‘What are they afraid of?’: Hogan rips RNC for shielding Trump from primary


Larry Hogan

“I’d say it’s been something of a feeding frenzy,” Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said of people talking to him about a potential primary challenge to President Donald Trump. | Patrick Semansky/AP Photo

2020 Elections

The Maryland governor, weighing a White House bid, said he expects to visit New Hampshire in the next few months.

Republican Gov. Larry Hogan said Thursday he expects to make a springtime trip to New Hampshire as he weighs a 2020 challenge to Donald Trump — and accused the Republican National Committee of going to extraordinary lengths to shield the president from a potentially draining primary.

“Typically they try to be fair arbiters of a process and I’ve never seen anything like it and I’ve been involved in the Republican Party for most of my life. It’s unprecedented. And in my opinion it’s not the way we should be going about our politics,” Hogan, a popular two-term Maryland governor, said in an interview with POLITICO. “It’s very undemocratic and to say, ‘We’re in some cases not going to allow a debate, we may not have a primary…’”

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“And the question is, what are they afraid of?” he added. “Because on the one hand you look at polls, 70 percent of Republicans support the president in a primary. Why are they so concerned? Why the puffing out the chest — ‘We’ve put together the greatest team ever assembled, we’re going to raise all this money early, we’re going to hire all these people early, we’re going to take over the RNC…’”

Trump has rolled out a 2020 campaign organization that incorporates the RNC and his campaign into a single entity. Traditionally, a presidential reelection committee has worked side-by-side with the national party committee but not overtaken it.

“I’m not a pundit and I can’t put myself inside the heads of the people making the decisions, but perhaps the way things look today are not the way they think things look a few months from now or next week or six months from now,” he added. “Maybe they’re concerned that they will drop in the polls and that they could be at some point down the road be subject to a threat in a primary.”

The RNC declined to comment.

Hogan’s team has been in talks to appear at Politics & Eggs at St. Anselm College in New Hampshire, which has long drawn presidential hopefuls. He said he expected to make a trip to the first-in-the-nation primary state sometime this spring.

The Maryland governor is slated to appear in Iowa early next month at an event sponsored by the National Governors Association. He said he would also set aside time to meet some people in the state before returning home.

Hogan, who in recent weeks has begun expressing interest in a potential primary bid, said he’s heard from several Republican donors and elected officials. He’s told them that he hasn’t decided whether he’ll run.

“I’d say it’s been something of a feeding frenzy,” Hogan said.

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10 books by black authors you should read this Black History Month

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Every product here is independently selected by Mashable journalists. If you buy something featured, we may earn an affiliate commission which helps support our work.

Image: mashable composite 

2016%252f06%252f30%252f00%252f201503270cheadshot 20.dac12.eece9.jpg%252f90x90By MJ Franklin

Sometimes the best way to understand the world around us is to stop and pick up a book.

That’s certainly true of race and power in America. Whether it’s through thoughtful essays, gripping fiction, or haunting poems, contemporary black authors have been publishing a number of books that are shaping our conversations about race for readers of all ages.

SEE ALSO: Like these books? Read these classics of black literature next.

Some books tackle larger issues like mass incarceration and police violence. Others offer intimate portraits of individual characters to showcase the world as experienced through different perspectives. But no matter the scope, black writers are using literature as a way to explore race and the effects of racism on the world around us.

Without further ado, here are 14 books by black authors that are shaping our conversations about race.

Image: HarperCollins Publishers

Annie Turnbo Malone created the largest hair care brand in the country. Robert Reed Church was, at one point, one of the largest landowners in Memphis. Turnbo Malone was the daughter of slaves and Church escaped slavery, but both went on to become entrepreneurs and millionaires. Author Shomari Wills details those and other similar improbable success stories in Black Fortunes.  

Image: The New Press

In this collection of essays, Cottom discusses her life experiences in the context of social and political theories she’s studied in order to explore different facets of the black female experience in the U.S. It’s the perfect blend of scholarly writing and personal anecdote. She touches on race, beauty, and even BBQ Becky

<img data-credit-name="Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
” data-credit-provider=”custom type” src=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F937799%252F85d21280-d2a1-4bad-94b9-ee904de281d9.jpg%252Ffit-in__1200x9600.jpg?signature=JDueloYGZGboDCIy-DRjXqPVJJI=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com”&gt;

Image: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

Jerome, the protagonist of this young adult novel, shares a fate similar to that of Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old boy killed in Cleveland, in 2014. Jerome is shot to death by an officer who confuses his toy gun for the real thing. Jerome lives on as a ghost and meets Emmett Till, the 14-year-old black teenager who was tortured and murdered in 1955. Jerome also meets Sarah, the police officer’s daughter. Together, they’ll try to confront and understand why Jerome was killed. 

Image: Yale University Press

In this book, historian Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers makes the case that white women benefited just as much from the American slave system as white men — and she has the sources to prove it. She focuses on testimonies of formerly enslaved people to illustrate how white female slave owners punished slaves, and used them to gain wealth, status, and independence from men. Jones-Rogers’ findings will force many readers to confront the fact that white women who owned slaves could be just as brutal as male slaveowners. 

Image: Graywolf Press

Danez Smith’s poetry collection Don’t Call Us Dead is a breathtaking look at being black, being queer, and living with HIV, when the world seems hostile to those very identities. The opening poem, “summer, somewhere,” is a 25-page-long elegy that imagines paradise for black boys killed by police violence, and will leave readers vibrating with anger, sadness and resolve as a result of Smith’s haunting prose.

Image: HarperCollins

The Hate U Give has been a New York Times best seller since it debuted a year ago, and for good reason. The novel tells the tale of Starr Carter, a 16-year-old who is trying to reconcile going to a predominantly white high school without feeling like she is abandoning her friends and family in her predominantly black neighborhood. But when Starr is the sole witness to a police shooting of an unarmed black teen, she must develop the courage to find her voice and speak out against injustice. What makes The Hate U Give so brilliant is the seamless way that it blends a stirring and universal coming-of-age story with an important lesson about standing up against institutional corruption.

Image: Riverhead

New People is a sharp commentary on race disguised as a suspense thriller. The book follows Maria, a biracial New Yorker who seems to have the perfect life. She’s a research scholar, she’s engaged to an entrepreneur who’s launching a new internet venture, and she’s the star of a documentary about biracial Americans. However, when Maria becomes obsessed with a poet, she begins to question what it means to be black and what it means to be successful in a world where there seems to be defined expectations for both. “I’m interested in narratives with black protagonists that don’t follow an expected script,” Senna told MashReads. This novel will leave you think about the plight of Maria long after you’ve turned the last page.

Image: Simon & Schuster

If there is one word that describes Jesmyn Ward’s National Book Award winning novel Sing, Unburied, Sing it’s “haunting.” The novel is a beautifully written portrait of a family navigating the embattled racial dynamics, past and present, of the American South, as 13-year-old Jojo and his mother Leonie road trip to pick up Jojo’s father from prison in Mississippi. In her acceptance speech, Ward highlighted the importance of representation in literature. ““You looked at my poor, my black, my southern women, and you saw yourself. I am deeply honored to each and everyone of you who looks at my work and sees something in it. I hope to continue this conversation with you for all of our days.”

Image: Oneworld Publications

We Were Eight Years In Power is a collection of Coates’ essays written about race, history, and power during the eight years of Obama’s presidency. Many of the essays were previously published in The Atlantic, and then Coates augmented the book with eight new essays, one written for each year of the Obama era. Put together, they provide an important element for processing modern day America: context. A critical look at race in the U.S., delivered with Coates’ characteristic thoughtfulness and wisdom, We Were Eight Years In Power situates the current social, political, and cultural conversations we’re having as a country within the larger web of history, making it a must-read. (Also, it goes without saying, read his award winning book Between The World and Me.)

Image: St. Martin’s Press

When They Call You A Terrorist is a fact check of public record. The book tells the story of the creation of Black Lives Matter, the movement dedicated to fighting injustice that was subject of a petition aiming to label it a terrorist organization. The book also details the coming of age story of the woman who co-created the movement, Patrisse Cullors. But the book is more than a recounting of the past. This memoir acts as a beacon of hope for readers — that community activism makes a difference, that it is possible to stand up to injustice, and that no matter who you are, you still get to tell your own story.

Image: Algonquin books

If there is one book that demonstrates that fiction can be as revealing as even the most grounded non-fiction, it’s Tayari Jones’ An American Marriage. The book, which was recently selected as Oprah’s Book Club pick for February, follows a newlywed couple, Celeste and Roy, who are trying to build a life together. But when Roy is arrested for a crime he didn’t commit, Celeste and Roy’s world is thrown into disarray, resulting in a gripping tale about race, love, and family, as well as the forces like incarceration that can disrupt them and what we will do to hold onto the future we want for ourselves.

Image: Harper Perennial

In her debut book, writer and journalist Morgan Jerkins dives into what it means to a black woman in modern society. Through essays about everything from Sailor Moon to the “Black Girl Magic” movement, Jerkins outlines how race, womanhood and feminism intersect. It’s all delivered with the sharp criticism that has made Jerkins a must-follow voice in today’s media landscape.

Image: Crown Books For Young Readers

In her YA novel Dear Martin, debut author Nic Stone explores what its like to come of age as a black boy in a white world. The story follows Justyce McAllister, a black boy attending a predominantly white prep school. When Justyce is handcuffed by a cop who wrongfully assumes he’s attacking a drunk friend he’s trying to help, his eyes are suddenly opened to the various racial dynamics at play around him. Drawing on the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., Dear Martin asks one resounding question: why should you try to be your best in a world that already assumes the worst of you?

Why I’m No Longer Talking To White People About Race is an essay collection that examines structural racism. It was borne out of frustration about conversations about race. The book began as a 2014 blog post by the same title, in which Eddo-Lodge wrote “I can no longer engage with the gulf of an emotional disconnect that white people display when a person of colour articulates our experiences.” Throughout her collection Eddo-Lodge discusses class, race, gender and privilege, through the framework of British culture and history. But whether you’re English or not, the book’s exploration of inequality will echo with readers all over the world.

Additional reporting by Victoria Rodriguez. 

UPDATE: Feb. 21, 2019, 1:19 p.m. PST This story was originally published in 2018 and was subsequently updated in 2019. 

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People are thirsting over this unnervingly hot statue of shirtless Abe Lincoln

2018%252f04%252f02%252f74%252fheadshot.edeb7.jpg%252f90x90By Morgan Sung

Good news everyone. Abe Lincoln is hot. 

At least this statue of him is. A rock-hard Abraham Lincoln, 16th president of the United States, graces the Los Angeles federal courthouse. The 8-foot-tall young Lincoln, shirtless as can be, gazes down at the viewer in pure, unadulterated horniness. In one hand he carries a book, while the other plays with his waistband, as if he’s inviting you to both take off his pants and educate yourself on the intricacies of American democracy.

If an Abercrombie and Fitch model could read, it would be the Hot Abe statue. 

Reminder that the Los Angeles federal courthouse has a statue of Abraham Lincoln where he’s a shirtless young stud suggestively tugging at his waistband like a Sports Illustrated swimsuit model: pic.twitter.com/32bjqEERYi

— Zack Stentz (@MuseZack) February 20, 2019

And dare I ask, is that a bulge? Does Hot Abe have a discernible bulge? 

When screenwriter Zack Stentz tweeted a photo of the statue, Twitter went wild.

well he did help pass the Thirsteenth Amendment

— ryan teague beckwith (@ryanbeckwith) February 21, 2019

this statue showed up to a party, asked everyone if they’d read infinite jest, and then gave their detailed summary of it regardless of the answer https://t.co/x07PEfepcX

— Hanif Abdurraqib (@NifMuhammad) February 21, 2019

Called “Young Lincoln,” the statue was created by a 23-year-old James Lee Hansen who modeled the lanky Abe after his own sculpted body in 1941. According to the Washington Post, Hansen explained the unnerving hotness during the statue’s unveiling: “Well, from a sculpturing standpoint, it’s better to show the body without any clothes. That’s why I left ’em off.” 

And Twitter thanks you for that, James. We really do. 

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As murdered Slovak remembered, calls to legally protect reporters

Last year, on February 21, Slovak investigative journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiancee, archaeologist Martina Kusnirova, were murdered in their home in Vel’ka Maca, a small village 28 miles east of Bratislava.

They were killed by a professional assassin: Kuciak with two shots to the chest, Kusnirova with one to the head.

Their deaths provoked a public outcry which led to mass protests against state corruption and forced the resignation of prime minister Robert Fico.

Exactly one year later, more than 20,000 have taken to Bratislava’s streets again to remember the journalist and his partner, who were both in their late twenties.

For several weeks, the murders and their repercussions dominated international headlines.

But one key piece of information slipped under the radar of most foreign news outletsKuciak’s colleagues at the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) believed that the killers were aided by government leaks of Jan’s Freedom of Information (FOI) requests.

In a March 2018, an article on the OCCRP website titled “Freedom of Information Law: Reporters’ Best Friend or Killer?” the reporters laid out their reasoning.

Kuciak was careful to used encrypted communications, so they did not think his online accounts been hacked. In his public records requests, Kuciak provided detailed information about his research, hoping it would improve his chances of getting a positive response.

Bearing in mind the recent physical, online, and legal attacks against journalists, I think we have very good momentum to press the European Commission and European politicians for legislation on access to information.

Flutura Kusari, legal adviser at the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom

Finally, in his requests he had provided the address of the house he and Kusnirova had recently moved into, the one in which they were killed.

The provision of a physical address is a requirement for those making enquiries under Slovakia’s FOI law.

Kuciak was a public records specialist who filed dozens of FOI requests. His OCCRP colleagues could not track down all of them. 

They did, however, seek comment from the Slovakia’s Agricultural Paying Agency, the Trebisov public prosecutor’s office, the Bratislava regional court, and the Slovak energy agency SIAS, to which they knew Kuciak had sent multiple requests shortly before his murder. 

These agencies denied to the OCCRP that they had ever passed on personal details from FOI requests to any third parties. 

When contacted for this article, they either did not respond or told Al Jazeera to direct enquiries to Slovakia’s Special Prosecution’s Office.

In their article, the OCCRP gathered testimonies from other European journalists who said they had been threatened or impeded in their research as a result of their FOI requests. 

Off the back of the article, the OCCRP – along with the transparency organisation Access Info, campaigned for the introduction of “Jan’s Law”, a proposed piece of EU legislation that would grant anonymity to those making FOI requests in the EU and sanction officials found to have leaked requests.

Almost a year on from its publication, the OCCRP’s Eva Kubaniova told Al Jazeera she no longer believes that Jan and Martina were killed as a result of FOI leaks. In October 2018, new evidence emerged that Kuciak was being physically surveilled in the period leading up to the murders.

OCCRP head Drew Sullivan said it is now clear that disclosures of Kuciak’s FOI requests were not a primary factor in the murders, but that it is less certain that government leaks played no role whatsoever.

Whether or not they did, journalists working in the EU say a new FOI law is needed to protect both themselves and their stories.

Kuciak was shot dead in Slovakia while working on a story about the activities of Italian mafia in Slovakia and their alleged links to people close to Prime Minister Robert Fico [File: Bundas Engler/The Associated Press]

Approximately six months ago, Italian journalists Cecilia Anesi and Luca Rinaldi from the Investigative Reporting Project Italy received a series of surprise phone calls. 

They were conducting research for an upcoming documentary on an organised criminal trade in toxic waste, and were seeking information from several public bodies.

“The entrepreneur we had requested information on thought it was OK to call us on our personal mobile phones and tell us off, saying, ‘Why do you want this information?’,” says Anesi.

Neus Vidal, a journalist and transparency activist, told Al Jazeera that after she filed an FOI request with a Spanish government agency, she received a call from the agency’s communications director pressuring her to drop her enquiries. She later learned the director had searched online for her and persuaded a colleague at a newspaper where Vidal had previously worked to give him her number. 

“As a journalist, I am exposed to [these kinds of] calls, but I could certainly be exposed to something more dangerous if my private details are shared with other people,” she told Al Jazeera.

Italy and Spain are two of several EU countries which require individuals filing an FOI request to identify themselves by their government ID numbers. 

Most others require applicants to identify themselves by their full name.

Authorities who enforce these rules say they need to know requesters’ identities so they can keep track of the enquiries, and so they can filter out “vexatious requests”. Officials have also pointed out that someone seeking information would have to identify themselves if they wanted to fight a case in court. But privacy campaigners say these issues could be worked around.

Access Info’s director Helen Darbishire says she believes Jan’s Law would be difficult to pass at the EU level, as transparency laws in Europe have always fallen under the jurisdiction of sovereign states.

Flutura Kusari, a legal adviser at the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF), is more optimistic, citing the recent success of activists in drafting an EU directive on whistleblower protection.

“Bearing in mind the recent physical, online, and legal attacks against journalists, I think we have very good momentum to press the European Commission and European politicians for legislation on access to information,” Kusari told Al Jazeera.

A woman kneels by a memorial on the first anniversary of the murder in Bratislava [David W. Cerny/Reuters]

If the Slovak couple’s killers weren’t assisted by FOI leaks, what did happen, and how can more killings be prevented?

Much is still unclear about the circumstances surrounding the murders, but what is known is that Kuciak was being followed and photographed before being killed.

The person who surveilled Kuciak is believed to be a former agent of the Slovak secret service, who reportedly told police he was working for Marian Kocner, a Slovak entrepreneur whose business dealings Kuciak had reported on extensively.

In September 2017, Kuciak filed a criminal complaint against Kocner for threats the businessman had issued against him.

In an October 20, 2017 post on his Facebook page, Kuciak complained that no police officer appeared to have been assigned to his case in the 44 days since he had filed the report.

The Bratislava police did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment.

In late September 2018, four people were charged with Kuciak and Kusnirova’s murders or complicity in the killings. 

A woman accused of paying 70,000 euros for the assassinations has been identified as Alena Zsuzsova, an Italian-Slovak translator who was allegedly close to Kocner.

According to Peter Bardy, Kuciak’s editor at the Slovak news site Aktuality.sk, Kocner is being investigated for the murders but has not been charged, although he has been in prison since June 2018 on unrelated charges of financial fraud. 

Kuciak’s colleagues believe other associates of Kocner’s, not currently under investigation, may also have been involved in the murders. The Special Prosecution’s Office did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment.

Kusari, the legal adviser, is concerned that there has been no investigation into state responsibility in their killings.

“The most urgent thing to do when journalists are killed is to conduct an independent inquiry into whether the state was responsible,” Kusari told Al Jazeera.

“If somebody reports a threat, and then he or she is killed, there should be an investigation into whether the state failed to protect that person and what can be done so the other lives are not lost in the future.”

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Anthony Davis, Antonio Brown to Guest Star on LeBron James’ ‘The Shop’

CHARLOTTE, NC - FEBRUARY 17:  Anthony Davis #23 of Team LeBron during the 2019 NBA All-Star Game on February 17, 2019 at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Michael J. LeBrecht II/NBAE via Getty Images)

Michael J. LeBrecht II/Getty Images

Odds are a major focus of the first episode of The Shop’s second season will be trade requests.

Anthony Davis and Antonio Brown are among the guests for the season premiere of the LeBron James HBO vehicle, which is set to debut March 1. The remainder of the panel includes Jamie Foxx, Meek Mill, Jerrod Carmichael and 2 Chainz in a star-studded affair.

Davis and Brown have dominated the headlines of their respective sports over the last month after asking out of their current situations.

NBA Twitter will no doubt be abuzz about Davis’ appearance on The Shop, given most viewed the timing of his trade request as a calculated attempt to join James’ Los Angeles Lakers. The episode was filmed during All-Star Weekend in Charlotte. 

Brown has put on a social media blitz in an effort to force the Pittsburgh Steelers to trade him. The Pro Bowl wideout has pointed to, among other things, frustration with quarterback Ben Roethlisberger and head coach Mike Tomlin as a reason for wanting out.

The episode may also touch on criminal justice and race. Meek Mill’s incarceration for a probation violation in 2017 became a rallying cry for criminal justice reform. Carmichael, a standup comedian, regularly addresses race relations as part of his act. 

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Pakistan’s Imran Khan approves military response if India attacks

The Pakistani government has authorised its military to “respond decisively and comprehensively to any aggression or misadventure” by neighbouring India, as tensions soar between the nuclear-armed rivals.

India has vowed a “jaw-breaking response” to a suicide bombing in the disputed Kashmir region last week that killed 42 Indian soldiers – the worst such attack since the start of an armed rebellion in 1989.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan announced the order in a government statement released after a meeting of his National Security Committee.

It said Pakistan was “not involved in any way, means or form” in the attack, which it said was “conceived, planned and executed indigenously.”

In the statement, Pakistan reiterated its offer to help investigate the attack and to take action against anyone found to be using Pakistani soil for attacks on India.

Pakistan also offered to hold a “dialogue” with India on all issues, including terrorism. Earlier, it had demanded India provide evidence for its claims that it supports Kashmiri rebel groups.

India and Pakistan, both nuclear powers, have been fighting for seven decades over the Himalayan region of Kashmir, now one of the most militarised zones in the world.

India has long accused Pakistan of harbouring and aiding armed rebels who target its forces in Kashmir.

The Himalayan territory is split between Pakistani and Indian zones of control, but both countries claim it in its entirety and have fought two of their three wars over it.

An armed rebellion erupted in Kashmir in 1989, demanding independence or a union with Pakistan.

Pakistan denies supporting the rebels, and has blamed the violence in Kashmir on what it views as India’s military occupation of the territory.

Following last week’s attack, India halted trade and a key bus service with the Pakistani-controlled part of Kashmir.

News agency AFP on Thursday reported that bunkers were being rebuilt and a blackout ordered in Chakothi, a border village in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

Local authorities have encouraged residents in areas near the Line of Control to take additional precautions against the risk of “mischievous action” by the Indian army.

“Bunkers should be constructed in areas where they don’t exist. Unnecessary lighting should be avoided after sunset and people should refrain from travelling on roads located close to LoC,” the local disaster management agency warned residents in Chakothi.

India wants Pakistan to stay on terror list

India, meanwhile, is pressing for Pakistan to be kept on a terrorism financing watchlist, three Indian government officials told Reuters news agency on Thursday.

The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a global body created to counter terrorism financing and money laundering, has been meeting in Paris this week and Pakistan has been hoping to get off a “grey list” of nations with inadequate controls over such activities.

But two Indian government officials dealing with the issue said new information had been provided to the FATF relating to Pakistan after the car bombing last week in Pulwama district of Kashmir.

Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) claimed responsibility for the attack. A third Indian official said details relating to the group’s operations were provided to the FATF.

“It was a post-Pulwama brief,” said one of the officials when asked about the information provided to the watchdog. The officials declined to be named as the talks were still underway in Paris.

Pakistan has been on the grey list since June, making it harder for it to access international markets at a time when its economy is stumbling.

While there are no direct legal implications from being on the list, it brings extra scrutiny from regulators and financial institutions that can chill trade and investment and increase transaction costs, experts say.

Pakistan’s finance ministry did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment.

The Pulwama attack chilled the long frosty relations between India and Pakistan, with New Delhi accusing Islamabad of failing to crack down on armed groups operating from its soil and saying it would work to isolate Islamabad diplomatically.

India cancelled Most Favoured Nation trade privileges for Pakistan and imposed 200 percent duty on goods coming from Pakistan, further squeezing the barely $2bn bilateral trade.

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Roger Stone asks for second chance as gag order looms


Roger Stone

Roger Stone was already under a partial gag order that allowed the defendant to continue discussing his case so long as he wasn’t in the vicinity of the D.C. courthouse. | Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

mueller investigation

Stone was trying to walk back an Instagram post appeared to include a gun’s crosshairs above the head of the federal judge overseeing his case.

Roger Stone took the stand Thursday to ask for a second chance to keep his voice, days after a loaded social media post put him on the precipice of a new gag order in his fight against special counsel Robert Mueller’s charges.

In the Washington, D.C., courthouse where he’s on track to stand trial later this year, Stone offered a formal apology to U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson, his second attempt to walk back a Monday post on Instagram that featured a picture with what appeared to be a gun’s crosshairs above her head.

Story Continued Below

“I recognize that I let the court down,” Stone said. “I let you down. I let myself down. I let my family down. I let my attorneys down. I can only say I’m sorry. it was a momentary lapse in judgment. Perhaps I talk too much.”

Stone was already under a partial gag order that allowed the defendant to continue discussing his case so long as he wasn’t in the vicinity of the D.C. courthouse.

But since that decision last week, Stone has remained active on Instagram, mainly promoting his legal defense fund but also criticizing media reporting about his case. His account took a more solemn turn just hours before his hearing Thursday with a quote from an Old Testament Bible passage.

On Thursday, Stone insisted that he didn’t realize the crosshairs were in the photo until a reporter contacted him.

“I am kicking myself over my own stupidity but not more than my wife is kicking me,” he said.

Mueller’s grand jury indicted Stone last month, charging him with misleading House Intelligence Committee investigators about his attempts to communicate with WikiLeaks during the election. The seven-count indictment also accused Stone of intimidating another Russia probe witness, liberal radio host Randy Credico.

As Stone’s case developed, legal experts had expected Jackson to gag Stone at the outset given his outspoken style, willingness to do media interviews and a prolific social media presence.

Jackson also hasn’t responded well to anything in her courtroom that she perceives as showboating. She slapped a gag order on Paul Manafort, as well as Manafort’s attorneys and his then co-defendant Rick Gates, within weeks of their initial October 2017 indictment. She later jailed Manafort, a former Stone business partner, over witness tampering allegations.

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