Monday, December 30, 2024
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Monday, December 30, 2024

Milwaukee Press Club 'Excellence in Wisconsin Journalism' 2020 & 2021 Award Winners

UW-Milwaukee Encampment Posts ‘Rules’ Banning Speaking to Police; Is to End Tuesday

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UW-Milwaukee now says UWM leadership and the student protesters have reached an agreement, and the encampment will be fully down by Tuesday morning.

The pro-Palestinian occupiers at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee encampment posted a set of “rules” inside the state-owned lawn they’ve fenced in. The “rules,” which were hanging inside the encampment on May 12, banned people entering the area from speaking with or assisting police and demanded that people report suspicious people to yellow-vest wearing protester “security” guards instead of law enforcement.

If people didn’t comply, even though public property must be legally accessible to all, the rules warned: “Anyone not following these rules will be held accountable and possibly asked to leave.” The area in question is a large lawn in front of Mitchell Hall, a major campus building that students must enter for some classes.

The set of rules, observed and photographed on May 12 inside the UWM encampment, reads, “UWM Popular University for Palestine Coalition Guidelines.”

“Do not talk to law enforcement – please find someone in a yellow vest, and they will find the police liaison,” the “guidelines” say. “We abide by St. Paul Principles: “We oppose any state repression of dissent, including surveillance, infiltration, disruption and violence. We agree not to assist law enforcement actions against activists and others.”

Later in the evening on May 12, Chancellor Mark Mone  suddenly announced that the UWM encampment will come down.

“I’m writing to share that UWM leadership has reached an agreement with representatives of the student protesters encamped on the lawn outside of Mitchell Hall. As a result, students have started dismantling the encampment and will finish doing so by Tuesday morning,” he wrote.

The agreement calls for the release of hostages held by ISRAEL as well as Hamas.

“Innocent civilians, especially children, must not be the targets of war. This is why we also call for the release of the remaining Israeli and international hostages held by Hamas and the release of Palestinian men, women and children held as hostages in military detention in Israel. We condemn all violence and call for it to end,” it reads.

The agreement says that UWM, a taxpayer-funded university, has called for a ceasefire and denounced “scholasticide,” which is the “destruction of universities in Gaza.”

“The Chancellor and the Provost have agreed to forgo relevant citations or conduct violations for the Coalition and the student groups,” for “camping activity” only, UWM says. Taxpayer-funded staff will clean the graffiti off Mitchell Hall and help remove plywood and other large items, he wrote.

They will also review study abroad policies and say an entity called the Water Council has ended relationships with two Israeli-government-owned water companies, Mekorot and Israel Innovation Authority.

There was no sign of any dismantling of the encampment around noon Sunday.

Uwm encampment
Uwm encampment “rules. ’

There was also no sign of any police presence at the UWM encampment on May 12.

Uwm encampment
Uwm encampment “rules. ”

A sign prominently displayed on the fence built by the occupiers on public property read,

“In memoriam to fellow protesters across the USA.

UCLA has fallen,

Columbia Uni has fallen,

P.S.U. has fallen,

UW-Madison has fallen,

George Washington Uni has fallen.

UW-Milwaukee will not fall to the pigs next! Free Palestine!”

Uw-milwaukee encampmentA sign also declares that “pigs” are not welcome in the encampment, referring to police.

On May 3, the UWM Dean of Students, Adam Jussel, wrote, “I’ve heard some students say they don’t feel safe walking past the encampment or hearing chants. Other students have said that if they speak out, they will be shouted down. And others say they just want to go to class and work and hope our campus is safe for everyone.”

On May 8, UWM Chancellor Mark Mone wrote, “If the encampment doesn’t end soon, UWM will have to take action to ensure that it does.”

On May 11, Mone told WISN-TV: “The encampments are at a place where we value the peace, we value the meaning of what’s going on, but we also know it’s illegal,” said Mone. “We do see the very, very distinct possibilities for ends of this coming around the corner.” Asked by the reporter if there is a “timeline on that,” Mone responded, “We do have a timeline in mind, but I’m not really able to share that yet.”

This all occurred as UW-Madison’s tents were coming down.

Uw-milwaukee encampment

No police officers or administrators were visible at the encampment on May 12, where the yellow-vest wearing protester security guards shared information via walkie talkie. They were overheard talking about a person taking photographs of the public area and passing on a man’s clothing description as they manned gates, and the entrance to Mitchell Hall.

It’s intimidating.

The chalk graffiti on Mitchell Hall, a taxpayer-funded building, remained on May 12, and it was visible to anyone who walked through the door to the building, where some students have classes (next week is finals week). The phrases “f*ck Israel” and “zionism is terrorism” were visible on the building, which was covered in chalk graffiti.

Uw-milwaukee encampment

Uw-milwaukee encampmentStudents and faculty entering the building through the entrance facing Kenwood, including Jewish students and faculty, would need to walk over steps covered with chalk-drawn waves and the large phrase “From the river to the sea.”

Uw-milwaukee
Uw-milwaukee on may 12.

They would need to enter a public building that the protesters have renamed after a man who referred to Oct. 7 as “legitimate and moral,” according to BBC, and who compared it to Jews rising up against the Nazis in the Warsaw Ghetto during the Holocaust. They would have to walk past a protester “security guard” wearing a yellow vest and sitting at the entrance.

Uw-milwaukee encampment

Uw-milwaukee encampment

Here are more scenes of the encampment on May 12.

The “rules” say that if people see “something suspicious,” they are supposed to “tell someone in a yellow vest,” referring to the ever-present protester “security guards.”

The rules ban “hate, anti-Semitism, racism, sexism, anti-LGBTQ, etc. – we are all stronger together against the occupation.”

Yet they don’t explain why rhetoric is allowed inside the encampment such as “f*ck Israel” (chalked on the side of Mitchell Hall) or why the Hall, for days, has born the name of a Palestinian professor who controversially praised Oct. 7 as “legitimate and moral.”

They also don’t explain why previously we observed a pro-October 7 flyer prominently hanging inside the encampment (it had been removed on May 12.) It refers to “Al Aqsa Flood” in a positive light – that’s the phrase for the Oct. 7 terrorist attack.

Uwm encampment
Uwm encampment

There is still a painting on the makeshift fence with the phrase Oct. 7 crossed out.

Uw-milwaukee encampment

The guidelines also ban leaving the encampment alone and talking to the media, noting “please find someone in a yellow vest and they will find our media point people.”

Trandgender Treatments for Wisconsin Minors

Gender Transition Procedures for Minors Receive Increased Scrutiny From Emboldened GOP

Gender transition procedures on minors face intensifying scrutiny as the transgender-friendly Biden administration prepares to step down, with Republican lawmakers demanding a federal health agency reveal the scientific evidence justifying such treatments.

In a letter sent to the Inspector General (OIG) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, members of the GOP-led House Committee on Energy and Commerce dubbed the HHS a “global outlier” for its promotion of puberty blockers and reconstructive surgeries for children.

The lawmakers cited European studies and restrictions that apparently contradict the HHS’ assertions that such procedures are beneficial.

“[A]ll of HHS’s medical treatment recommendations, especially medical treatment recommendations for children, should be based on rigorous and well-established research,” the lawmakers wrote. “Accordingly, the Committee requests that the OIG investigate this matter to ensure American children receive evidence-based, high-quality, and safe medical care.”

The committee’s letter came about a week after the House passed the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act, which included a last-minute GOP addition banning military health insurance from covering procedures on minors that “may result in sterilization.”

The HHS has defended its support of what it calls “gender-affirming care” for minors, claiming that scientific data and medical experts back treatments like hormones and surgeries on children.

“At HHS, we listen to medical experts and doctors, and they agree with us, that access to affirming care for transgender youth is essential and can be life-saving,” HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra said in March 2022.

But as recently as October 2024, new research suggests that gender transition procedures on minors may not deliver the benefits promised.

The $10 million study involving Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, the second-largest provider of child medical gender reassignment interventions, is currently being withheld from publication due to the author’s fear its results could be “weaponized” against the practice of giving children puberty blocker hormones.

Some medical organizations in the U.S. had expressed caution even before the study was finished, most notably the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

"ASPS currently understands that there is considerable uncertainty as to the long-term efficacy for the use of chest and genital surgical interventions for the treatment of adolescents with gender dysphoria, and the existing evidence base is viewed as low quality/low certainty. This patient population requires specific considerations," the organization said in April.

Yet, as warning signs grow, the number of gender transition procedures on minors in America has risen significantly over the past five years.

According to medical nonprofit group Do No Harm, between 2019 and 2023, there were at least 13,394 gender reassignment procedures on individuals 17.5 years old or younger nationwide, with the youngest seven years old.

“Procedures” are defined as either the use of puberty or hormone blockers, or gender reassignment surgeries such as mastectomies and penile reconstruction. The organization reports that of those, there were 4,160 breast removal procedures and 660 phalloplasty procedures on minors.

Some states have begun enacting restrictions on what gender dysphoria treatments minors may receive, prompting a slew of lawsuits.

One case challenging the constitutionality of Tennessee’s ban on transgender-identifying children receiving sex surgeries, hormones, and puberty blockers is currently being heard by the U.S. Supreme Court.

The court is set to rule on whether state-level bans are constitutional in 2025.

Report: Federal Agencies Spent Millions of Taxpayer Money Torturing Cats

A new report published by U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, R-KY, highlights more than $1 trillion worth of taxpayer money spent on projects that he argues wastes and abuses taxpayer money.

Tucked in the report are three programs funded by federal agencies using millions of taxpayer dollars to experiment on cats.

The details are explicit and gruesome.

$11 million on Department of Defense “Orwellian cat experiments”

The US Department of Defense spent nearly $11 million on “Orwellian cat experiments” that have nothing to do with training the U.S. military or national defense.

“When George Orwell wrote 1984, he couldn’t have imagined the bizarre, dystopian reality we find ourselves in today where tax dollars are being spent to shock cats into having erections and defecating marbles. Yes, you read that correctly,” the report states.

Through the DOD’s, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), $10,851,439 of taxpayer dollars were allocated to the University of Pittsburgh to conduct “grotesque and extremely invasive experiments on cats.”

This involved slicing open the backs of male cats to expose their spinal cords and inserting electrodes to send electric shocks “to make cats have an erection.”

The cats were then subjected to “even more electric shocks, sometimes for up to 10 minutes at a time, before having their spinal cords severed to paralyze their lower bodies,” the report states. “And just for good measure, the shocks continued for another 10 minutes. All this, in the name of ‘science.’”

In another DARPA-funded experiment, balloons were inserted into the cats’ colons and marbles into their rectums “to force these poor animals to defecate the marbles via electric shock.”

“Nothing says ‘national defense’ quite like torturing cats to poop marbles,” the report notes. “If we can’t stop the government from shocking cats into defecating marbles, then what can we stop?”

$2.24 million on feline COVID experiments

The report also notes that under the direction of Dr. Anthony Fauci, since 2022, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the U.S. Department of Agriculture allocated $2.24 million in grants to Cornell University to conduct feline COVID experiments.

Through a University of Illinois NIAID subgrant, Cornell received $1.59 million over the past two years in addition to a $650,000 USDA grant, bringing the total to $2.24 million, the report notes.

The experiments led to the suffering and death of 30 cats, according to the records of the experiments, the report notes.

The experiments involved injecting healthy cats with COVID-19, observing them suffer and then killing them in groups of four. The cats were not given any type of vaccine or treatment but killed as early as two days after being injected and left isolated in cages.

NIAID funding for the program is slated to continue through 2025; the USDA’s through May 2026, the report notes.

“It’s a mystery as to why the U.S. government continues to fund these barbaric types of studies, especially when the knowledge gained is either useless to society or could be learned without torturing an animal,” the report states.

$1.5 million to torture primarily female kittens

The National Institutes of Health spent more than $1.5 million to torture primarily female kittens in an extreme example “of waste and cruelty,” the report found.

“If you learned that your money is being used to electro-shock young kittens, torturing them for hours on end, and to the point that they vomit, would you believe it?” the report asks. “Since 2019, $1,513,299 worth of taxpayer money has been going to these medieval-type experiments. This is not some distant, dystopian future; it’s happening right now at the University of Pittsburgh, courtesy of a grant from the NIH.”

According to the report, primarily female kittens between four and six months old were strapped to a hydraulic table, spun 360 degrees, flashed with bright lights, injected with copper sulfate, had holes drilled into their skulls, to be “shocked, and abused without resistance.”

According to NIH, the purpose of the experiments is to study how different species, like cats and monkeys, respond to motion sickness. Understanding responses to the test “could have implications for human health, potentially aiding in the treatment of conditions like vertigo or helping us understand the effects of space travel on the human body,” the report states.

The report cites primary sources and includes photographs of the animals and diagrams of the machines used.

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From Venezuela to Dallas to the Dakotas, Gang Members Involved in ATM Theft Ring

Illegal border crossers from Venezuela with confirmed ties to the violent prison gang Tren de Aragua have been connected to an ATM theft ring in multiple states. The latest arrests occurred in North and South Dakota.

One recent arrest was made by West Fargo police of a 25-year-old man outside of a Gate City Bank branch. He was initially pulled over for a broken taillight but was arrested for felony theft after police discovered he was allegedly involved with bank ATM thefts in the Red River Valley.

“During that traffic stop, [the officer] starts talking to the individual, who is here illegally, who is not a citizen of the United States. As he questions him, he ends up finding that there was over $24,000 cash in his vehicle,” West Fargo Police Chief Pete Neilsen told Valley News Live. Upon searching the vehicle, police found facemasks, black latex gloves, a computer keyboard with several cables and wires, and more than $24,000 in cash. According to court documents, he admitted to being involved with a group of hackers who "jackpot" ATMs to steal money.

He also allegedly gave up the name of two others involved in the theft ring that involved targeting banks in Fargo and West Fargo who were arrested on I-29 near Watertown, South Dakota in Codington County, KXLG News reported.

“When you have someone that comes into your community and steals $150,000, and that’s an illegal alien, and then leaves, one would think that the Feds would step in and say, ‘You know, I’m going to take this one,’” Nielsen said.

Last month, Farmers Branch Police Department in a Dallas suburb arrested five Venezuelan men illegally in the country believed to be part of a national ATM theft ring, The Center Square reported.

The arrests in Dallas are part of a multi-agency national ATM theft investigation in multiple states including Colorado, New Mexico, Ohio, South Dakota and Wyoming. Investigators with the Department of Homeland Security’s Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, FBI, U.S. Marshals Service and U.S. Secret Service are involved.

As are investigators from the Texas Department of Public Safety, Texas Financial Crimes Intelligence Center, Colorado Bureau of Investigations, Colorado State Police, the South Dakota Prosecutor’s Office, and officials in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, Campbell County, Wyoming, Meade County, South Dakota, Dona Ana County, New Mexico, and the Dallas County Sheriff’s Office.

In July, the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) designated and sanctioned TdA as a transnational criminal organization. In September, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott designated TdA as a foreign terrorist organization, launching a major initiative to target their operations, The Center Square reported.

The U.S. Department of State is offering up to $12 million in rewards for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction of several TdA leaders “for conspiring to participate in, or attempting to participate in, transnational organized crime.”

TdA gang members are known for violence, murder, kidnapping, extortion, bribery and human and drug trafficking and are linked to hundreds of law enforcement investigations nationwide.

Under the Biden administration, the greatest number of Venezuelan illegal border crossers were reported in U.S. history, more than one million, The Center Square reported.

They’re also among millions of illegal foreign nationals identified to be deported and more than 662,000 with criminal records identified to be deported that haven’t been, The Center Square reported.

Guatemalan Illegal Immigrant Charged With Murder After Setting Woman On Fire

A Guatemalan foreign national in the U.S. illegally was charged Monday in the murder of a woman he allegedly set on fire on a New York City subway over the weekend.

Sebastian Zapeta, 33, was charged Monday with first- and second-degree murder and arson.

Zapeta previously was deported under President Donald Trump's administration after illegally entering the U.S. in 2018 in Arizona, Just the News reported. It was unclear when and where Zapeta reentered.

The homicide occurred on the F Train in Coney Island, Brooklyn.

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Victims Named in Madison’s Abundant Life Christian School Shooting

(The Center Square) – The teacher and student who were shot and killed on Monday at Madison’s Abundant Life Christian were identified as 42-year-old teacher Erin West and 14-year-old student Rubi Vergara by the Dane County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Vergara was a freshman at the school. The two were determined to have died due to “homicidal firearm related trauma” from another student shot, who died from self-inflicted wounds.

Two students who were injured in the shooting remain in the hospital with life-threatening injuries while three students and a teacher who were also injured have been released from area hospitals.

Police determined the freshman shooter opened fire in a mixed grade study hall classroom on Monday. Two guns were found at the school but only one – a handgun - was used in the shooting, according to Madison Police.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives traced the weapons but police are not releasing the results of that search at this point.

“Detectives are still working to determine a motive,” Madison Police said in a statement. “As in any investigation, they are reviewing the shooter's social media activity and evidence collected at her home. They are aware of the documents and photos circulating around the internet and are working to verify their authenticity.”

After the shooting, officers went to the shooter’s home and entered the residence without a warrant due to concerns of the physical well-being of anyone inside. Officers later received consent to search the residence.

STRIKE: Amazon Workers Launch Historic Strike Just Before Christmas

The Teamsters Union announced an Amazon workers strike beginning at 6 a.m. Thursday as Amazon is in overdrive in shipping and delivery for Christmas.

The Teamsters say they have 10,000 workers in their ranks, though Amazon boasts about 1.5 million employees in the U.S. They say Amazon ignored a Sunday deadline to respond to their demand for “higher wages, better benefits, and safer conditions at work.”

“If your package is delayed during the holidays, you can blame Amazon’s insatiable greed,” Teamsters General President Sean M. O’Brien said. “We gave Amazon a clear deadline to come to the table and do right by our members. They ignored it.”

Amazon has reportedly said they do not expect delays.

“For more than a year now, the Teamsters have continued to intentionally mislead the public – claiming that they represent ‘thousands of Amazon employees and drivers,’” Amazon spokesperson Kelly Nantel said in a statement to media outlets. “They don’t, and this is another attempt to push a false narrative.”

The Teamsters said workers in Atlanta, New York City, San Francisco, Southern California and Slokie, Illinois, will join the strike and that “other facilities are prepared to join them.”

The union said local Teamsters unions are also setting picket lines at hundreds of shipping sites around the country.

“These greedy executives had every chance to show decency and respect for the people who make their obscene profits possible. Instead, they’ve pushed workers to the limit and now they’re paying the price,” O’Brien said. “This strike is on them.”

Trump Attorney: Willis Decision Ends ‘Politically Motivated Persecution’

The decision by the Georgia Court of Appeals to remove Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis from an election interference case involving President-elect Donald Trump "puts an end to a politically motivated persecution of the next President of the United States," Trump's lead attorney on the case said.

The court said in a 2-1 decision on Thursday that "no other remedy will suffice to restore public confidence in the integrity of these proceedings." Willis had a romantic relationship with Nathan Wade, the man she appointed as lead prosecutor on the case.

A Fulton County judge ruled that Willis could continue on the case as long as Wade stepped down, which he did. The appeals court reversed that ruling but did not dismiss the indictment.

"The Georgia Court of Appeals in a well-reasoned and just decision has held that DA Fani Willis’ misconduct in the case against President Trump requires the disqualification of Willis and her office," Steve Sadow, Trump's lead attorney, said in a text message to The Center Square. "The court highlighted that Willis’ misconduct created an 'odor of mendacity' and an appearance of impropriety that could only be cured by the disqualification of her and her entire office. As the court rightfully noted, only the remedy of disqualification will suffice to restore public confidence."

The Center Square was unsuccessful getting comment from Willis' office before publication.

Trump and others are accused of trying to overturn the 2020 election, which he lost to Joe Biden. Michael Roman, one of the co-defendants in the case, discovered the romantic relationship between Willis and Wade.

Willis was first elected as district attorney in 2020. She was reelected in November defeating Republican Courtney Kramer after having staved off a challenge in the Democratic primary from Christian Wise Smith.

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