causes of widespread cartel violence we see unfolding south of the border. Not only does the United States fuel the drug war by outlawing narcotics while doing nothing to mitigate the demand for such products — creating a scenario in which criminals naturally band together to begin catering to demand — but it also supplies an endless stream of military-grade weapons to ensure that that very same War on Drugs is as violent as possible.


Tennessee’s gay-thirst-trap-loving lt. gov. survives no-confidence vote
Randy McNally was slammed with accusations of hypocrisy after he was caught publicly lusting after a gay online social media figure despite cruasding for anti-LGBTQ policies in office. But his fellow conservatives have declined to remove him from his leadership position. Hypocrisy is not only allowed within the GOP, it's apparently encouraged. As long as you support ongoing efforts to loot this country for all it has on behalf of the super rich, Republicans don't seem to care one iota about your personal behavior.


Communications between Stormy Daniels and Trump attorney turned over to Manhattan DA
The exchanges — said to date back to 2018, when Daniels was seeking representation — raise the real possibility that Trump attorney Joe Tacopina could be sidelined from his defense of the disgraced ex-president's imminent hush-money criminal case in New York. In MAGA world these days, things just keep getting worse.


Arkansas restricts school bathroom use by transgender people
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Today’s Action: Pass the PRO Act and protect the right to unionize!

The National Labor Relation Board’s Seattle office filed a complaint against Starbucks last year for violating US labor law with extreme union-busting tactics, such as withholding benefits and pay raises from unionizing stores. And just last month corporate employees of the coffee giant sent an open letter fighting back against the store’s continued reaction to union efforts. We can’t allow workers to continue fighting these greedy corporations on their own — it’s time for our legislators to step up and protect the right to unionize.

Starbucks is far from the only guilty corporation. In the face of worker power, corrupt bigwigs are working overtime to ensure their employees aren’t compensated properly for their work. There’s strength in numbers, and the labor movement certainly has that, but if certain senators don’t stop holding up the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act to provide more equitable conditions for all workers, the fallout across the American workforce will only worsen.

The fact is, when unions thrive, American workers and families thrive. It’s really that simple. Corporate America’s desperate efforts to get everyone back to work has reminded workers everywhere they’re worth more than low pay, low benefits, long hours, and emotional abuse from unappreciative bosses.

Call (202-224-3121) or write your senators and ask them to support the PRO Act in solidarity with the growing labor movement across the country! Send them this petition with almost 40,000 signatures in favor of its passage!

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FOCUS: Robert Reich | US Banks Want Socialism for Themselves - and Capitalism for Everyone Else

 


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20 March 23

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'After this week, the five largest banks will be even bigger.' (photo: REX/Shutterstock)
FOCUS: Robert Reich | US Banks Want Socialism for Themselves - and Capitalism for Everyone Else
Robert Reich, Guardian UK
Reich writes: "When banks like Silicon Valley Bank collapse, money floods to bigger ones like JPMorgan. Clients know they’re ‘too big to fail.'" 

When banks like Silicon Valley Bank collapse, money floods to bigger ones like JPMorgan. Clients know they’re ‘too big to fail’

Greg Becker, the former CEO of Silicon Valley Bank, sold $3.6m of SBV shares on 27 February, just days before the bank disclosed a large loss that triggered its stock slide and collapse. Over the previous two years, Becker sold nearly $30m of stock.

But Becker won’t rake in the most from this mess. Jamie Dimon, chair and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, the biggest Wall Street bank, will probably make much more.

That’s because depositors in small- and medium-sized banks are now fleeing to the safety of JPMorgan and other giant banks that have been deemed “too big to fail” because the government bailed them out in 2008.

Last Friday afternoon, the deputy treasury secretary, Wally Adeyemo, met with Dimon in New York and asked whether the failure of Silicon Valley Bank could spread to other banks. “There’s a potential,” Dimon responded.

Presumably, Dimon knew such contagion would mean vastly more business for JPMorgan. In a note to clients on Monday, bank analyst Mike Mayo wrote that JPMorgan is “battle-tested” in volatile markets and “epitomizes” how the largest US banks have shed risk since the 2008 financial crisis.

Recall that the 2008 financial crisis generated a gigantic shift of assets to the biggest Wall Street banks, with the result that JPMorgan and the other giants became far bigger. In the early 1990s, the five largest banks had accounted for only 12% of US bank deposits. After the crisis, they accounted for nearly half.

After this week, they’ll be even bigger.

Their giant size has already given them a huge but hidden effective federal subsidy estimated to be $83bn annually – a premium that investors and depositors willingly pay to these enormous banks, in the form of higher fees and lower returns, precisely because they’re considered too big to fail.

Some of this hidden federal subsidy goes into the pockets of bank executives. Last year alone, Dimon earned $34.5m.

Dimon was at the helm in 2008 when JPMorgan received $25bn from the federal government to help stem the financial crisis which had been brought on largely by the careless and fraudulent lending practices of JPMorgan and other big banks. Dimon earned $20m that year.

In March 2009 Barack Obama summoned Dimon and other top bank executives to the White House and warned them that “my administration is the only thing between you and the pitchforks”.

But the former president never publicly rebuked Dimon or the other big bankers. When asked about the generous pay Dimon and other Wall Street CEOs continued to rake in, Obama defended them as “very savvy businessmen” and said he didn’t “begrudge peoples’ success or wealth. That’s part of the free market system.”

What free market system? Taxpayers had just bailed out the banks, and the bank CEOs were still raking in fat paychecks. Yet 8.7 million Americans lost their jobs, causing the unemployment rate to soar to 10%. Total US household net worth dropped by $11.1tn. Housing prices dropped by a third nationwide from their 2006 peak, causing some 10 million people to lose their homes.

Rather than defend CEO paychecks, Obama might have demanded, as a condition of getting bailed out, that the banks help underwater homeowners on Main Street.

Another sensible proposal would have been to let bankruptcy judges restructure shaky home mortgages so that borrowers didn’t owe as much and could remain in their homes.

Yet the big banks, led by Dimon, opposed this. They thought they’d do better by squeezing as much possible out of distressed homeowners, and then collecting as much as they could on foreclosed homes.

In April 2008, Dimon and the banks succeeded: the Senate voted down a bill that would have allowed bankruptcy judges to modify mortgages to help distressed homeowners.

In the run-up to the 2020 election, Dimon warned against policies that Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez were then advocating, including Medicare for All, paid sick leave and free public higher education. Dimon said they amounted to “socialism”.

“Socialism,” he wrote, “inevitably produces stagnation, corruption and often worse – such as authoritarian government officials who often have an increasing ability to interfere with both the economy and individual lives – which they frequently do to maintain power,” adding that socialism would be “a disaster for our country”.

Dimon also warned against “over-regulation” of banking, cautioning that in the next financial crisis, big institutions like JPMorgan won’t be able to provide the lending they did during the last crisis.

“When the next real downturn begins,” he wrote, “banks will be constrained – both psychologically and by new regulations – from lending freely into the marketplace, as many of us did in 2008 and 2009. New regulations mean that banks will have to maintain more liquidity going into a downturn, be prepared for the impacts of even tougher stress tests and hold more capital.”

But, as demonstrated again this past week, American capitalism needs strict guardrails. Otherwise, it is subject to periodic crises that summon bailouts.

The result is socialism for the rich while everyone else is subject to harsh penalties: bankers get bailed out and the biggest banks and bankers do even better. Yet average people who cannot pay their mortgages lose their homes.

Meanwhile, almost 30 million Americans still lack health insurance, most workers who lose their job aren’t eligible for unemployment insurance, most have no paid sick leave, child labor is on the rise and nearly 51m households can’t afford basic monthly expenses such as housing, food, childcare and transportation.

Is it any wonder that many Americans see the system as rigged against them? Is it surprising that some become susceptible to dangerous snake-oil peddled by power-hungry demagogues?


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POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Trending away from Twitter


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BY LISA KASHINSKY


IS THIS THING ON? — If it seems like you’re tweeting more into a void than an echo chamber these days, you’re not alone.

Engagement is down across the #mapoli and #bospoli hashtags for state and Boston politics, according to new analysis from Legislata , a productivity software for politicians, and its founder and CEO Chris Oates.

Oates compared tweets per day during the week that Gov. Maura Healey released her first budget (a very newsy time) to tweets per day in August 2021 (a quieter time in state politics, save for mayors races). He found that one-third fewer tweets were sent per day and one-third as many accounts were using the #mapoli hashtag per day during budget week as compared to August 2021.

He also saw a shift in who ’s tweeting. While accounts run by private citizens were “getting a lot of followers and a lot of engagement” in the summer of 2021, it was politicians and journalists who dominated the Twitter discourse during budget week, Oates said.

Maybe people just aren't that into state budgets (though if you're reading this, you probably are). But Oates found other instances of declining engagement — like a drop-off in the average number of retweets and favorites of tweets from politicians like Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey, who've stayed on Twitter despite their distaste for its new owner.

“There’s a broad decline in the use of Twitter across the Massachusetts political establishment and a particular decline among average citizens,” Oates told Playbook. “If political Twitter is declining — whether that’s because of Elon Musk or the rise of WhatsApp [and other services] — it raises the question of whether it’s useful to put a lot of your effort into Twitter to get your message out there?”

Playbook put that question to Jonathan Cohn, political director for Progressive Massachusetts and a Democratic activist who uses his outsized Twitter presence for organizing and promoting progressive viewpoints. (We're focusing on Democrats because Republican activists here tend to favor Facebook.)

“Twitter remains a utility,” Cohn said. But engagement ebbs and flows with each campaign cycle. And people are less online now than they were at the height of the pandemic (remember how hyper-online the 2020 U.S. Senate primary got?). That means campaigns “have to start thinking about how to engage on other platforms as well,” Cohn said.

Breaking up with Twitter has been hard to do for Boston Mayor Michelle Wu. A prolific tweeter whose @wutrain handle was an integral part of her political brand, Wu said she retreated from the platform late last year amid increasing harassment against herself and others that crowded out the "community conversation" she used to enjoy.

But Twitter's usefulness as an "information-sharing platform" eventually drew her back, though in a limited capacity. When Silicon Valley Bank collapsed, for instance, Wu used her official @MayorWu account to circulate a survey for businesses that might need assistance. But she's also turning more to Instagram, and has been dabbling in Mastodon and even BeReal.

“I want to be in every space our constituents are in. And that means finding the right balance, even if there’s more to ignore or cut through in certain spaces,” Wu told Playbook. “It’s a struggle I’m still trying to sort out.”

GOOD WEDNESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Here's the shameless plug you probably saw coming: Follow me on Twitter @lisakashinsky. We can commiserate the next time it breaks.

TODAY — Healey is on WBUR’s “Radio Boston” at 11 a.m. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll is in D.C. for the National Lieutenant Governors Association Federal-State Relations Conference. House Democratic Whip Katherine Clark attends the MGH Revere Healthcare Center Food Pantry ribbon-cutting ceremony at 8 a.m. Wu is on “Java with Jimmy” at 9 a.m. and attends Eastie Farm’s Spring Equinox Celebration at 10:45 a.m.

Tips? Scoops? Interesting tweets? Email me: lkashinsky@politico.com .


 

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “Santiago vows to ‘rebuild trust’ in veterans’ services,” by Jennifer Smith, CommonWealth Magazine: “Jon Santiago knows the pandemic left Massachusetts looking askance at its veterans’ services after scores of COVID deaths amid scandals over mismanagement at two long-term care facilities for veterans. Reforming the embattled soldiers’ home system and instilling confidence in his office, Santiago said, are his top priorities as Gov. Maura Healey’s secretary of veterans’ services, a newly created cabinet-level post. … With superintendents from veterans’ homes in Holyoke and Chelsea beside him, Santiago said they are ‘committed to changing the culture, rebranding the institution, to best serve our veterans.’”

— “Missed training — including for use of force — led to 46 Mass. police suspensions,” by Chris Van Buskirk, MassLive: “A group of 46 police officers facing license suspensions did not complete a 40-hour training course that included materials on cultural competency, de-escalation and use of force, according to documents summarizing the teachings.”

— "State board allowed woman accused of abusing foster children to keep nursing license for more than a decade," by Andrea Estes, Boston Globe.

FROM THE HUB

— “Will this trio of Boston police officers stay fired?” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “If history is any indication, the dismissals of former sergeant Shana Cottone, and patrolmen Joseph Abasciano, and Michael Geary are anything but a done deal. Attorneys for Cottone and Abasciano say the two will appeal their terminations. Geary’s attorney declined to comment.”

— “Evictions in Boston spike over last year,” by Diego Lopez, GBH News: “The number of evictions filed each week in Boston are up nearly 75% from last year, according to new data released by Princeton University’s Eviction Lab, looking at the four-week average. Advocates and attorneys say eviction rates are coming back up after a lull during the pandemic, saying it’s been a decades-long problem exacerbated by a cost-of-living crisis.”

— “Boston councilors seek ‘scofflaw’ landlord list,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald.

 

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 .

  

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “DATTCO slams brakes on SouthCoast to Boston bus service,” by Grace Ferguson, New Bedford Light: “Commuter buses headed for Boston will leave their South Coast stations for the last time next month. The DATTCO SouthCoast-Boston Express bus route will end service on April 16 because of declining ridership, the company announced. … New Bedford is expected to get two MBTA commuter rail stops at the end of the year, which [DATTCO vice president Dennis] Lyons said were going to put the bus route out of business anyway. But the trains won’t arrive for months, and that’s if the infamously long-delayed project does finish on time.”

DAY IN COURT

— “Judge denies triple damages for former SORB head,” by Julie Manganis, Salem News: “While acknowledging that former Gov. Deval Patrick was driven by emotions and was ‘to some extent, negligent’ in the process that led to his firing the chair of the state’s Sex Offender Registry Board in 2014, a judge has concluded that Patrick did not act out of ‘evil motive’ or any intent to harm her career. And it’s for that reason that Newburyport Superior Court Judge James Lang on Tuesday denied a request by Saundra Edwards for punitive triple damages in her whistleblower suit against the state.”

— "Boston jury finds former Haitian mayor — now a Malden resident — liable for political violence," by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News.

 

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

— “Following a dismal global climate report, could Massachusetts push up its net-zero goal?” by Sabrina Shankman and Emma Platoff, Boston Globe: “Several state policy makers, legislators, and others who helped shape Massachusetts’ climate targets said that moving the deadline [up from 2050] could force a daunting if not prohibitive redo of untold amounts of work that took years to achieve. One lawmaker central to the state’s landmark climate laws, Senator Michael Barrett, said the state could also risk a popular backlash against climate policies perceived as liberal if they were suddenly shifted into significantly higher gear.”

— “Climate activists in Boston call on big banks divest from fossil fuel companies,” by Paula Moura, WBUR: “Climate activists took to the streets of Boston’s financial district to demand banks stop investing in fossil fuel companies. The protest was one of more than 100 around the country organized by Third Act, a climate activism group largely made up of retirees.”

FROM THE 413

— “The saga of Great Barrington’s last beer and wine license continues with a warning from Price Chopper,” by Heather Bellow, Berkshire Eagle: “Price Chopper representatives told the Select Board last month that alcohol sales are critical to the chain's $4 million rebranding overhaul of the store into a Market 32. They also said a number of the town’s jobs would be lost if town officials don’t reverse an earlier decision to not grant the company the license. But while granting it might relieve financial pressure on the town, it might also create legal pressure, given another license rejection of a competitor by the board last year.”

 

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THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “Everett school leaders file discrimination lawsuit against the mayor,” by Liz Neisloss, GBH News: “Superintendent Priya Tahiliani and Kim Tsai, her deputy, filed a lawsuit against Mayor Carlo DeMaria in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts on Tuesday, accusing him of racism, retaliatory attacks and interfering with their work as they attempted to diversify the school district’s leadership. The civil complaint also lists the city of Everett and Everett’s school committee as defendants.”

— “Wayland Superintendent Omar Easy had previously alleged discrimination in Everett,” by Norman Miller, MetroWest Daily News: “Last month, Superintendent of Schools Omar Easy filed a complaint with the state arguing he was discriminated against based on his race after being placed on paid administrative leave by the School Committee. The complaint, which was filed with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination (MCAD), has not yet gotten a ruling. … While he was executive vice principal of academics for Everett Public Schools, Easy in 2019 claimed he was passed over for a chance to become the district's superintendent due to his race. … MCAD dismissed the claim in 2020 without a full hearing by the commission.”

— “Home belonging to son of Sen. Elizabeth Warren destroyed in Medford fire,” by Mari Salazar and Annie Sandoli, 7 News.

— “Raffles, charity bingo rebounding from pandemic,” by Christian M. Wade, Eagle-Tribune.

MEDIA MATTERS

— “Springfield public media company cuts 20% of its staff,” by Yasmin Amer, WBUR.


HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

TRANSITIONS — Scott S. Spearing is now partner in Casner & Edwards’ litigation group.

MASS. MOVES AT POLITICO — Boston Globe and GBH alum Katie Locke continues to climb the ranks at POLITICO, where she’s stepping into a new role as breaking news editor. Kelly Garrity has officially joined the breaking news desk along with her Playbook guest-hosting duties. And Globe and NYT alum Matt Berg, who’s been crushing the national security beat for POLITICO these past few months, is now splitting his time between that and breaking news.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY —  to former state Rep. Tom Sannicandro, Daniel Sullivan, Zachary Agush and Larry Farmer .

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how:  jshapiro@politico.com .

 

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