it s 11:00 a.m. eastern now, and 8:00 a.m. pacific. i am ana cabrera in for josé diaz-balart. right now the judge overseeing the case is holding a sealed hearing, meaning no public, on issues protected by grand jury secrecy or attorney/client privilege. today s hearings come as new court filings by prosecutors contain the new photos of the boxes of documents seized during the mar-a-lago search. let s go to ken dilanian outside the courthouse in florida. also with us, former federal prosecutor and former senior investigative house for the january 6th committee. this is day three of hearings in this case. help us to keep it all straight. what do we need to know about today s hearing? ana, today is an example of a hearing many legal experts say should not have happened. you have two issues that already have been ruled on by other judges. in one case the fbi is arguing sorry, the defense is arguing against the search warrant of mar-a-lago, and that s a motion approved by the
Mayor Brandon Scott and other officials announced the start of Safe Streets Baltimore’s 4th annual Safe Summer program at a kickoff event in Druid Hill Park on
350 million put aside for cops. but the cops sandra: can you hang on live to the briefing room, she s being asked about it right now. and the attorney general will join with law enforcement officials alongside elected leaders, including mayor adams, governor hochul at the police headquarters to discuss the work that federal, state and local law enforcement are taking guns and repeat shooters off the streets. afterward, president biden, attorney general, the mayor and other leaders will meet with intervention leaders in queens to talk about the community-led work to interrupt gun violence. the president outlined the a comprehensive plan last year to tackle gun crime, historic funding through the american rescue plan, more cops on the beat and community violence programs, and creating economic communities and address the root causes of gun crime.
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Community Crisis Intervention, City Hall Ventilation Among Proposed COVID Relief Spending Discussed by Duluth Council
More than a dozen citizens spoke out in support of what they call a community crisis response team independent of law enforcement.
July 6, 2021
Council unanimously tabled the resolution, to further discuss the Mayor’s following suggestions to allocate the money:
Affordable Housing: $20,678,130
Job Training and Workforce Services: $550,000
Utility Infrastructure and Broadband: $13,850,000
City Hall Ventilation and COVID Mitigation Improvements: $12,000,000
Improving Outdoor Spaces: $2,000,000
Assistance to Small Businesses, Tourism, Component Units, and Impacted Industries: $2,200,000
Public Safety Crisis Intervention and Community Violence Programs: $1,800,000
The rescue plan funds must be spent by December of 2026.