Archive for the ‘Eric Holder’ Category

Let’s applaud the bipartisan approach to fentanyl at the state Capitol … – Minnesota Reformer

A desperate battle has been waged at the Capitol to address the number one killer of people between the ages of 18 and 45 fentanyl. Minnesota may finally be on a better path.

Thanks to a coalition including grieving families, community leaders, law enforcement and prosecutors, common sense legislation increasing penalties for fentanyl trafficking to equal the penalties for heroin are included in the public safety bill (SF2909) thats on its way to Gov. Tim Walz for his expected signature. A bill to require and fund lifesaving Narcan in Minnesota schools is included in the education finance bill.

These glimmers of hope confront a sobering reality. Well more than 107,000 Americans and more than 1,200 Minnesotans were killed by drug overdoses in 2021, and fentanyl is the biggest killer. Fentanyl deaths are rising sharply. One kilogram of fentanyl can kill 500,000. The emergency department at Hennepin County Medical Center is overwhelmed by 100 overdose patients a week.

As a prosecutor, I have witnessed this carnage: Parents appearing at court hearings scared to death that if released from jail and without treatment, their children will die. Heartbroken friends and families of overdose victims speaking at sentencing hearings. Desperate addicts marshaling strength and courage to fight a demon that has consumed them.

We have a moral imperative to do everything in our power to save the lives of our young people from this poison. Success will require us to recognize two essential truths.

First, the threat from fentanyl and other powerful synthetic drugs is a threat to public health exponentially greater than any prior drug epidemic we have faced.

Second, knee-jerk partisan narratives must be rejected in favor of a nuanced approach that considers every possible solution.

Fentanyl is 50 times more powerful than heroin.

Experts suggest that between 40% and 60% of fentanyl pills are potentially fatal.

Fentanyl is present in as many as 90% of the counterfeit oxycodone pills seized by law enforcement, and is frequently mixed with cocaine, methamphetamine, and heroin.

Its so bad that bipartisan legislation in Congress seeks to classify fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction. Indeed, given its lethality it may be more accurate to consider it a poison than a drug.

There is no clear historical precedent for fentanyl or other super-charged synthetic drugs. Yes, methamphetamine, cocaine, heroin and prescription drugs have ruined and taken lives. Never, however, have we been faced with a drug that carries a significant potential of a life-threatening overdose every time it is used. But for Narcan and the heroic work of emergency responders, far more overdoses would result in death.

Prior to the 2023 legislative session, boilerplate political narratives blocked any progress. As recently as 2021 the Minnesota Senate, with Republicans in the majority, passed a bill increasing penalties for fentanyl trafficking by a decisive bipartisan vote of 62-5. The bill never received a vote in the DFL-majority House. The legislation requiring and funding Minnesota schools to have lifesaving Narcan failed to survive the legislative gridlock in both 2021 and 2022.

Some folks on the left would label any effort to prosecute purveyors of this poison for profit as a part of the failed War on Drugs strategy of the past.

But thats the wrong analysis, given Minnesotas approach to prosecuting drug offenses coupled with fentanyls unique threats to public health.

Minnesota is in fact a probation-first/treatment-first state. Our prison rates by population are low, whereas the number of residents on probation is comparatively high. In courthouses throughout the state, defense attorneys, prosecutors and judges continue to find ways to keep users and user-dealers out of prison. The Minnesota Drug Sentencing Reform Act of 2016 aimed specifically to keep addicts out of prison wherever possible.

Knowingly selling fentanyl again, a poison as much as a narcotic even if in part to fuel an addiction, is a criminal act worthy of punishment. Selling a product as lethal as fentanyl knowing the result could be overdose or death cannot be excused as simply an act of addiction or economic desperation.

Concerns from progressives as to the unequal impact of the War on Drugs on communities of color have merit. A different racial inequity, however, can be seen in the tragic disparities in death rates by fentanyl overdose in our Indigenous communities and communities of color. Minnesota has among the largest racial disparities gap in overdose deaths in the United States. As a percentage of population, more than nine times as many Indigenous residents die of overdoses as white Minnesotans. Overdose deaths among Black Minnesotans are three times as high as in white Minnesotans.

The storyline we hear from the right has also been destructive. Addiction is a disease. Deterrence through harsher penalties must be focused rather than indiscriminate. Fentanyl is coming into the United States through Mexico, but generally through sophisticated networks involving commercial vehicles and not desperate migrants crowding the border. Treatment and harm reduction must be central to any effort to stop this epidemic.

House and Senate members on both sides of the aisle can learn from GOP Rep. Dave Bakers support of both a public safety and a public health approach. Rep. Kelly Moller, DFL-Shoreview, and Sen. Ron Latz, DFL-St. Louis Park, have worked with Baker and GOP members in a refreshing show of bipartisanship.

As chair of the Opioid Epidemic Response Advisory Council, Baker, who lost a son to opioids, is working with an impressive board of doctors and health professionals dedicated to a comprehensive public health approach to opioid addiction.

There are also hopeful signs that congressional action may be on the horizon. President Joe Biden, no doubt spurred to action by reports from high level public safety and national security experts, specifically called for increasing federal penalties for fentanyl trafficking in his recent State of the Union address. U.S. Rep. Angie Craig, a Democrat from the 2nd District, spoke powerfully of the need to address fentanyl through aggressive drug interdiction efforts at the recent rally at the Minnesota Capitol.

Former Attorney General Eric Holder recently cautioned both the left and the right to avoid a reflexive response to the historic challenges of the fentanyl epidemic. The breadth and scope of this challenge requires both a vigorous criminal justice approach and a public health response.

We need an all-of-the-above approach, including focused deterrence, harm reduction, education and awareness and a comprehensive public health response.

With every passing day that we dont act, more people die.

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Let's applaud the bipartisan approach to fentanyl at the state Capitol ... - Minnesota Reformer

Issues of the Court: Legal Experts Discuss Affirmative Action … – westsiderag.com

Issues of the Court: Asking Hard Questions + Seeking Common Ground, is a new two-part series at the JCC, hosted by former federal and state prosecutor Tali Farhadian Weinstein. The series welcomes legal experts in conversation on upcoming Supreme Court decisions, exploring major issues facing our country and society.

At the second event in the series on May 17, well hear from special guest Jeannie Suk Gersen, Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, who will discuss Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College and its impact on affirmative action in college admissions.

This term at the Supreme Court may turn out to be more consequential in terms of its impact on American life than last termAnd we really wanted to empower people to know whats happening and try to do something about it, shared Tali Farhadian Weinstein in first part of the series, where she met with Former United States Attorney General Eric Holder to discuss Moore v. Harper, and its impact on democracy, the courts, and how elections are run.

In the case we will discuss on May 17, petitioner Students for Fair Admissions sued Harvard College over its admissions process, alleging that the process violates Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by discriminating against Asian American applicants in favor of white applicants. Harvard admits that it uses race as one of many factors in its admissions process but argues that its process adheres to the requirements for race-based admissions outlined in the Supreme Courts decision in Grutter v. Bollinger. Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard was argued before the Supreme Court in October 2022, and the decision on this case will be issued within the next two months.

Issues of the Court: Asking Hard Questions + Seeking Common Ground is an exploration of issues facing our country and society, giving voice to a range of perspectives on cases before the Supreme Court. Join us on Wed, May 17, at 7 pm, for this lively conversation about college admissions and the Civil Rights Act. Click here to reserve your tickets.

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Issues of the Court: Legal Experts Discuss Affirmative Action ... - westsiderag.com

Willie Nelson honored with prestigious Texas award: Were here tonight to clap for Willie. – KXAN.com

AUSTIN (KXAN) The LBJ Foundation honored Willie Nelson with its most prestigious award, the LBJ Liberty & Justice for All Award, Friday at a gala dinner at the LBJ Presidential Library.

Lyndon B. Johnsons daughters Luci and Lynda Johnson presented Nelson with the award.

When I think of rural America, I think of Lyndon Johnson. And when I think of rural America and who cares [for them], I think of Willie Nelson, Luci Johnson told KXAN before the ceremony. Wille Nelson has done a premier job of saying not only can we not leave those folks behind but we have to be on the front lines clapping the loudest for them. And were here tonight to clap for Willie.

Willie Nelson, who just celebrated his 90th birthday, wasnt the only country musician in attendance. Eric Church, Sam Hunt, Elle King and Lyle Lovett all performed covers of some of Nelsons most recognizable songs.

Its Willie Nelsons individuality and free thinking that has inspired me the most, Hunt said before singing Willie Nelsons Mammas Dont Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys.

This man means a lot to me personally and musically, country music star Eric Church said before playing his Nelson tribute.

Only several other people have received the prestigious award since it was created in 2010. Other award recipients include President George H. W. Bush, President Jimmy Carter, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, U.S. Sen. John McCain, U.S. Sen. Carl Levin, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, U.S. Rep. John Lewis, U.S. Rep. John Dingell, U.S. Rep. James Clyburn and philanthropist David M. Rubenstein.

A lifelong advocate for farmers, alleviating food insecurity, and support of rural communities, Nelson embodies President Lyndon Baines Johnsons commitment to public service, particularly in the areas of farming and food security, The LBJ Foundation wrote in a release about the event

Net proceeds from the event will benefit the newly established Willie Nelson Endowment for Uplifting Rural Communities at the LBJ School of Public Affairs, a part of UT Austin. The endowment will fund research and student fellowships focused on sustainable agriculture, eliminating hunger, resilient energy, sustainable water, and natural disaster recovery to benefit rural and farm communities.

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Willie Nelson honored with prestigious Texas award: Were here tonight to clap for Willie. - KXAN.com

Today in History: May 13 | | heraldbulletin.com – The Herald Bulletin

If youre not prepared to be wrong, youll never come up with anything original. Sir Ken Robinson

TODAY IS

Today is SATURDAY, MAY 13, the 133rd day of 2023. There are 232 days left in the year.

HIGHLIGHT IN HISTORY:

On May 13, 1981, Pope John Paul II was shot and seriously wounded in St. Peters Square by Turkish assailant Mehmet Ali Agca.

10 YEARS AGO

President Barack Obama tried to swat down a pair of brewing controversies, denouncing as outrageous the targeting of conservative political groups by the IRS but angrily denying any administration cover-up after the deadly attacks in Benghazi, Libya, in September 2012. Philadelphia abortion doctor Kermit Gosnell was convicted of first-degree murder in the deaths of three babies who were delivered alive and then killed with scissors at his clinic (Gosnell is serving a life sentence). The Associated Press sent a letter of protest to Attorney General Eric Holder after the Justice Department told the news agency it had secretly obtained two months of telephone records of AP reporters and editors. Psychologist Joyce Brothers, 85, died in Fort Lee, New Jersey.

ON THIS DATE:

In 1940, in his first speech as British prime minister, Winston Churchill told Parliament, I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and sweat.

In 1972, 118 people died after fire broke out at the Sennichi Department Store in Osaka, Japan.

In 1973, in tennis first so-called Battle of the Sexes, Bobby Riggs defeated Margaret Court 6-2, 6-1 in Ramona, California. (Billie Jean King soundly defeated Riggs at the Houston Astrodome in September.)

In 1985, a confrontation between Philadelphia authorities and the radical group MOVE ended as police dropped a bomb onto the groups row house, igniting a fire that killed 11 people and destroyed 61 homes.

In 1994, President Bill Clinton nominated federal appeals Judge Stephen G. Breyer to the U.S. Supreme Court to replace retiring Justice Harry A. Blackmun; Breyer went on to win Senate confirmation.

In 2002, President George W. Bush announced that he and Russian President Vladimir Putin (POO-tihn) would sign a treaty to shrink their countries nuclear arsenals by two-thirds.

In 2016, the Obama administration issued a directive requiring public schools to permit transgender students to use bathrooms and locker rooms consistent with their chosen gender identity.

In 2019, Doris Day, the sunny blond film star and singer who appeared in comedic roles opposite Rock Hudson and Cary Grant in the 1950s and 1960s, died at her California home at the age of 97.

CELEBRITY BIRTHDAYS

Singer Stevie Wonder is 73.

Basketball Hall of Famer Dennis Rodman is 62.

Late Show host Stephen Colbert is 59.

Singer Darius Rucker (Hootie and the Blowfish) is 57.

Former NBA player Mike Bibby is 45.

Rock musician Mickey Madden (Maroon 5) is 44.

Actor-writer-director Lena Dunham is 37.

Actor Robert Pattinson is 37.

NHL defenseman P.K. Subban is 35.

Actor Debby Ryan is 30.

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Today in History: May 13 | | heraldbulletin.com - The Herald Bulletin

Internet-famous for Irish dancing, Mary Papageorge is about to grab … – Madison.com

A UW-Madison student who managed to get an impressive slate of celebrities off their feet albeit to pretend they had her fancy footwork on TikTok during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic is among thousands graduating from the university this weekend.

Mary Papageorge is a testament to putting her classroom learning to use. As one of the 70% of UW-Madison students who have a job offer in hand by the time they don their caps and gowns for commencement, Papageorge will take what she learned in class and on her portable Irish dance platform to improve consumer relationships.

I felt like there was a key that was unlocked in my brain that made me understand everything a lot easier, especially in classes, because I could definitely see the trajectory of long-term goals within business, she said.

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It all started as the emerging pandemic upended the last weeks of Papageorges freshman year. And the Mequon native had been on bedrest after years of competitive Irish dancing which requires a lot of fast jumping, often on the balls of your feet or the tips of your toes had contributed to a herniated disc in her back. Now retired from dancing and looking to stave off boredom, Papageorge posted a reaction video from a previous competition.

But viewers of that video wanted to actually see Papageorge dance. So, three weeks after a spinal surgery, Papageorge started combining Irish dancing footwork with pop songs garnering millions of views and catching the attention of celebrities, dance icons and eventually her current employer, Under Armour, who hired her as a consumer intelligence specialist before graduation.

Mary Papageorge -- in her Irish dance shoes on the steps of the state Capitol -- cannot dance as often as she used to, as years of Irish dancing have taken a physical toll.

A consumer behavior studies major with a certificate in digital studies, Papageorge is one of 8,625 students graduating from UW-Madison this weekend. The majority of degrees including 6,225 bachelors degrees, most masters degrees and law school degrees will be conferred Saturday at Camp Randall Stadium. Doctorate, medical and masters of fine arts degrees will be received Friday night at the Kohl Center.

Saturdays 90-minute ceremony will feature commencement speaker and Badger dad Eric Holder Jr., the first Black U.S. Attorney General, and student speaker Liam McLean.

Merging two worlds

Papageorge is among the few people who have infused pop with the more traditional Irish dance.

Most of Papageorges dancing career has focused on upholding the dances hereditary aspects, such as step-dancing to Irish music with arms held rigid on your side. Drawn by the competitive aspect at a young age, Papageorge danced on both national and international stages.

But with the pop-based videos, the dance is slightly different. Papageorge coordinates her movements with the syllables and rhythm of the music. She also affords herself more liberty in moving her arms around as she dances on a portable stage in her backyard, in front of the Capitol, on the frozen chain of Yahara Lakes during the winter or along the Milwaukee lakefront.

Often behind the camera is Papageorges brother, Teddy, who helps her overcome deep-seated perfectionism from her competition days.

I got over it once I realized that Irish dance was still niche, and no matter what I posted it was already new to people, she said.

Mary Papageorge in her Irish dance shoes.

Cracking the algorithm

Papageorge spent months studying the TikTok algorithm and to get videos placed in peoples curated feeds.

The goal was always to grab the attention of artists whose songs Papageorge was dancing to. One of her first, to a Marshmallo song, wasnt what captured the artists attention rather, it was her first truly viral dance, to the song Fergalicious, that prompted Marshmallo and other celebrities, including Jason Derulo, the late comedian Bob Saget and Dancing With The Stars alum Derek Hough to take her dancing to new heights.

Theyd repost her video to millions of their own followers as theyd duet her video by keeping Papageorges fancy footwork on the bottom half and replacing the top with them dancing. That in turn drove up page views to Papageorges own profile. She racked up hundreds of thousands of followers.

Papageorge posted regularly in 2020 and the first half of 2021 but has since stepped back.

Now shes using her TikTok knowledge in a new way.

TikTok, once synonymous with dancing videos, has shifted to being more focused on fashion, Papageorge said. Its created a window of opportunity for Papageorge to take what she already knows adapting to what viewers want and helping Under Armour develop more authentic relationships with customers.

I dont know where its going to take me in the next five years, but I would happily work for them as long as theyd allow and hopefully learn more skills so that I can break another algorithm in another way, she said. I think itd be fun to just normalize social media use in general, for businesses and corporate settings ... thats where youre going to get the best sales is just having loyal customers who trust you, that are relatable at the same time.

After budget cuts and consolidations, the campus' enrollment is down 90% from 2014, and UW-Platteville was ordered to shutter the campus.

With record enrollment contributing to the housing crunch, UW-Madison lured students out of dorms by offering incentives to live elsewhere.

Management companies are seeing some of their housing in prime areas sell out three to four weeks faster than previous years.

A new Early Learning Center that opened in 2021 at MATC's Truax campus doubled capacity, and a facility at the Goodman South campus could be next.

UW-Madison doctorate student Kirstan Gimse found the courage to go back to school a decade ago from a chemistry professor she would wait on.

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Internet-famous for Irish dancing, Mary Papageorge is about to grab ... - Madison.com