Archive for June, 2017

Pearl River, Bronxville relays among area athletes golden at Day 1 of States – The Journal News | LoHud.com

Valhalla's Sam Morillo throws the discus before winning the event, as well as the girls D2 shot put.(Photo: Nancy Haggerty/The Journal News)Buy Photo

ENDWELL Joe Metcalfe was running as if he was running his last race ever.

It turned it was for the Pearl River senior.

But immediately after handing off to teammate Brian Flaherty in the boys Division 2 (small-school) 4x400, Metcalfe found himself on his head on the track, having tripped over another runners foot.

Flaherty, who ran the third, handed off to Thomas Wilson for the fourth in first place and Wilson didnt give the lead back.

The three, along with lead-off Nick Malfitano ran a personal-best 3:24.51 as the team (except for newcomer Malfitano) repeated as State D2 champions, despite entering the race at Union-Endicott High School ranked third.

The race was Metcalfes last for Pearl River after five years and he doesnt plan to run in college.

It was a sweet exit bruised head all but forgotten when Wilson crossed the finish.

Pearl River's Thomas Wilson (r) races to the finish as the Pirates win the D2 boys State 4x400 title..(Photo: Nancy Haggerty/The Journal News)

Its awesome, Metcalfe said. I was super emotional coming into today. This is all Ive known. There were definitely some tears earlier today and there may be more but I think theyll be tears of joy.

Sam Morillo also shed some tears.

The Valhalla junior not only won the girls D2 shot at 43-2.75 but recorded a personal-best 136-11 to take the shot put.

Those were Valhallas first state track titles since 1990.

For four years Ive trained for this, Morillo said. When I had the 136 discus throw I cried. I want to thank the community of Valhalla and my parents (Luisa Martinez and Francisco Morillo). They support me highs and lows.

Briarcliff's Jack Zimmerman before he threw the shot 57-10 to win the D2 championship..(Photo: Nancy Haggerty/The Journal News)

Briarcliffs Jack Zimmerman won the boys D2 shot at 57-10 and finished second in the boys D2 shot with a personal-best throw of 161-10.

Im really shocked, Zimmerman said of his discus placement.

Hell compete in both events Saturday for the Federation title, which is against private school athletesas well as public.

Hackleys Onye Ohia-Enyia won the boys Federation 400 title in 47.38 with Pearl Rivers Wilson fourth (49.72).

Bronxvilles Eve Balsiero, Caroline Brasherar, Laura Holland and Kaitlin Ryan shattered their personal record while winning the girls D2 4x400 relay title in 3:51.22.

Ryan, wholl run for Stanford next year, also won the girls D2 800 in 2:07.88, which was second in the Federation by a hair.

If Id gone out a little sooner and hadnt let them get so far away maybe I could have gotten it but Im pretty happy with the way it played out, Ryan said.

Rhinebeck (4:01.45) was third in the D2 4x400 and Hackley sixth in a school-record 4:04.33.

Lourdes Caroline Timm was second in D2 and fourth in the Federation (2:08.44), Ursulines Lily Flynn (sixth overall, fourth in public D1) in 2:10 and John Jay-Cross Rivers Brooke Nohilly seventh overall, fifth public D1) in 2:11.11.

Briarcliffs Ryan Gallagher won the boys D2 3,200 title, clocking 9:13.57, before being greeted by happy family members.

Briarcliff's Ryan Gallagher gets some water from his mother, Chris, after winning the boys D2 State 3, 200 title..(Photo: Nancy Haggerty/The Journal News)

Im happy with it, said Gallagher, wholl run his last high school race, the 1,600 Saturday.

Somers Greg Fusco was second in the D1 3,200 in 9:13.97 with his brother, Matt, sixth ((9:20.67).

Colin Duignan of Fordham Prep finished second in the Federation in the boys pole vault, vaulting an outdoor personal-best 15-3.

Bronxville resident Colin Duignan clears an outdoor-best 15 feet, 3 inches for second place in the Federation..(Photo: Nancy Haggerty/The Journal News)

I got out of a little rut. I was able to compete, the junior and Bronxville resident said, adding he was 100 percent very happy.

New Rochelles Kiana Stallworth was second in the girls D1 long jump (18-10.25).

Bronxvilles Alex Rizzo was second among D2 public school boys in the 800 and third in the Federation in 1:55.53.

New Rochelle sophomore Jordan Forrest was third in the boys D1 shot put at 56-2.

New Rochelle's Jordan Forrest throws the shot en route to finishing third in the boys State D1 division..(Photo: Nancy Haggerty/The Journal News)

Getting up there and getting a medals this year means a lot to me, said Forrest, who qualified for States last year in the discus.

Putnam Valleys Antonia Hoyos was third in the girls D2 long jump at 17-4.50. Ardsleys Yilinn Yang was fifth (17-3).

Zoe Maxwell of Irvington won the girls D2 triple jump at 36-6.75 with Hoyos fifth (36-3.50).

Sufferns Myles Solan was third in the boys D1 40 (47.69) with Nyacks Justin Marsland eighth (48.94).

Nyacks Louise Jones crushed her previous personal best to finish third in the girls 40 hurdles in 1:01.48.

Bronxvilles Margot Richards, Sabrina Mellinghoff, Alisa Kanganis and Sophie Kohlhoff clocked 49.28 for fourth in the girls D2 4x100.

Lakeland/Panass Josias Luctamar was fourth in the boys D1 long jump (22-09.25).

Nyacks Raylan Boutin, Justin Marsland, Marc Alexandre and Dante Brown finished eighth in the boys D1 4x100 in a personal-best 42.48. That was just hundredths of a second off the school record but the four qualified for Saturdays Federation, where theyll have a shot at breaking the record.

Rye Country Day was fourth in D2 at 44.04.

In other results, Valhallas Ethan Bartlett was fifth in the boys D2 long jump (20-10.25). Our Lady of Lourdes was fifth in the boys D2 4x400 (3:28.98). New Rochelle was sixth in the girls D1 4x400 (3:58.95) and Suffern eighth (3:59.87).

Sufferns Briana Montgomery threw 39-07.25 for sixth in the girls D1 shot put.

Ramapos Cliventz Alexis (149-06) was sixth in the boys D1 discus.

Suffern was sixth in the boys D1 4x400 (3:18.92).

Twitter:@HaggertyNancy

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Pearl River, Bronxville relays among area athletes golden at Day 1 of States - The Journal News | LoHud.com

Did Donald Trump Just Defame James Comey? – Slate Magazine

President Donald Trump greets thenFBI Director James Comey in the Blue Room of the White House on Jan. 22.

Joshua Roberts/Reuters

In March, President Donald Trump accused President Barack Obama of wiretapping him. At the time, I wrote that in the unlikely event that Obama were to file a defamation claim against his successor, the former might have a case. Now comes the potential for another defamation claimthis time by former FBI Director James Comey. He and Trump are exchanging charges of mendacity, and a defamation claim might be one way to resolve them. As with the statements about Obama, the issueif Comey were to choose to pursue itwould likely come down to the limits of executive immunity from lawsuits.

At Thursdays hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee, Comey explained his decision to memorialize his meetings with the president by expressing his worry that Trump might lie about their meetings. In defending both himself and the FBI against charges that the organization was in disarray, Comey bluntly stated: Those were lies, pure and simple. He said thatin these prior statementsthe administration and the president had defamed him and the bureau.

Trump, of course, deployed his Twitter-finger in response:

In a statement following the testimony, meanwhile, Trump and his lawyer directly accused Comey of lying under oath. This statement also accused Comey of illegal leaks of classified information and privileged communications. Finally, at a news conference on Friday, Trump said that Comeys testimony that the president had asked him for loyalty and had asked him to let go of the Flynn investigation was false, essentially accusing the man of perjury. He even promised to testify as much under oath. In almost any other situation, such accusations, if false, would be an easy case for defamationeven though such cases are generally very tough to win. Some background on defamation will help.

This tort claim protects reputation, which Shakespeare called the immediate jewel of [our] souls. Accusing someone of lyingunder oath, in this caseis sure to harm the good name of the accused. And even if Comey cant prove he was damaged by the charge, in defamation cases the harm is generally presumed in cases where the statement is libel (written defamation) rather than slander (spoken defamation). Tweets would qualify as libel.

If there isnt a tape of their conversations, it could still ultimately come down to he saidhe said.

In cases involving public figures, the Supreme Court has applied an additional requirement: The false statement must be made with actual malice. Thats a legal term meaning that the defendant must either know the statement is false or act in reckless disregard as to whether it was true. These additional requirements shouldnt pose a problem in this case, because Trump knows (or certainly should!) whether the statements are true or false.

Of course, any Comey lawsuit against Trump for defamation would be met with a more elaborate version of the accusatory tweet: I didnt lie, Comey did. To succeed, Comey would have to show that Trumps charge was false. Unless there are tapes, lordy, proving the point one way or the other, the issue would come down to whether a civil jury would believe Comey or Trump.

Ill leave the question of each individuals personal veracity alone, except to mention Comeys response to a question about why people should believe him instead of Trump: I think people should look at the whole body of my testimony. In the same answer, he drew attention to the significant fact that Trump kicked everyone out of the room before allegedly expressing the hopewhich was read as a directivethat Comey would let the Flynn investigation go. This, on top of the fact that Comey documented his version of this conversation in a memo immediately after and shared it with several contemporaneous witnesses, might bolster his case. But if there isnt a tape of their conversations, it could still ultimately come down to he saidhe said.

During the hearing itself, the Republican senatorsfor the most partknew better than to attack Comeys credibility and chose instead to undermine the suggestion that Trumps statements amounted to obstruction of justice. Trump has also called Comey out for leaking the memorandum describing his closed-door meeting to a friend, supposedly in violation of, well, something, that his lawyer didnt clearly define. The charge that Comey did something illegal here appears to be groundless and thus could equally be the subject of a defamation claim if he could prove in court that he hadnt illegally leaked anything.

As I explained in March, it seems very unlikely that the always-sanguine former President Obama would bring such a suit. Its unclear whether thats true of Comey. Trump did fire him, call him a nut job, and has now flatly called him a liar. He may have had just about enough; hes already publicly accused the president of trying to defame him and the entire FBI. A lawsuit would underscore the point.

Yet Comeys a smart lawyer who knows that his claim would face one very steep obstacle: presidential immunity. The Supreme Court has held that the president enjoys broad immunity from civil liability for official acts committed while in office. Were the tweets and his lawyers statements official acts? The law isnt so clear, and it doesnt help Trump that the tweets were sent from his private account rather than his presidential account. Theres been a lot of discussion lately about whether these 140-character eruptions constitute the official White House position; a defamation lawsuit based on tweets would draw that question into dramatic relief.

In Clinton v. Jones, the Supreme Court equivocated on whether potentially defamatory statements made by President Clintons press secretary against Paula Jones were official acts. Although the court allowed the claim to proceed, it stated that the statements arguably may involve conduct within the outer perimeters of the presidents official responsibilities, adding an unhelpful footnote that described the matter as not free from doubt.

Top Comment

Interesting article. I believe that Mr. Comey, like Mr. Obama before him, will choose the higher road and bask in the glow that comes from being an unassailable, and unimpeachable, target of PT's legendary alternative facts. More...

On the side of liability, its hard to argue that falsely accusing someone of lying under oath should be protected conduct. As I mentioned in the Obama defamation piece, surely theres some limit to what even a president can get away with: Had Trump punched Comey, no one would be arguing for immunity. But for statements made about what was, or wasnt, said during a meeting between the president and another high-ranking public official, perhaps the best remedy lies within the political process, up to and possibly including impeachment. Comey might get no relief there, of course, since the current leadership in both the House and the Senate seems prepared to ignore or excuse anything the president does. In that case, Comey would have to take comfort in the prospect that most peopleincluding the very Congress members and senators who seem unwilling to hold the president accountable for these possible liesare likelier to believe him than the president of the United States.

Disclosure: James Comey and the author were once well-acquainted, but havent seen each other since 1986 and have exchanged only a couple of email pleasantries since then.

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Did Donald Trump Just Defame James Comey? - Slate Magazine

Fact Check: Donald Trump’s Claims About Infrastructure – New York Times


New York Times
Fact Check: Donald Trump's Claims About Infrastructure
New York Times
Mr. Trump announced plans to turn over the Federal Aviation Administration's air traffic control responsibilities to a private nonprofit organization on Monday, a broad push for a $1 trillion infrastructure investment on Wednesday, and the creation of ...

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Fact Check: Donald Trump's Claims About Infrastructure - New York Times

Watch Donald Trump Throw Binders Full of Highway Environmental Reviews on the Floor – Slate Magazine (blog)

Is federal environmental review holding up megaprojects? Mostly not.

C-SPAN

In a speech on Friday dedicated to speeding up infrastructure construction, President Trump couldnt resist deploying one of his favorite props: a big stack of paper.

Henry Grabar is a staff writer for Slates Moneybox.

This time, the paper was the 10,000-page environmental report for the Intercounty Connector, an 18-mile highway in Maryland, enclosed in three binders that the president borrowed from a state highway official to demonstrate the waste and folly of federal bureaucracy.

Denouncing the report as nonsense, Trump unceremoniously dropped the binders on the floor, to applause, before kicking them out of the way as he returned to the lectern. Nobodys going to read it, except the consultants who get a fortune for this, the president said. "These binders could be replaced by just a few simple pages, it would be just as good. It would be much better."

The Intercounty Connector, or MD-200, is a$2.4 billion, 18-mile highway that was first proposed more than 50 years ago but not completed until 2014. Supporters of this tolled alternative to the Beltway, which slices through suburbs and wetlands parallel to the Washington ring road, have condemned its opponents as tree-huggers standing in the way of progress.

But with exaggerated traffic estimates furnished by consultants, the predictions for toll revenue failed to come true: Vehicle counts were 20 percent lower than what consultants had predicted. Revenue was one-third the low-end prediction. Its true that environmentalists battled the road in court for years, delaying it and raising the construction costs. But they also got the size of the highway reduced from 12 lanes to six.

Imagine if the ICC had been twice the size. As it is, Maryland had to raise tolls on other crossings to pay off ICC debt. The ICC only passed its year-one toll revenue estimate in its third year of operation. Around that time, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan canceled Baltimores Red Line project and shifted the states $1.35 billion contribution into highway funding instead, a decision that prompted an investigation from President Obamas Department of Transportation.

The ICC is slowly filling up, because new highways always do. They dont solve traffic congestion. But they do create more car-dependent lives, stemming from new personal choices and new car-dependent patterns of housing and employment. Or as the California Department of Transportation put it in a recent paper, Increasing Highway Capacity Unlikely to Relieve Traffic Congestion.

As a symbol, then, the ICC represents the overwhelming influence of the highway construction lobbymore than the obstructionism of environmental activists.

Trump was announcing the creation of a new office in the Council of Environmental Quality dedicated to rooting out inefficiency, clarifying lines of authority, and streamlining coordination between different levels of government.

The president bemoaned, as he has before, the glacial pace of public works construction in the United States, and spoke wistfully of the Hoover Dam and the Golden Gate Bridge, built in five and four years, respectively.

Top Comment

Trump no like books! TRUMP SMASH! More...

Could U.S. infrastructure be built more quickly? Yes. Is 10,000 pages too many pages for an 18-mile highway? Yes. And yet, according to a Congressional Research Service review of the subject, environmental reports prompted by the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) are mostly a scapegoat. Causes of delay, the CRS reports, "are more often tied to local/state and project-specific factors, primarily local/state agency priorities, project funding levels, local opposition to a project, project complexity, or late changes in project scope.And while phony environmental concerns are used as a pretext to forestall growth of all kinds, the bias in highways is definitively towards building.

But hey, the trade-offs involved in expediting the construction of public works are difficult. And dropping binders on the floor is easy. And fun.

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Watch Donald Trump Throw Binders Full of Highway Environmental Reviews on the Floor - Slate Magazine (blog)

Donald Trump hasn’t tweeted in a very long time – CNN

The last time Trump sent out a tweet was 8:17 a.m. on Wednesday. It said this: "Getting ready to leave for Cincinnati, in the GREAT STATE of OHIO, to meet with ObamaCare victims and talk Healthcare & also Infrastructure!" Between that moment and the time of this posting, roughly 37 hours have passed. That, according to calculations made by the one and only Philip Bump of the Washington Post, is the fifth-longest Twitter outage for Trump since he announced his candidacy in June 2015. To pass the fourth longest drought, Trump will need to stay away from Twitter for 2,312 minutes -- 38 total hours, or until 10:17 p.m. Thursday -- which looks doable. To break his all-time longest tweet drought, according to Bump, Trump would need to not tweet until 6:14 a.m. tomorrow.

What's fascinating about the past droughts is that they almost always have corresponded with slow news moments. Trump's longest break from Twitter, for example, came over the 2016 Thanksgiving Day weekend -- soon after he had been elected. The second longest was earlier that same month, the weekend after the election when Trump was, almost certainly, worn down from the just-concluded campaign.

If ever there was a time when you might expect Trump to take phone in hand and offer his own counter-narrative, this past 37 hours was it. And yet, nothing.

Theories abound to explain it.

The most common one is that someone took Trump's phone away, ensuring that he simply lacked the ability to tweet. I doubt it. He's the President of the United States. He's made clear -- in the face of much criticism -- that he isn't going to stop tweeting. I'm not sure anyone is in a position to simply tell the President to stop doing something and have him actually listen.

Or maybe Trump's staff, as they had hoped to do, successfully distracted the President over these past 37 hours -- keeping him from thinking too much, and therefore tweeting too much about the situation. But how is that even possible given that we know Trump is an absolutely avid news consumer and there has been so much (and so much bad) Trump news over that period of time?

The short answer is we don't know why Trump hasn't tweeted since 8:17 a.m. Wednesday. But with every passing minute of Trump Twitter silence, he edges closer to his own personal best (worst?).

One other thing we know: Silence isn't Trump's natural state. So when the drought breaks -- and it will break -- look out.

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Donald Trump hasn't tweeted in a very long time - CNN