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Reade: ‘I Didn’t Use Sexual Harassment’ in Biden Complaint

Photo Caption - In this April 4, 2019, photo Tara Reade poses for a photo during an interview with The Associated Press in Nevada City, Calif. (AP Photo/Donald Thompson)

By: Alexandra Jaffe, Don Thompson & Stephen Braun

Tara Reade, the former Senate staffer who alleges Joe Biden sexually assaulted her 27 years ago, says she filed a limited report with a congressional personnel office that did not explicitly accuse him of sexual assault or harassment.

“I remember talking about him wanting me to serve drinks because he liked my legs and thought I was pretty and it made me uncomfortable,” Reade said in an interview Friday with The Associated Press. “I know that I was too scared to write about the sexual assault.”

Reade told the AP twice that she did not use the phrase “sexual harassment” in filing the complaint, but at other points in the interview said that was the behavior she believed she was describing. She said: “I talked about sexual harassment, retaliation. The main word I used – and I know I didn’t use sexual harassment — I used ‘uncomfortable.’ And I remember ‘retaliation.’”

Reade described the report after the AP discovered additional transcripts and notes from its interviews with Reade last year in which she says she “chickened out” after going to the Senate personnel office. The AP interviewed Reade in 2019 after she accused Biden of uncomfortable and inappropriate touching. She did not raise allegations of sexual assault against Biden until this year, around the time he became the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.

The existence of the Senate report has become a key element of the accusations against Biden, which he has flatly denied. Reade says she doesn’t have a copy of the report, and Biden said Friday that he is not aware that any complaint against him exists. He asked the Senate and the National Archives to search their records to try to locate a complaint from Reade.

But Reade is suggesting that even if the report surfaces, it would not corroborate her assault allegations because she chose not to detail them at the time.

According to a transcript of her 2019 interview with the AP, Reade said: “They have this counseling office or something, and I think I walked in there once, but then I chickened out.” She made a similar statement in a second interview with AP that same day, according to written notes from the interview.

On Friday, Reade said she was referring to having “chickened out” by not filing full harassment or assault allegations against Biden. In multiple interviews with the AP on Friday, Reade insisted she filed an “intake form” at the Senate personnel office, which included her contact information, the office she worked for and some broad details of her issues with Biden.

On Saturday, Reade told the AP there may have been a box to check on the form noting a sexual harassment complaint, but she couldn’t remember and wouldn’t know for sure until she saw the form. Reade also said she canceled a planned television interview with “Fox News Sunday” because of security concerns.

Reade was one of eight women who came forward last year with allegations that Biden made them feel uncomfortable with inappropriate displays of affection. Biden acknowledged the complaints and promised to be “more mindful about respecting personal space in the future.”

During one of the April 2019 interviews with the AP, she said Biden rubbed her shoulders and neck and played with her hair. She said she was asked by an aide in Biden’s Senate office to dress more conservatively and told “don’t be so sexy.”

She said of Biden: “I wasn’t scared of him, that he was going to take me in a room or anything. It wasn’t that kind of vibe.”

The AP reviewed notes of its 2019 interviews with Reade after she came forward in March with allegations of sexual assault against Biden. But reporters discovered an additional transcript and notes from those interviews on Friday.

A recording of one of the interviews was deleted before Reade emerged in 2020 with new allegations against Biden, in keeping with the reporter’s standard practice for disposing of old interviews. A portion of that interview was also recorded on video, but not the part in which she spoke of having “chickened out.”

The AP declined to publish details of the 2019 interviews at the time because reporters were unable to corroborate her allegations, and aspects of her story contradicted other reporting.

In recent weeks, Reade told the AP and other news organizations that Biden sexually assaulted her, pushing her against a wall in the basement of a Capitol Hill office building in 1993, groping her and penetrating her with his fingers. She says she was fired from Biden’s office after filing a complaint with the Senate alleging harassment.

The accusation has roiled Biden’s presidential campaign, sparking anxiety among Democrats. Republicans have accused Biden backers of hypocrisy, arguing that they have been quick to believe women who have accused President Donald Trump and other conservatives of assault. Trump has faced multiple accusations of assault and harassment, all of which he denies.

Reade says she was reluctant to share details of the assault during her initial conversations with reporters over a year ago because she was scared of backlash, and was still coming to terms with what happened to her.

Two of Reade’s associates said publicly this past week that Reade had conversations with them that they said corroborated aspects of her allegation. One, a former neighbor, said Reade told her about the alleged assault a few years after Reade said it happened. The other, a former coworker, said Reade told her she had been sexually harassed by her boss during her previous job in Washington. (AP)

 

The AP has also spoken to two additional people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to protect their families’ privacy, who said Reade had told them about aspects of her allegations against Biden years ago.

One friend, who knew Reade in 1993, said Reade told them about the alleged assault when it happened. The second friend met Reade more than a decade after the alleged incident and confirmed that Reade had a conversation with the friend in 2007 or 2008 about experiencing sexual harassment from Biden while working in his Senate office.

 

NYC COVID-19 Community and Ethnic Media Update – A Round Table Discussion with Bitta Mostofi,  Dr. Oxiris Barbot & Dr. Andrew Wallach

Department of Health Commissioner Oxiris Barbot

Edited by: JV Staff

Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs Commissioner Bitta Mostofi, Department of Health Commissioner Oxiris Barbot, and NYC Health and Hospitals Ambulatory Care Chief Medical Officer Dr. Andrew Wallach hosted a Community and Ethnic Media virtual round table on Friday, May 1st on COVID-19 testing updates. 

 

We’re committed to providing information, resources and guidance to ensure that all New Yorkers, regardless of immigration status and especially those living in heavily impacted areas, have access to quality care including testing for COVID-19.

 

Important Messages from Mayor de Blasio and Commissioner Bitta Mostofi

 

In honor of May Day, sometimes referred to as International Workers’ Day, we recognize the perseverance and resiliency of all essential workers in New York City.

  • Immigrants comprise half of the city’s essential workersrepresenting 53 percent of the city’s healthcare workers, 70 percent of cleaning service professionals and 53 percent of all food and drug store labor. 
  • A reminder: Anyone who works in our cityregardless of immigration status, national origin, or country of originhas rights. 

 

Seek Care Without Fear: In New York City healthcare is a right to all who call our city home, regardless of immigration status or ability to pay. If you need help finding a doctor or getting medical care, call 311.

  • New York City public hospitals and clinics have strong privacy protections, do not collect information about immigration status, and do not share patient information with anyone or any organization—unless authorized by the patient. 
    • As is already their policy, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has said that it does not carry out operations at or near health care facilities. Individuals should NOT avoid seeking medical care because they fear immigration enforcement.
  • Seeking care and getting testing or treatment related to COVID-19 will NOT impact your immigration status or ability to apply for a green card or citizenship.
    • New York City residents who have questions about how accessing certain public benefits may affect immigration status, can call the free, confidential ActionNYC hotline, Monday to Friday between 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., at 1-800-354-0365 to access timely and trusted information and connections to legal help.

 

Support for NYC Small Businesses Owners and Nonprofits

  • Federal government expanded its loan programs with an additional $310 billion.
  • Loans available on a first-come, first-served basis.
  • Small business owners and nonprofits can apply for up to $10 million through the Paycheck Protection Program at SBA.gov or click here for Spanish
  • Upcoming webinars from NYC Small Business Services to help business owners:
    • May 4 at 12PM: Assistance Overview for NYC Small Businesses Impacted by COVID-19: bit.ly/SBSCOVID54
    • May 5 at 5:30PM:Assistance Overview for NYC Small Businesses Impacted by COVID-19: bit.ly/SBSCOVID55 
    • May 5 at 6PM: COVID-19: Programas de Ayuda Económica para Empresarias: bit.ly/WENYCSeminario
    • May 6 at 9:30AM: Assistance Overview for NYC Small Businesses Impacted by COVID-19 bit.ly/SBSCOVID56 
  • Sign up for COVID-19 Emergency Financing Assistance from NYC Small Business Services: bit.ly/NYCSBSCounseling
  • For more information, visit nyc.gov/COVID19Biz or call 311
  • WATCH: This week, Yemeni American Merchants Association hosted a Virtual Town Hall on City resources for immigrant business owners with MOIA Commissioner Mostofi, NYC Small Business Services Commissioner Gregg Bishop, and Dr. Debbi Almontaser.

 

City Distributing Free Face Coverings

  • 100,000 face coverings will be distributed, starting this week, free of charge. 
  • Visit nyc.gov/FaceCoverings for locations and times.
  • Over 1,000 full-time city workers will be assigned to patrol parks and public spaces to ensure social distancing guidance is understood and followed.
    • City enforcement officers do not ask about immigration status.
  • View this message in multiple languages. 

 

Starting May 6: MTA will Stop Service Daily from 1 am to 5 am to Disinfect Trains

  • Alternate transportation such as bus service, for-hire vehicles, or “compliant” dollar vans will be provided to essential workers who need to commute during those times, at no cost.
  • The Metro North and Long Island Railroad will also receive cleaning, but service will continue as usual.

 

Citi Bike Expansion

  • Over 100 new Citi Bike stations, including those serving workers near the Lincoln and Harlem hospitals, will be added in Upper Manhattan and the Bronx. 
  • The Critical Workforce Membership program will be extended, providing one year of free Citi Bike membership to essential workers.
  • Over 5,500 employees enrolled this month. 

 

NYC Taxi is hiring for delivery work!

  • Through the TLC Driver Food Delivery program, TLC drivers will now be paid $53 per route, rather than hourly ($40 base pay + $13 for expenses), when delivering meals to New Yorkers in need.
  • Drivers can use personal cars and complete multiple routes. This change helps drivers make more money. 
  • Sign up at nyc.gov/deliverytlc or share on Twitter in multiple languages. 

 

Temporary Jobs

 

Community Testing Update 

  • COVID-19 tests are provided on a walk-in basis, at no cost to the patient, and with a priority for those over the age of 65 and those with pre-existing conditions that put them at risk for serious illness.
  • New York City has opened community testing sites in all five boroughs. 
  • NYC Health + Hospitals (H+H) is currently operating free walk-in COVID-19 nasal swab testing sites through Gotham Health clinics, including 3 as part of NYCHA developments.

 

Do NOT ingest or inject Lysol or any other disinfectant as a treatment for COVID-19

 

Mental Health Resources

  • NYC H+H Helping Healers Heal Program
    • 24/7 Behavioral health helpline for H+H staff at 646-815-4150
    • 1-on-1, peer and group support, wellness rounds at all facilities
  • FDNY: Gold Standard Counseling Services Unit, among the best in U.S. for first responders
    • Counselors are available by phone 24/7 at 212-570-1693

 

Open Streets: First streets to open Saturday!

  • 4.5 Miles inside parks to ease crowding will open Saturday in Fort Tryon Park, Callahan-Kelly Park, Flushing Meadows, Grant Park, Forest Park, Silver Lake Park.
  • 2.7 Miles will open Saturday adjacent to Williamsbridge Oval, Prospect Park, Court Square, Stapleton Waterfront Park, Carl Schurz Park, Lt. Willian Tighe Triangle, Highbridge Park
  • At least 40 miles of street closures, widened sidewalks, and additional bike lanes over the next month, will provide New Yorkers with more space to exercise and move, while social distancing. 
    • Open streets will only be in effect for the duration of “NY PAUSE,” with the exception of bike lanes. 

 

Alternate Side Parking Suspended

  • Suspension extended through May 12.

 

New Safe Havens

  • 200 Safe Haven beds will begin to open this week.
    • Builds on the Mayor’s commitment to supporting vulnerable New Yorkers through the COVID-19 crisis.  
    • Safe Haven and stabilization beds provide safe, secure spaces for unsheltered New Yorkers, and connect them with the resources and support they need to find a lasting path to stability. 
    • Beds will be prioritized for the most vulnerable, unsheltered New Yorkers living on the streets and subways, with locations strategically placed in areas where outreach teams have experienced activity and determined need

 

Online Marriage Licenses

  • The marriage license process will be available online starting next week.
    • The site will be available in 11 languages and Language Line will be available to provide on-demand translation to any couple in need of translation services.

 

New City Task Forces 

  • A new task force on racial inclusion and equity, comprised of officials from across the Administration, will:
    • Engage hardest-hit communities.
    • Monitor response and recovery efforts in those neighborhoods.
    • Identify unique needs associated with Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises (MWBE) and community health care providers.
    • Work with City officials and agencies to narrow long-standing racial and economic disparities. 
  • This racial inclusion and equity task force, led by First Lady McCray and Deputy Mayor Thompson, will focus both on the immediate needs of these communities and shape a longer term strategy to close the gaps that have been exacerbated during this crisis. 
  • Civic leaders, via a Fair Recovery Task Force, will help the City formulate a broader post-crisis recovery effort that builds a stronger, safer, and fairer economy and society. 
  • Starting in June, the Fair Recovery Task Force will put forward a recovery road map that will inform the City’s recovery efforts. 

 

Updates from the NYC Department of Education (DOE)

 

Adjusted K-12 Citywide Grading Policy 

  • A new grading policy will maintain a high bar for student achievement, give flexibility to families and students grappling with the COVID-19 crisis, and provide targeted support to students who have fallen behind.
  • The new grading policy for the remainder of the 2019-20 school year is effective immediately.
  • View more information about the grading policy or view translated information.

 

Update on iPad Distribution and Support to Students 

  • NYC public schools will continue academic instruction through Remote Learning for the rest of the school year and students in need of a device may borrow internet-enabled iPads.
  • To request a device, families should call DOE at 718-935-5100 and choose Option 5 on the menu or fill out the Remote Learning Device Request form at coronavirus.schools.nyc/RemoteLearningDevices. The contact information provided on the form will be used to reach out to the family to schedule delivery of the device.
  • Everyone who fills out a request form online, with a staff member, or over the phone, will be sent follow up emails and texts. 
    • Priority will be given to students most in need.
    • All devices are granted on a temporary basis and will later need to be returned.
    • There is a limit of one device per student. 
    • You must fill out a separate form for each student who needs a device.
    • Make sure you agree to the Terms of Use in the request form. 
    • There is no need to call the DOE or 311 to check on the status of the device.

 

Additional Resources and Multilingual Materials

 

Translated COVID-19 Social Media Graphics Available

         Visit nyc.gov/immigrants/coronavirus to view, download, and share translated COVID-19 social media graphics. 

 

“We Speak, We LEAD”: Free Online Professional Development for Immigrant Women

  • We Speak NYC and New Women New Yorkers have teamed up to launch  “We Speak, We LEAD,” a free online workforce development and professional English language learning program for immigrant women.
  • This free series of 10 interactive job readiness workshops supports and prepares participants for entry into the NYC workforce or to pursue higher education, and helps them improve their professional English and gain confidence.
  • Register now for the pilot program. An information session is scheduled for Tuesday, May 12 from 3-5pm, and the program runs from May 19 until June 23.

 

 

Jewish Initiative Crowdfunds Gear for Health-Care Workers to Protect Against Coronavirus

AEPi brothers Raphael Eidelman, Tal Ankori and Noah Ben David pick up supplies for Jewish Family Services in Los Angeles. Credit: Courtesy.

Immediate access to lifesaving protective personal gear like masks, gloves and gowns is the best defense against the pandemic for both workers and the people they serve.

By: Josh Hasten

With more than 1 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the United States to date, many of the hardest-hit states include those with large Jewish populations—New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Illinois, California. As a result, Jewish nonprofit organizations in the heath-care arena, including nursing homes and assisted-living centers, hospice facilities and those who provide homecare for Holocaust survivors and other vulnerable populations, have witnessed overwhelming fatality rates as a result of the pandemic.

Unwillingly to sit idly by, a group of “next generation” young communal Jewish leaders and heads of nonprofit Jewish organizations have mobilized, along with the mainstream Jewish community, to launch a world-wide emergency campaign—called “Pledge to Protect”—to purchase and deliver life-saving personal protective equipment (PPE) to the above-mentioned front-line protectors.

 

Alex Jakubowski, executive director at KAHAL, an organization that connects Jewish students studying abroad with experiences in their host communities, told JNS that in February that “KAHAL saw the writing on the wall.”

“Since we have students in China and around the world, we decided to change our whole organization and become a COVID-19 support organization,” he said.

 Jakubowski says he realized that he was hearing pleas for help over and over again from the same segments of the health-care community. “There is a global shortage of PPE equipment in nursing homes and hospice care. These frontline workers, especially those outside of a hospital setting, are not given equipment by state governments. They are not the first priority. We also learned that this equipment needs to be imported at outrageous prices.”

Utilizing KAHAL’s global network and partnering with other Jewish organizations, a well-oiled procurement, shipment and distribution chain for PPE equipment was set up quickly to assist caregivers at more than 200 Jewish institutions throughout the country that support not only Jewish workers, but people of all faiths.

Thanks to the initiative, as of April 28, nearly 2 million pieces of PPE have been delivered to local agencies and communities—surgical mask, gloves, gowns and other equipment—with the goal of reducing the risk of transmission of the novel coronavirus. All of this come even before the “hard launch” of the campaign, as much more is needed.

‘Without that gear, it could have cost lives’

 

Jay Feldman, managing director at the Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity Foundation (AEPi), told JNS that Jakubowski reached out and got his organization on board to work together on the critical project. “We have a wide network, including 90,000 alumni. I was able to put KAHAL in touch with some of our people to start setting up a data network, and to manage and plot the distribution operation.”

At the same time, he added, “we realized, we needed someone for that last mile—the actual delivery. So we tapped into our student network and alumni, and they stepped up as volunteers to actually pick up and deliver the equipment to the institutions.”

AEPi CEO James Fleischer noted that “the mission of Alpha Epsilon Pi International Fraternity—to develop the future leaders of the world’s Jewish communities—is in clear evidence in this program. We are proud that our undergraduate and alumni brothers are playing a vital role in this amazing project. … The fact that so many of these undergraduates recognize the needs of their global community and the importance of tikkun olam at a time like this, means that we are doing our job for the future of Jewish communities.”

 

Jakubowski said the PPE has been ordered from places all over the world, including China, Hong Kong, Mexico and other countries. One of the obstacles, he says, is fierce competition, as well as delays in shipping and receiving the equipment.

“When shipments are delayed, we must create opportunities to get these agencies what they need,” he said.

Jakubowski is quick to praise AEPi for stepping up to the plate. In one instance, he says that thousands of disposable gowns worn to treat those in isolation needed to be dropped off. He adds that “alum Jordan Elcott created the initiative with AEPi chapters, and got the gowns and more items delivered. Without that gear, it could have cost lives.”

Jordan’s father, Shalom Elcott, works as the philanthropic curator at Samueli Foundation, a family foundation focused on health, education, the Jewish community and Israel. He has been part of the managing team on the campaign, working with Jakubowski, Feldman and representatives from other organizations.

As someone who has had many more years of experience in the nonprofit sector, he has much praise for such quick mobilization during an intense time of crisis.

He says Jakubowski was able to get mainstream and well-established large umbrella Jewish organizations on board, such as the Jewish Federations of North America and the Jewish Funders Network, to be active partners in the campaign. “In just five weeks, he brought longtime established organizations together in a powerful partnership with Jewish leaders from around the world.”

Jakubowski says that $408,000 has been raised so far for the campaign during this “soft launch” stage, with the official crowdfunding aspect of the campaign having commenced on April 29, Israel’s Independence Day. The campaign goal is currently $3 million.

Elcott says that of the total amount raised so far, it is remarkable that more than $100,000 was donated by people living in Israel. “The Jewish Funders Network in Israel has been extremely generous even as demands in Israel [as a result of the virus] are herculean.”

Perhaps most importantly are the results of the campaign on the ground, as reported by the agencies themselves that are being assisted during these difficult and frightening times.

According to a representative of the Kline Galland Home for the aged in Seattle, “we just tested all our residents this weekend and came back with ZERO positive cases. We all know this is 100 percent because we have the PPE to treat our patients safely and responsibly. You all are saving lives.” (JNS.org)

 

Mossad Gave Germany Intel on Hezbollah Before Ban

Israel’s Mossad agency furnished German intelligence counterparts with information on Hezbollah’s activities that contributed to the German government’s decision to ban the terror group, Israel’s Channel 12 reported on Saturday. Pictured above is Yossi Cohen, the head of Mossad. Photo Credit: Miriam Alster - Flash 90

The Israeli spy agency reportedly provided Berlin with information about Hezbollah’s warehouses of explosive material in southern Germany, among other intelligence.

By: WIN Staff

Israel’s Mossad agency furnished German intelligence counterparts with information on Hezbollah’s activities that contributed to the German government’s decision to ban the terror group, Israel’s Channel 12 reported on Saturday.

According to the report, Israeli agents operated in Germany tracking Hezbollah’s movements and activities in a secretive operation. The dossier on Hezbollah’s operations in Germany was then delivered to German authorities

The information Mossad agents provided to Germany included details about the locations of warehouses in the southern part of the country where the terror group stored hundreds of kilograms of ammonium nitrate, a common agricultural fertilizer that can be repurposed as a deadly explosive agent.

The Mossad intelligence reportedly contributed to Germany’s decision on Thursday to ban all of Hezbollah’s activities, regardless of whether the terror group classifies them as “political” or “military” activities.

The German order prohibits the public use Hezbollah symbols, and the terror group’s assets in Germany were also slated to be confiscated and forfeited to the government.

The German Ministry of the Interior issued a statement explaining, “Hezbollah openly calls for the violent elimination of the State of Israel and questions the right of the State of Israel to exist. The organization is therefore fundamentally against the concept of international understanding, regardless of whether it presents itself as a political, social or military structure.”

In addition to massive amounts of aid from Iran, Hezbollah also directs a global narcotics trafficking and money laundering operation. According to Forbes magazine, Hezbollah is the richest terror group in the world.

Hezbollah has also amassed a massive arsenal of rockets and missiles in southern Lebanon, with which it routinely threatens Israel. (World Israel News)

Read more at: worldisraelnews.com

 

B&H Photo Lays off 400 Employees; Virus Crisis Has “No End in Sight”

B&H Photo & Electronics, the iconic electronics retailer that has made a name for itself in Manhattan and throughout the world announced this week that it was furloughing 400 of its 2000 employees because of the coronavirus lockdown. Photo Credit:  B&H

Edited by: JV Staff

B&H Photo & Electronics, the iconic electronics retailer that has made a name for itself in Manhattan and throughout the world announced this week that it was furloughing 400 of its 2000 employees because of the coronavirus lockdown, according to a NY Post report. 

Last month, B&H shuttered its Manhattan megastore that employs Orthodox Jews from the tri-state area. Izzy Friedman, the human resources director of B&H told those employees that are now without jobs that this was a very difficult decision for the company and it “waited as long as possible” before sending out the pink slips. The Post reported that Friedman reminded the laid off employees that B&H has been providing salaries and benefits ” “through the Passover holiday break, and beyond to make this easier.”

B&H is a landmark in Manhattan for locals and tourists from across the globe who travel to the Big Apple in order to purchase electronic equipment and supplies from the celebrated retailer. B&H has been in operation for the last 47 years in its flagship store on 9th Avenue and West 34th Street in midtown Manhattan.   

Friedman also told employees that B&H had no choice but to let the 400 employees go because the  “crisis has continued with no clear end in sight” but was looking forward to evaluating “the various stimulus benefits available,” according to the Post report.  

“It is our sincerest hope and prayer that this global pandemic and its economic impacts will be temporary, and that in the future we will be able to reverse many of these furloughs,” Friedman wrote in the Wednesday memo, as was reported by the Post.

According to one B&H employee who spoke to the Post, the layoffs come as a surprise as the store’s call center has been generating a brisk business from those who wish to order electronic equipment such as cameras, computers and accessories. Now that a vast majority of people are working from home due to the coronavirus pandemic, such orders are related to those seeking to set up offices from home.    

Back on March 16th, B&H officially closed its two-story Manhattan location, however, according to the company’s web site, those who placed online or phone orders may pick up their products within 30 minutes of their order at the side entrance of the midtown store, according to the Post report. 

B&H is owned by the Schreiber family. Its first store was opened in Tribeca in 1973 and has since grown exponentially.  

In November of 2019, it was reported that New York State’s Attorney General Letitia James had filed suit against B&H, alleging that  the store withheld approximately $7.3 million in tax revenue from New York State over 13 years.

Officially, the suit is for violations of New York’s Tax Law, the New York False Claims Act, and New York’s Executive Law. The suit claims that B&H — the nation’s largest non-chain photo and video equipment retailer — knowingly failed to pay sales tax due on tens of millions of dollars it received from electronics manufacturers to reimburse the company for “instant rebate” manufacturer discounts B&H passed along to its customers.

A spokesman for B&H Photo, Jeff Gerstel, said the state’s lawsuit was without merit in a statement. “B&H is not a big box store or a faceless chain; we are a New York institution, having operated here for nearly 50 years with a stellar reputation. The tax department has done countless audits and never once – not a single time – mentioned this widespread industry practice. B&H has done nothing wrong and it is outrageous that the AG has decided to attack a New York company that employs thousands of New Yorkers while leaving the national online and retail behemoths unchallenged.”

Why Aren’t Many Americans Getting Their Economic Stimulus Checks? Here Are Some Reasons for the Delay  

Photo Credit: IRS

Edited by: JV Staff

Seems like a significant number of Americans are still awaiting their economic stimulus payments and are getting antsy over the delay because of lack of money to pay basic expenses.

This week, President Trump took to Twitter to tell people of the Internal Revenue Service’s “Get My Payment” tool on the agency’s web site. According to a CNN report, the president told people to click on the button that says “receive your money FAST.”

According to the CNN report, people will be asked to put in basic information about themselves then the tool can tell users when they will receive their payment and how it will arrive to them.  It also lets people update bank account information so that the IRS can send a direct deposit rather than a check, speeding up the payment process.

The National Taxpayer Advocate service reports that the IRS has already $207 billion to Americans in 122 million payments, according to the CNN report. The bad news is that 28 million people are still waiting for their promised money. 

The problem with the Get My Payment tool on the IRS web site is that people going there leave frustrated because they receive a “cryptic status message” and the IRS has no staff to field phone calls as they have shuttered their call center due to the spread of the coronavirus, as was reported by CNN.   

CNN reports that the Get My Payment tool is updated each day and that people should continue to check the site. 

For those people who continue to get a message that states, ‘payment status not available’ it could be for a number of reasons.

CNN has reported that it could mean that some people don’t qualify because they earn too much money. Undocumented workers, including those who pay taxes with an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number, are also ineligible, as well as anyone who can be claimed as a dependent for tax purposes, like many college students, as was reported by CNN. 

This status could also mean that the IRS is still processing a person’s 2019 tax return or that the agency has not added your data to the tool yet.CNN reported that people who receive Supplemental Income or Veterans Affairs benefits might be getting this message because their information was not uploaded to the tool. But they will likely be sent their money later in May.

If a person gets a ‘need more information’ message on the web site it means that you do qualify for a payment but that the IRS does not have your bank account information on file, according to the CNN report. The tool will prompt you to input that information. If you don’t, a paper check will be sent to you to an address the agency has on file from a 2019 or 2018 tax return, as was reported by CNN.

The IRS suggests checking your most recent tax return to make sure the data matches, as well as trying a different way to type in your street address. For example, try “123 North Main St” instead of “123 N Main St.”

Other people are receiving a message that says ‘You’re eligible, but no payment date is available.’ This means that a person is eligible to receive a payment from the IRS but a payment date has not been scheduled as of yet.

CNN has reported that this could possibly mean that you recently uploaded your bank account information to the IRS site. If you enter the information before noon on Tuesday, your payment date should be available on Saturday. If it’s after noon on Tuesday, you’ll have to wait at least another week, according to the CNN report.

 

Israel Attacks Hezbollah Targets in Homs and in Southern Syria

The Israeli Air Force (IAF) attacked several targets in Homs on Friday night and in southern Syria in the areas adjacent to the Golan Heights on late Thursday night, strikes hitting Iranian forces and the Hezbollah terror organization. Photo by Kobi Richter/TPS on 8 September, 2019

By: Aryeh Savir

The Israeli Air Force (IAF) attacked several targets in Homs on Friday night and in southern Syria in the areas adjacent to the Golan Heights on late Thursday night, strikes hitting Iranian forces and the Hezbollah terror organization.

On Friday night, the IAF hit a munitions depot in Homs used by the Hezbollah terrorist organization after midnight on Friday.

Syria stated media claimed that the explosions were the result of a “human error” caused by troops moving ammunition.

However, the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights (SOHR) said that the Syrian missile defense system was activated during the strike, meaning that the Syrian air defenses were responding to a missile attack.

At least 10 civilians were wounded outside the warehouse, according to eyewitness reports quoted by the SOHR. There were no available reports of injuries to troops or Hezbollah operatives in the warehouse.

On Thursday night, Syria’s official SANA news agency reported that an attack was launched from Israel on targets in southern Syria, causing material damage to structures.

The SOHR reported that the targets were Iranian-led Hezbollah units in the Tel Ahmar area south of Quneitra in southern Syria, adjacent to Israel’s border with Syria.

The SOHR noted that the Israeli helicopters hit three different sites that Hezbollah was using to set up bases along the border.

Israel has previously bombed Hezbollah and Iranian infrastructure under construction in the area.

The IDF in March 2019 announced that it had exposed a clandestine Hezbollah unit that was operating in southern Syria in the area near the border with Israel and where the attacks occurred.

The unit’s objective is to establish another front against Israel from the Golan Heights, in addition to Hezbollah’s threat from Lebanon.

The IDF published classified information about the “Golan File,” the name for the unit whose purpose is to establish infrastructure and act against Israel at a time of deterioration. The infrastructure is at its preliminary stages and has yet to reach the level needed for operational activity and is still in the process of development and consolidation.

Israel has reportedly carried out several attacks inside Syria in recent weeks.

While Israel has refrained from publicly commenting on the reports, Minister of Defense Naftali Bennett stated during an interview on Tuesday that the IDF was determined to drive the Iranians out of Syria.

“We have moved from blocking Iran’s entrenchment in Syria to forcing it out of there, and we will not stop. We will not allow more strategic threats to grow just across our borders without taking action,” he stated. “We will continue to take the fight to the enemy’s territory.”

Iran seeks to establish bases, with Syrian’s blessing, along Israel’s northern borders. Israel has long maintained that it will not allow Iran to establish a new threat on its borders.

Israel is also trying to prevent Iran from providing Hezbollah with advanced weaponry, specifically precision-guided missiles.

In general, Iran’s military build-up in Syria remains a red line for Israel. The IAF has carried out thousands of attacks to thwart the Iranian entrenchment in the war-torn country. (Tazpit Press Service)

 

As Warmer Weather Beckons, NYPD to Enforce Social Distancing

People wearing protective masks enjoy Central Park Saturday, May 2, 2020, in New York. New York City police dispatched 1,000 officers this weekend to enforce social distancing due to coronavirus concerns, as warmer weather tempted New Yorkers to come out of quarantine. Officers set out on foot, bicycles and cars to break up crowds and remind everyone of public health restrictions requiring they keep 6 feet away from others.(AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

By: Jim Mustian & Tom Hays

As warmer weather tempted New Yorkers to come out of quarantine, police dispatched 1,000 officers this weekend to enforce social distancing and a ban on congregating in public spaces.

Officers set out on foot, bicycles and cars to break up crowds and remind those enjoying the weather of public health restrictions requiring they keep 6 feet away from others.

“I believe with the warm weather people will come outside,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Saturday. “You can’t stay indoors all the time. People will come outside and that’s great, go for a walk. But respect the social distancing and wear a mask.”

The New York City Police Department has made 60 arrests and issued 343 summonses related to social distancing since March 16.

Police Commissioner Dermot Shea issued a stern warning after a series of clashes this week between police officers and members of Orthodox Jewish communities over social distancing.

“We will not tolerate it,” Shea said after community members flooded the streets for funeral processions. “You are putting my cops’ lives at risk and it’s unacceptable.”

Enforcement has its limitations when it comes to social distancing, police concede, leaving it up to New Yorkers to play by the rules to help keep infections on the downturn.

“You’ve got to get voluntary compliance,” Benjamin Tucker, NYPD’s first deputy commissioner,” said last month.

Most people are heeding officers’ warnings to keep their distance in parks and around essential businesses like grocery stores, Shea said.

But a stark example of non-compliance came Thursday when officers interrupted a crowded funeral procession in Brooklyn’s Borough Park neighborhood. Video posted to social media showed officers in protective masks chasing a minivan and shouting at dozens of people marching behind the van to get out of the street and onto the sidewalk.

On April 18, officers passed out summonses and made arrests at a Bronx parking lot and garage where they found a makeshift nightclub featuring a pool table and bar offering hard liquor and Corona beer, and at a closed Brooklyn barbershop where more than 50 people gathered for a party featuring loud music and gambling.

Two days later officers broke up a “4/20” marijuana holiday celebration staged in the vacant third floor of a building in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood. Dozens of people, some drawn by social media hype about the party, were given summonses for trespassing.

Here are other coronavirus developments in New York:

CENTRAL PARK HOSPITAL CLOSING

Mount Sinai Hospital Health System said it’s shutting down the small field hospital it erected in Central Park through a partnership with a charity run by Christian evangelical preacher Franklin Graham.

Only eight patients remained at the makeshift hospital as of Saturday.

It plans to stop admitting new patients to the field hospital as of Monday. Officials said it would take about two weeks to treat these last patients and then decontaminate and remove the tents.

“While this crisis is far from over, this marks a significant turning point in the coronavirus outbreak in New York that gives us assurance that we are returning towards normalcy,” the system said in a statement to The Associated Press. “We are grateful to have fought the coronavirus together alongside the courageous people of New York City.”

Mount Sinai Health System partnered with the Graham’s charity Samaritan’s Purse to open the field hospital, treating 315 people infected with the coronavirus since April 1.

The hospital had come under fire from some city officials and activists over Samaritan’s Purse’s practice of having volunteers and staff sign a statement of religious beliefs that included a rejection of same-sex marriage. That practice didn’t apply to the Mt. Sinai doctors staffing the field hospital.

City Council Speaker Corey Johnson, who is gay, called Friday for the hospital to be taken down because of its affiliation with Graham.

___

LATEST CASUALTY FIGURES

The virus killed 299 people in the state Friday, according to Cuomo. That brings the state’s official death toll to more than 18,900, a number that does not include 5,200 additional victims in New York City whose deaths were blamed on the virus on death certificates, but whose infections haven’t been confirmed by a lab test.

Another 831 people were hospitalized with the virus Friday, Cuomo said, a number that has been dropping but which he said remains disturbingly high.

The governor on Saturday toured a Metropolitan Transportation Authority maintenance facility in Queens, seeking to highlight the closure of New York City’s subway system from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. so trains and stations can be disinfected.

He described the cleaning as labor intensive, with workers wearing haz-mat suits.

“This has never been done before,” Cuomo said. “You have to go through the whole train with a misting device where they spray disinfectant on every surface.” (AP)

NY Hospital Lobby’s Power Stretches to DC in Stimulus Battle

In this April 20, 2020, file photo, a medic moves a gurney at Queens Hospital Center in the Jamaica neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York. The stated mission of The Greater New York Hospital Association is simple enough: to help members deliver “the finest patient care in the most cost-effective way.” But it’s more complicated than that. While the association, which represents health care providers at the epicenter of the pandemic, is a nonprofit organization, it has the balance sheet of a robust private company, pays executive salaries that top $3 million and spent millions more to lobby in Washington for some of the nation's most profitable hospitals. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)

By: Brian Slodysko & Richard Lardner 

The stated mission of The Greater New York Hospital Association is simple enough: to help members deliver “the finest patient care in the most cost-effective way.” But it’s more complicated than that.

While the association, which represents health care providers at the epicenter of the pandemic, is a nonprofit organization, it has the balance sheet of a robust private company, pays executive salaries that top $3 million and spent millions more to lobby in Washington for some of the nation’s most profitable hospitals.

So when it came time to secure its share of the record $3.6 trillion in federal stimulus money, the association was well positioned. It helped steer over $11.5 billion in funding to the state, with billions more on the way soon, in a competition with other hospital groups, major corporations and thousands of small businesses.

“On the surface, the purpose (of the stimulus) is to relieve financial damage caused by COVID-19. But in reality, it’s likely to actually increase the disparity,” said Ge Bai, a Johns Hopkins University professor who studies the economics of hospitals. “It’s very political. The money coming from the federal government is a zero sum game and we have some extremely powerful, large and rich hospitals.”

The story of how the New York group leveraged its power during the pandemic shows that the Washington influence industry functions much the same way in a public health crisis as it does in normal times, where the better heeled and connected get far closer to a desired result.

Many smaller organizations say the group’s connections and resources make it hard to compete.

“We did feel that we were being a little outgunned,” said Maggie Elehwany, vice president of government affairs and policy for the National Rural Health Association, which has spent just over $403,000 on lobbying since January 2019, a fraction when compared to the $3 million outlay by the Greater New York Hospital Association during the same period.

The association helped secure billions for its member hospitals inundated by the virus, particularly New York City’s underfunded public health system.

But the aid will also flow to profitable hospitals that have generated millions — and in some cases billions — of dollars in revenue in recent years, records show.

What’s more, some of the group’s recent lobbying has been aimed at rolling back consumer protections or blocking new ones rather than securing resources for New York.

The association declined to answer questions. Brian Conway, the group’s spokesman, said in a statement, “GNYHA advocates fiercely and without apology for our entire membership, including public hospitals, financially struggling safety net hospitals, and academic medical centers, and we will continue to do so.”

The Trump administration has wide latitude to decide where much of the $175 billion in emergency coronavirus funding allotted for hospitals and other health care providers will go. And New York isn’t the only state seeking to influence how the money is distributed.

If it does prevail, one reason is likely to be its well tended political connections.

The association has served as a deep-pocketed donor to the interests of powerful Democratic officials in New York such as Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Sen. Chuck Schumer, while also maintaining Republican ties, including the ability to contact Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and a top adviser, by phone when needed.

The organization has given more than $8.5 million since 2016 to a super PAC aligned with Schumer, and about $2.2 million to a similar super PAC that elects House Democrats. Its chief lobbyist, David Rich, has donated more than $130,000 to Cuomo, a Democrat, records show.

The contributions to the two super PACs were more than double what the American Hospital Association’s political action committee gave to Republicans and Democrats alike during the same period.

Raske recently touted the organization’s contacts with high-ranking White House officials.

“GNYHA has been totally engaged with the Trump Administration on this issue,” Raske wrote in an April 10 statement that also mentioned he spoke directly with Kushner.

New York has since received an additional $4.3 billion made available through a $10 billion pot of money for coronavirus “hotspots.” And more money is coming through a $500 billion coronavirus aid bill Trump recently signed.

Beyond seeking relief money, the association has been instrumental in fighting a consumer protection measure that would prevent hospitals from sending surprise bills to care recipients.

The group told members in an email that it “advocated strongly against” it and was “pleased that extraneous measures supported by the Trump Administration, such as surprise billing and price transparency provisions, were not included in the final legislation,” the news website ModernHealthcare reported.

It also secured legal protections in New York to reduce hospitals’ liability during the pandemic

Smaller, less powerful hospital associations have not been so successful.

Timothy Moore, president of the Mississippi Hospital Association, said revenues at hospitals in his state have dropped as much as 60%.

Nearly 100 hospitals Mississippi have received $175 million in stimulus money so far — barely enough to cover a month’s worth of expenses for many of these facilities, according to Moore.

“I’ve had large hospitals in the state of Mississippi that call me and say, ‘I had nobody in the parking lot.’ There’s not a car in the parking lot.’ Well, you can’t do that long,” Moore said.

The New York hospital association does not show signs of financial distress.

The group’s most recent tax filing revealed revenue of $38 million in 2018 and assets valued at more than $147 million, including five for-profit companies that took in an additional $75 million in income. The association also paid seven executives over $13 million. Raske, the association’s president, was paid a salary of $3.4 million while the hospital covered first-class travel for him and his wife. Vice President Lee H. Perlman made $3.2 million. And Rich, the lobbyist, earned over $1.8 million. Former New York Congressman Charlie Rangel was also on the payroll, collecting $75,000 a year as the group’s only paid board director.

Roughly a month before the World Health Organization declared a pandemic, the group spun off two of its for-profit companies, which specialized in hospital consulting and supply chain management, in a deal worth over $291 million, according to SEC filings.

In comparison, the California Hospital Association spent $1.9 million on federal lobbying since the beginning of last year and held $14.7 million in assets. Associations in Illinois and Texas all reported spending far less on lobbying and also held less in assets.

The organization does more than direct lobbying. They’ve also organized pressure campaigns that have lauded Schumer while urging people to contact their federal representatives. Recent Facebook ads ran in states where vulnerable Republicans are on the ballot, pressing for more hospital funding.

Gerard Anderson, a Johns Hopkins public health and business professor, recalls dealing with the New York association when he served at the Department of Health and Human Services under presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan.

“They are notorious in Washington for being one of the best, strongest and most ruthless lobbying groups,” Anderson said. (AP)

Camera-Shy Supreme Court Forced by COVID-19 to Embrace New Technology

For the first time in its 231-year history, the high court's famously camera-shy and tech-averse justices will conduct — and livestream — oral arguments by teleconference, the first of 10 cases scheduled in this fashion for May due to the coronavirus pandemic. Photo Credit: AP

By: Masood Farivar

The United States Supreme Court will make history Monday. 

Not, this time, with an epoch-making ruling but with its embrace of heretofore shunned technology and transparency.   

For the first time in its 231-year history, the high court’s famously camera-shy and tech-averse justices will conduct — and livestream — oral arguments by teleconference, the first of 10 cases scheduled in this fashion for May due to the coronavirus pandemic. 

Rather than risking exposure to the deadly pathogen, the nine justices, competing lawyers, court officials and members of the public will be able to participate in or observe the court proceedings from the comfort and safety of their homes or offices. 

Monday’s case itself is of minimal public interest. It involves a legal dispute between the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the online reservation service Booking.com over whether the generic-sounding name can be registered as a trademark.  

While conducting oral arguments by teleconference is a new experience for the justices and lawyers, of far greater significance is the court’s historic decision to open up its deliberations via livestreaming.  

‘Big moment for the court’

“This is a big moment for the court,” said Adam Feldman, a professor at California State University who runs a popular blog about the Supreme Court.   

Oral arguments during which lawyers representing parties to a dispute present their case and field the nine justices’ questions were previously the only public part of the Supreme Court’s decision-making process. 

Although the court releases transcripts of the arguments the same day and posts their audio recordings at the end of the week, it has spurned calls from transparency advocates and members of Congress to broadcast or livestream its deliberations, with some justices arguing it would change court dynamics and encourage lawyers to play to the cameras.  

No more waiting 

The result has been that most members of the public don’t get to hear the arguments in real time. Depending on the case, spectators have to wait anywhere from five hours to five days to secure one of 50 seats reserved for the public, according to Gabe Roth, executive director of Fix the Court, which advocates for greater court transparency.   

As Roth put it on his website, “all it took was a global pandemic” for the court to change its entrenched ways of doing business.   

The pandemic has shut down much of the government forcing most federal appellate courts to conduct remote hearings with live audio access for the public. The Supreme Court initially postponed its March and April argument sessions before announcing in late April that it would conduct arguments in 10 cases by teleconference.  

Three cases involve Trump 

While most of the postponed cases were not time-sensitive, several apparently could not be delayed further. Among them are three cases involving efforts by House of Representative Democrats and New York prosecutors to gain access to President Donald Trump’s financial records.  

“The court was caught between a rock and hard place,” Feldman said.  

The justices scheduled the trademark case as a dry run of sorts for the first day to work out the kinks in the new system, according to court watchers. Before they’re patched into the teleconference at 10 a.m. EST, lawyers for the two sides will call in for any last-minute questions for the court clerk. The marshal will then open the session with the traditional cry of “Oyez, oyez, oyez.” 

Lawyers for the government and Booking.com will have two minutes of speaking time before justices begin questioning. Chief Justice John Roberts will ask the first question, a rarity for him, followed by the second-most-senior member of the bench, the famously laconic Justice Clarence Thomas, who has asked all of one question in more than 14 years.   

Breaking with tradition

This is a marked departure from the traditional format where any justice can interject at any time during oral arguments. Feldman said the justices will likely try to get a feel for the new format rather than hastening to ask questions.  

The court said on Thursday that it would provide a live audio feed of the arguments to three outlets, including C-SPAN, the public affairs channel, to carry on various platforms, allowing many more people to listen in. The court hasn’t indicated whether it would continue with this practice. 

The Supreme Court is the sole branch of the U.S. government whose proceedings are not broadcast. C-SPAN regularly airs key congressional hearings and floor action while the president’s news conferences and other remarks are widely carried live.  

When it comes to transparency, the Supreme Court also lags behind its counterparts in other democracies. The supreme courts of Canada and Britain have been broadcasting arguments for nearly a decade, while other countries have started live coverage more recently. Critics say this insularity also undermines public trust. 

“If we can’t see it, how can we trust it?” Roth said.  

Will changes stand test of time

Roth said that while he understands the argument against allowing cameras in the courtroom, he finds the reasoning against audio streaming less persuasive given that several federal appeals courts have been providing it for years. With growing pressure for court openness, Roth added, the court will likely continue livestreaming even after the pandemic crisis abates.  

“I think that once the justices catch up, I don’t see them going backwards,” he said.  (VOA News)

Former Trump Lawyer Michael Cohen Denied Release from Prison; Sources Say “Tell All Book” Was the Problem

Michael Cohen, former personal lawyer and fixer for President Trump was denied a promised early release from prison Friday, a day after an attorney from the Trump Organization sent him a threatening letter warning against him publishing a reported “tell-all” book before the 2020 election. Photo Credit: AP

Edited by: JV Staff

Michael Cohen, former personal lawyer and fixer for President Trump was denied a promised early release from prison Friday, a day after an attorney from the Trump Organization sent him a threatening letter warning against him publishing a reported “tell-all” book before the 2020 election, according to a CNBC report.

Two weeks ago, the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) had notified Cohen, 53, that he would be released early from prison due to the COVID-19 outbreak at the Otisville prison in upstate New York, Cohen’s attorney Roger Adler told ABC News at the time.
Cohen is serving a 3-year sentence at the federal prison camp where several staff and inmates have tested positive for the novel coronavirus, according to the ABC News report.

He has completed a 14-day quarantine required for that release.

CNBC reported that on Thursday, Charles Harder, a lawyer for the Trump Organization, sent Cohen a letter warning him that he would be at legal risk if he wrote a book about his time working for Trump, according to several people.

White House spokeswoman Kayleigh McEnany said “absolutely not” when asked at a news conference whether the White House directly or indirectly interfered in the decision to delay Cohen’s planned early release, according to the CNBC report,
ABC News reported that he is scheduled for release in November 2021. Cohen would have been allowed to serve the remainder of his sentence from home confinement.

Cohen’s lawyer, Roger Adler, told CNBC in an email, “I am disappointed that Michael was not released after the 14 day quarantine period.”
“It is my understanding that compassionate release applications are being reviewed by the BOP central office,” Adler wrote, according to the CNBC report. “It is my hope that following that review that Michael Cohen will be released either on a furlough, or transferred to home confinement.”

Lanny Davis, another Cohen lawyer, said in a statement Saturday that he “remains in effect in solitary confinement, under quarantine, rather than under home confinement as he was led to believe would occur yesterday, May 1.”
“As his friend and legal advisor, and on his and his family’s behalf, we are disappointed not only that there was this delay but that no explanation has been offered to him or his family as to the reason for the delay,” Davis said. “We hope that someone in positions of authority gives him and his family assurance that his release under home confinement for the remainder of his term will be forthcoming, for the valid reasons previously announced.”

With synagogues shuttered, ‘porch minyans’ grow in Brooklyn

 By DOVID ZAKLIKOWSKI (JNS)

The streets of Crown Heights in Brooklyn, N.Y., were eerily empty at 7 p.m. on Thursday. Normally, children are out playing and parents rushing home from work or errands, with crowds of people out now that the days are getting longer. But since mid-March, when local doctors advised the community to shut down because of the spread of the deadly coronavirus, this is the way it has been in the neighborhood, which has been inundated with cases of COVID-19.

With few cars on the road, other sounds can be heard during the day, such the murmur of prayer services. For the Orthodox, communal prayer services are like praying in synagogue. Theoretically, they can be held anywhere (think El Al flights to Israel), as long as it has aminyan—a quorum of 10 Jewish males over the age .

With synagogues shuttered in communities worldwide, praying on the porch—or “porch minyan,” as it’s been dubbed—has become the new norm in many Orthodox communities across the globe. The one leading the prayers, known as the chazzan, says them in a booming voice so the words can be heard in other places farther away.

For the most part, such services have been received by non-Jewish neighbors with appreciation. “Our neighbours just delivered this lovely gift to all homes on our street,” Jennifer Dorner posted on Facebook, about those who were praying on the porches on her Montreal, Quebec, block, “as a token of appreciation since they’ve been coming out onto their porches to pray. But the singing and prayers have already been such a gift!”

Using only his first name so as not to draw attention, Michel, 71, an administrator at a local boys’ day school in Crown Heights, prays all three daily prayer services with a minyan. “This is davening for me,” he said, using the Yiddish word for praying, saying that without a minyan, his prayers don’t feel real. “That is the way I was trained from childhood, and that is the way I feel most comfortable doing it.”

From his porch, there is no minyan that he could pray with, so he goes to nearby ones mostly on other blocks. Michel rattles off the times and locations of several places where an afternoon prayer service can be found these days. He notes that for his own safety, some locations will not let him join since he is over the age of 65, and others say that only those who are their own porch can join.

It’s more about cabin fever’

Rabbis across the globe have banned the porch minyan on various grounds. In March the beit din, or rabbinical court, of Crown Heights made it clear that even an outdoor minyan is prohibited, saying “it is our opinion that individuals should daven alone in their houses at this time.” (One of the three rabbis who signed the letter succumbed to COVID-19.)

Despite this, as week upon week of staying home has started to wear people down, the “porch minyan” phenomenon has increased in the neighborhood.

“I can’t wrap my head around it,” says Eli Uminer, who himself has been sick with the coronavirus. “If it is a question of life or death, one is allowed to even desecrate Shabbos [the Sabbath]. In Jewish law, it states that you do this even if there is less than a one out of a thousand percent chance of dying.”

He says that while many remain on porches, some come from other streets and stand close to the home of the prayer leader. “I think that in terms of the virus, if done right it could be OK. But in reality, it never ends up that way; therefore, they should be banned.”

Uminer says that even without those conditions, for many, especially those in homes that are small and crowded with family members, “it’s more about cabin fever.”

The issue of crowding came to the forefront this week after a funeral for a revered rabbi in the nearby neighborhood of Williamsburg drew hundreds of Orthodox Jews from the Satmar community, leading to a stern rebuke from Mayor Bill de Blasio on Twitter. De Blasio later apologized for his remarks, which were widely condemned as anti-Semitic for singling out the Jewish community.

Under orders signed by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in March, public gatherings of any size or any reason are strictly forbidden.

Rabbi Yosef Braun, one of the three rabbis in Crown Heights who signed the original letter prohibiting the minyans, spoke about the topic in a Zoom class in April, saying that nothing changed from the ruling in March. He notes that it is too complicated and too difficult to keep social distancing, even on the porch. This is especially true during morning prayers, and on the Sabbath and holidays, when prayers are longer. During those times, he explains, it’s hard to keep a face mask on, people naturally begin to gather around each other, and he has even seen worshippers bring children—meaning a father could have to chase after them and mistakenly come dangerously close to others.

Braun says his home has a porch, and he could easily join a minyan. Nevertheless, he won’t do it because “besides the health concerns, there’s a host of halachic [Jewish law] concerns.”

Other rabbis have permitted these prayer sessions, including one of the local rabbis on the Crown Heights rabbinical board (who did not sign the original letter). Rabbi Berel Bell, a member of the rabbinical court in Montreal, initially wrote to his community in March, advising that they not hold outdoor minyans. More recently, however, he has joined one himself, and under certain conditions has permitted others to do the same.

A lot of things are weird’

In Crown Heights, which runs along Eastern Parkway—where on a spring day thousands might be walking—Michel says about health concerns, “I am not near people, there is social distancing, you are standing six feet away from people, and you cannot even have a conversation.”

Just before the afternoon prayer services on one street, Dr. Reuben Ingber notes that it was wonderful to have the possibility to pray from his porch with a minyan. “I don’t see anything wrong with it,” he says. “Do you want to join?”

Detective Vincent Martinos of the Crown Heights Police Department, agrees. He says the porch minyans have been fine according to the city’s ordinances. From what he has seen, people have been staying on their private property, wearing masks and keeping to social-distancing rules.

While he acknowledges some issues have occurred in the past six weeks at Chabad World Headquarters on Eastern Parkway, they were taken care of quickly. “Our community has done exceptionally well with social distancing,” he reports.

Michel says that even with the porch minyans, he is craving for more normal times, when everyone can go back to normal prayer services. He is especially looking forward to being called to the Torah, to look inside and kiss it, as is customary.

“It is weird,” offers. “A lot of things are weird today. But you have to live with the current situation.”

Air Travel Wanes, But Bodies Still Fly To Israel For Burial

In this Friday, May 1, 2020 photo, family and undertakers carry the body of a man who died from the coronavirus in the USA for burial in east Jerusalem's Mount of Olives cemetery. Air travel to Israel has come to a near standstill due to coronavirus restrictions, but one type of voyage still endures: the final journey of Jews wishing to be buried in Israel. Families, the aviation industry and health workers are finding ways to keep the deceased flying in despite the challenges presented by the virus. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

Air travel to Israel has come to a near standstill due to coronavirus restrictions, but one type of voyage still endures: the final journey of Jews wishing to be buried in Israel.

For centuries, Jews have sought to be interred in the Holy Land, going to great lengths to secure their final resting place in the land of their biblical forefathers. Today, not even a once-in-a-century pandemic is halting this ancient last wish.

“The Land of Israel is a very special place for Jewish people to be buried,” said Rabbi Michoel Fletcher, who facilitates purchases of burial plots in Israel for Jews from abroad. “The flights have been reduced heavily, but there are cargo flights. So it may take a bit longer, but we are getting people coming in.”

Despite the challenges presented by the coronavirus, families, the aviation industry and health workers are finding ways to keep the deceased flying in — chartering private planes, adding cargo flights and striking deals with handling companies. Israel’s Foreign Ministry said 300 bodies, including many COVID-19 victims, have been flown in for burial since February.

During that time, Israel’s typically bustling Ben-Gurion International airport has become a ghost town, with only a few hundred passengers arriving on a handful of flights each week.

Jews have long aspired to be buried in the Holy Land. The biblical forefather Jacob and his son Joseph both requested to be buried in the Promised Land after having died in Egypt. Some Jews believe that being buried in the Holy Land grants atonement for sins or will make resurrection easier when the Messiah comes.

Israel has managed to keep the coronavirus crisis largely in check, and though it has reported 225 deaths out of more than 16,100 cases, it has not seen hospitals or morgues overwhelmed. More than half of the reported cases in Israel have recovered.

The virus causes mild to moderate flu-like symptoms in most patients, who recover within a few weeks. But it is highly contagious and can cause severe illness or death, particularly in older patients or those with underlying health problems.

Bringing in bodies is complex and costly, even under ordinary circumstances. Purchasing a plot can cost anywhere from a few thousand to tens of thousands of dollars, depending on the location. Many choose to spend hefty sums for a prime spot in Jerusalem’s Mount of Olives cemetery, which overlooks the storied Old City and its important Jewish sites. Additional costs include flights and transport from the airport to the cemetery.

Those who choose to be buried in Israel must also navigate a web of bureaucracy, starting with handling companies at their departure point to their local Israeli consulate or embassy as well as the Israeli Health Ministry.

The coronavirus crisis has complicated an already onerous process. While families typically fly in from abroad to escort the body and attend the funeral, that’s not possible under current travel restrictions, which require a two-week quarantine for anyone entering from abroad.

Extra measures are required to prevent contagion, including additional wrapping material and a separate ritual purification process. In hard-hit New York, which has a large Jewish community, some handling companies have refused to deal with the bodies of those who have died of COVID-19, the illness caused by the virus.

Last month, Dan Leshem’s father Amnon died from the coronavirus in Belgium, his home for the last 20 years. The bureaucracy and high costs were not a deterrent to bringing his father for burial in Israel, where Leshem lives.

“His last wish was to be buried in Israel,” said Leshem, who streamed the funeral to relatives and friends abroad. “It was clear that we must bring him.”

An Israeli aviation official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss the process of transporting bodies with the media, said a cargo flight that comes from Belgium five times a week brings in about 20 bodies a flight — “an exceptional amount.”

Most come from France, which has a large Jewish community and a severe outbreak, the official said. He said a weekly cargo flight from New York also brings in bodies but often can’t meet families’ needs, as Jewish custom requires burying the dead promptly.

Fletcher, the burial facilitator, said many in New York have opted to bury their dead in the U.S., intending to exhume the bodies once flights to Israel resume.

But solutions are being found even now. The aviation official said that even if a cargo flight is full, room will be made for the caskets. “We will not delay bodies because there is no space,” he said. Additional cargo flights are expected to be added in Europe, he said.

Wealthier families have hired private planes, which have been shipping in bodies about every other day from Europe and the U.S. In a photo released by ZAKA, an Israeli medical service, the sleek, slim interior of a private jet that had recently touched down was packed with four wooden caskets.

Israeli airline El Al struck a deal last week with a handling company in New York prepared to process the bodies of people who have died of the coronavirus.

Yossi Landau, a ZAKA official who has been assisting families with burials during the outbreak, said dignity for the dead, and the bereaved, was a main driver behind getting the bodies to Israel.

“Behind every person who dies there is also a family, people who are living,” said Landau. “They must be respected.”

Big Tech Censorship is Dangerous , In Time Of Pandemics

A worker at Shaare Zedek Medical Center in Jerusalem, April 2, 2020. Photo by Nati Shohat/Flash90

By  (American Greatness)

Modern reliance on technology has never been more evident than now. During the COVID-19 pandemic, modern technological advances have gone from conveniences to life-saving resources.

But not for everyone.

For people banned from tech platforms, the potential emergency resources these platforms provide are out of reach. Banned from Twitter? Reduced access to breaking news. Banned from Uber Eats? Good luck getting food while maintaining social distancing recommendations. Banned from PayPalVenmo, or GoFundMe? Sending, receiving, and raising money for emergencies becomes a lot harder. Banned from Facebook? Find another way to connect with loved ones during this difficult time. This is the reality for people whose political speech runs afoul of tech censors or who have been targeted by powerful groups for having the “wrong” political beliefs.

Groups like the SPLCColor of ChangeSumofUs, and Sleeping Giants gleefully try to get their political opponents banned from social media and cut off from payment processors. Tech companies are pressured by advocacy organizations and agenda-driven journalists.

When trying to get a “wrongthinker” kicked off social media or cut off from funding sources, organizations, journalists, and companies claim they’re helping people take a moral stand against bigotry. When Laura Loomer was banned from PayPal, the company told Newsweek: “Our decision and actions are values-based, not political.”

However, the people pushing these bans, and enacting them, have trouble explaining exactly how it is moral to limit some people’s access to food because their opinions fall outside the mainstream. How is it moral to cut people off from their support systems—from their friends, families, and neighbors—because they say things some people find offensive? How is it moral to take away peoples’ ability to pay their bills because their political views are on the fringe of current accepted norms?

In reality, these moves are meant to silence and punish politically unpopular opinions. This precedent creates a chilling effect on free speech. People have a right to say controversial, offensive, and even hateful things. American companies should realize now, more than ever, that they should not suppress the free exchange of thoughts and feelings, nor the exchange of resources, for expressing constitutionally protected speech.

There’s no question these are not normal times, but neither are the companies doing the banning merely private companies.

At a press conference, President Trump promoted a Google website to determine whether people should seek medical treatment for coronavirus. The website was created by Verily, a sister company to Google, under the umbrella of Alphabet—but a Google log in is apparently required. Meanwhile, Google fires engineers over their opinions, bans people from YouTube, refuses to allow certain ads to run, and, in extreme instances, and bans entire Google accounts. The White House has also partnered with Apple to create an app to track coronavirus information. At the same time, Apple bans apps from their app store, removes controversial podcasts, and blocks consumers from viewing chat messages that might contain offensive information.

Twitter, a platform relied on for breaking information and used by government officials and government services, removed a tweet from The Federalist after it shared an opinion piece about the best way to handle the coronavirus epidemic. Twitter also removed tweets by Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani for allegedly violating Twitter’s new rules about discussing the coronavirus outbreak.

In January, remember, the World Health Organization posted on Twitter that China found no evidence of human-to-human transmission of the coronavirus. That has been proven to be an utter lie, but the tweet still remains online. So do tweets claiming the virus originated in the United States and blaming American military for spreading the virus to China.

The coronavirus epidemic is causing people across the world to reevaluate their principles. Perhaps it’s time to rethink the role large companies play in policing perfectly legal—although sometimes controversial—speech. And perhaps it’s time for American companies to uphold the spirit of the First Amendment, especially when lives are at stake.

 

 

12% OF Americans say Another Month of Social Distancing May Lead to Not Affording Food

By HANNAH BLEAU (Breitbart News)

Twelve percent of Americans say they may not be able to afford food if stringent social distancing measures remain in place another month, preventing many “nonessential” workers from returning to work, according to results from Morning Consult’s weekly coronavirus survey tracker released Friday.

The Morning Consult survey, based on 2,200 surveys conducted April 29-30, 2020, asked respondents how continued social distancing measures could affect them, leaving “most nonessential workers” remaining at home. Twelve percent responded, “It would be extremely difficult for me to get by, and I might not be able to pay for basic things like food.”

Nearly one-fifth, or 19 percent, said it would be “difficult” to get by and that they would “have to cut down on spending or make other changes in … life” to survive.

Millions of Americans who have lost their jobs as a result of the coronavirus lockdowns have flocked to pop-up food pantries or drive-through food banks in recent weeks.

A Foodshare drive-through food bank in Hartford, Connecticut, for instance, drew massive lines in April, with many of the recipients identifying themselves as “first timers.”

“They’re people who just four weeks ago were gainfully employed and now through no fault of their own, have found themselves unemployed or not knowing where their next meal is coming from,” Foodshare CEO and President Jason Jakubowski stated.

About 30 million Americans have made jobless claims in the last six weeks as protesters across the country continue to take to the streets for freedom rallies, protesting the lockdown orders in their respective cities and states and demanding officials allow them to return to work.

 

House Panel Wants Bezos To Testify In Antitrust Probe

(AP)

House lawmakers investigating the market dominance of Big Tech are asking Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos to testify to address possible misleading statements by the company on its competition practices.

In a letter to Bezos on Friday, leaders of the House Judiciary Committee from both parties are holding out the threat of a subpoena if he doesn’t agree voluntarily to appear.

Amazon used sensitive information about sellers on its marketplace, their products and transactions to develop its own competing products, according to a recent Wall Street Journal report. An Amazon executive denied such a practice in statements at a committee hearing last July, saying the company has a formal policy against it.

If the news report is accurate, Amazon’s statements to the committee “appear to be misleading, and possibly criminally false” or constituting perjury, said the letter to Bezos signed by the committee’s chairman, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., and others. “Although we expect that you will testify on a voluntary basis, we reserve the right to resort to compulsory process if necessary.”

Amazon spokesmen had no immediate comment.

The Judiciary antitrust subcommittee led by Rep. David Cicilline, D-R.I., has been conducting a sweeping investigation of Big Tech companies and their impact on competition and consumers, focusing on Google, Facebook, Amazon and Apple.

The Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission also are pursuing antitrust probes of the four companies, and state attorneys general from both parties have undertaken investigations of Google and Facebook.

Amazon has drawn unwanted exposure on several fronts in the Trump administration. President Donald Trump has repeatedly lashed out at the e-commerce giant and Bezos. He has accused Amazon of destroying the U.S. Postal Service by swamping it with packages to deliver, at below-market rates charged by the postal service that are deepening its financial woes. USPS is receiving a $10 billion loan under the government’s pandemic rescue package.

Trump has called The Washington Post newspaper, owned by Bezos, “fake news.” The Post has published critical reports about Trump and his business dealings.

Amazon has sued the government over the Pentagon awarding a $10 billion cloud computing contract to rival Microsoft, alleging that Trump’s frequently expressed animus toward the company and Bezos caused the Pentagon to unfairly award the contract

And on Wednesday, the Trump administration’s trade office for the first time added five of Amazon’s overseas operations to its list of “notorious markets” where pirated goods are sold. Amazon dismissed the move as part of the administration’s “personal vendetta” against it.