Senin, 11 Mei 2020

Donald Trump makes claim that tape of killing of Ahmaud Arbery might not be complete - Daily Mail

Donald Trump makes claim that tape of killing of Ahmaud Arbery might not be complete and claims something happens off camera which needs to be investigated

  • Trump commented again on the videotaped killing of Arbery, saying there was a portion where 'nobody saw what was going on' 
  • Trump also said Arbery looked like a 'wonderful guy'
  • Ahmaud walked into the construction site in Brunswick, Georgia, looked around and then walked back out 
  • Later that day, he was shot dead by Travis McMichael, 34, who'd chased him with his former cop father Greg 
  • The pair told police they thought Ahmaud was a burglary suspect who had broken into homes near them 
  • The owner of the construction site said they never called police or the McMichaels, who they don't know
  • They released the video to show that Ahmaud did not steal anything and say they had nothing to do with the young man's death   
  • President Trump said the tape 'doesn't look good'  

President Donald Trump on Monday repeated his claim that there could be activity taking place out of the frame of a shocking videotape of the killing of Ahmaud Arbery that may be pertinent to the case where 'nobody saw' what was going on.

Trump made the comment raising apparent doubts about the video evidence for the second time in the explosive case, even as he said he was 'disturbed' by the case, which has drawn the attention of the Justice Department as a possible hate crime.

'Well I saw the tape and when they moved left – I don't believe when they moved left, outside of the tape – nobody saw what was going on. Nobody saw,' Trump said at the White House when asked about the killing of Arbery, who is black.

'It's an empty spot on the tape, I guess. Now, do they have additional tapes, I hope?' Trump continued, speaking about the video that shows Arbery getting shot and killed at close range in his own Georgia neighborhood.

'Nobody saw what was going on,' President Trump said, pointing to a moment during a struggle on the videotape of the killing of Ahmaud Arbery

'Nobody saw what was going on,' President Trump said, pointing to a moment during a struggle on the videotape of the killing of Ahmaud Arbery

'But I will say that it's something that did, based on what I saw, doesn't look good.'

Then Trump referenced South Carolina Republican Sen. Tim Scott, who is black.  

'Somebody that I have a lot of respect for is Senator Scott of South Carolina, you know who I'm talking about, he's a great gentleman. He's a great senator, he's a great gentleman, Tim Scott. And I called him two days ago I said to him: 'What do you think? Tell me what you think. Tell me, what do you think?' He's very disturbed by it. He's very disturbed. And I'm very disturbed also,' Trump said.

Trump said of the incident: 'I think it's horrible. And it's certainly being looked at by many people. I'm speaking to many people about it.'

'He looked – I saw the picture of him in his tuxedo.  It was so beautiful. He looks like a wonderful young guy. Would have been a wonderful – just a wonderful guy. I think it's a horrible thing. I think it's a horrible thing.  

'To me it's a very sad thing. I spoke to a number of people that are very much involved in it. I've been following that one very closely - it breaks your heart to watch it.  Breaks your heard to watch it. Breaks your heart. And certainly the video – it was a terrible looking video to me,' Trump said.

'You have a lot of people looking at it,' Trump said. He said hopefully an answer would be arrived at 'very quickly.'     

Trump was responding to a question about an earlier comment he made which also referenced something that could have happened outside the tape which might somehow undercut what is revealed.  

'You know, it could be something that we didn't see on tape,' Trump said during a Fox News interview. 'There could be a lot of, if you saw things went off tape, and then back on tape, but it was troubling.' 

Trump appears to be referencing a brief portion of the tape where Arbery and his suspected killers briefly move off screen during a struggle before the unarmed Arbery is shot dead.  

Arbery's autopsy has revealed the 25-year-old was killed by two close-range gunshot wounds to the chest and that he was also shot in the hand when he was chased down and shot by a white father and son vigilante duo in Brunswick, Georgia, in February.

TMZ obtained Ahmaud's autopsy on Monday. The 25-year-old had no drugs or alcohol in his system, and was carrying two tan bandannas which were soaked with blood.

It has taken nearly three months and three different prosecutors for Travis and Gregory McMichael to be arrested and charged with his killing. Georgia's Attorney General is now investigating the handling of the case amid claims that prosecutors passed it off to protect 64-year-old Gregory, a former police detective who recently worked in the local district attorney's office. 

The case has sparked outrage around the world and some say it is proof of persistent racism in the South. Over the weekend, people ran to honor what would have been Ahmaud's 26th birthday and armed protesters took to the street. 

The McMichaels' defense has been that they were making a citizen's arrest after suspecting Ahmaud of breaking into and robbing homes in their neighborhood. They said Travis, 34, then exercised his stand your ground right by shooting Ahmaud, claiming the unarmed 25-year-old reached for his gun. 

On Monday, DoJ spokeswoman Kerri Kupec said: 'The Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice, the FBI, and the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Georgia have been supporting and will continue fully to support and participate in the state investigation. We are assessing all of the evidence to determine whether federal hate crimes charges are appropriate,' Kupec said in a statement.' 

The McMichaels have both been charged by the state of Georgia with murder and aggravated assault which carry maximum prison sentences of life. 

Georgia has no hate crimes as a state but the federal charge carries a maximum prison sentence of life when the hate crime results in death. A federal prosecution would supersede a state case and could negate it if the defendants were found guilty and the need for a state prosecution reduced.  

It comes as new surveillance video Arbery walking into a construction site on the day of his death, looking around the property and then leaving empty handed the day he was gunned down emerged.   

But the new video obtained by News4Jax appears to undermine their shaky burglary suspect claim. It shows Ahmaud walking into an under-construction house in Brunswick, looking around and then leaving without taking anything. 

In the two months before Ahmaud's killing, there were no reports of suspected burglaries in the area, and the owner of the under-construction property has spoken out to say they have no links to the McMichaels whatsoever.  

Scroll down for video 

Ahmaud Arbery inside the under-construction home on February 23, the day he was killed. He walked into the house then left empty handed and was later shot dead by Travis McMichael who had chased him with his father, Gregory, a former cop

Ahmaud Arbery inside the under-construction home on February 23, the day he was killed. He walked into the house then left empty handed and was later shot dead by Travis McMichael who had chased him with his father, Gregory, a former cop 

Ahmaud had been out jogging when he came across the home. His family says the footage shows he was not a burglar and that he would have been guilty of trespassing at most

Ahmaud had been out jogging when he came across the home. His family says the footage shows he was not a burglar and that he would have been guilty of trespassing at most

Another video shows Ahmaud entering the property. It was taken on a surveillance camera on a different home

Another video shows Ahmaud entering the property. It was taken on a surveillance camera on a different home 

Gregory and Travis McMichael  have both been charged with murder and aggravated assault over the February 23 shooting of Ahmaud Arbery. Gregory McMichael is pictured in his mugshot
Travis McMichael is pictured in his mugshot following his arrest on Thursday

Gregory (left) and Travis McMichael (right) have both been charged with murder and aggravated assault over the February 23 shooting of Ahmaud Arbery

Arbery's death has sparked nationwide outrage. A rally for the slain jogger was held Friday - the day he would have celebrated his 26th birthday

Arbery's death has sparked nationwide outrage. A rally for the slain jogger was held Friday - the day he would have celebrated his 26th birthday 

The video was shared by the property owner who said they had never had any contact with the McMichaels let alone did they call for them to investigate any break-ins. 

The attorney representing Ahmaud's family says the video shows that at most, Ahmaud would have been guilty of trespassing. 

It's unclear what time the video on the construction site was taken. 

According to the police report into his death, Ahmaud was shot dead at 1.46pm. 

A time stamp on a different surveillance camera video says he entered the construction site at 2.13pm. It's possible that camera was inaccurately running an hour fast. 

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation says it is now investigating the video along with the cellphone footage of Ahmaud's killing that went viral.

The property is owned by Larry English. 

Over the weekend, he released a statement through an attorney to say he neither called for the McMichaels to go after Ahmaud, nor did he condone in any way how they killed him. 

Ahmaud was killed while out jogging on February 23. It is unclear if he had come from his mother's house, which is just under two miles from where the shooting unfolded. The McMichaels said they saw him 'hauling a**' down Satilla Drive and that he'd been seen on surveillance cameras inside homes near them but it's unclear which homes they were referring to. He was shot and killed at an intersection not far from the houses

Ahmaud was killed while out jogging on February 23. It is unclear if he had come from his mother's house, which is just under two miles from where the shooting unfolded. The McMichaels said they saw him 'hauling a**' down Satilla Drive and that he'd been seen on surveillance cameras inside homes near them but it's unclear which homes they were referring to. He was shot and killed at an intersection not far from the houses 

'First, and most important, the English family -- the homeowners -- want Ahmaud Arbery's parents to know that they are very sorry for the loss of their son and they are praying for them.

TIMELINE OF BOTCHED HANDLING OF THE CASE

February 23: Ahmaud Arbery is shot dead in the street in Brunswick, Georgia. 

Gregory and Travis McMichael had gone out in their car with guns to chase him because they mistook him for a burglar. 

When they caught up to him, Travis got out of the car. 

Jackie Johnson recused herself because McMichael used to work in her office

Jackie Johnson recused herself because McMichael used to work in her office 

Greg says they told Arbery that they wanted to talk to him and that he attacked Travis. A struggle ensued and Travis fired his gun twice, killing Ahmaud, 25. 

Late February - First prosecutor recuses herself

Jackie Johnson, the Brunswick District Attorney, stepped down from the case because Gregory used to work in her office as an investigator. 

Mid-April - Second prosecutor says he won't press charges, then recuses himself

George Barnhill said Ahmaud initiated the fight

George Barnhill said Ahmaud initiated the fight 

George Barnhill was given the case. 

He at first said he did not think it merited charges because the McMichaels were acting lawfully by trying to carry out a citizen's arrest, which is legal in Georgia. 

He also said that the video 'shows' Arbery reaching for Travis' gun. 

Barnhill recused himself because his son, also called George Barnhill, works in the office where McMichael used to

Barnhill recused himself because his son, also called George Barnhill, works in the office where McMichael used to 

The first shot is fired however when the pair are out of frame. 

When the camera panned back to them, they were struggling again to the side of the vehicle. 

Barnhill said Travis was standing his ground by firing three shots which hit Arbery. 

He later had to recuse himself after it emerged that his son works in the Brunswick District Attorney's Office, where Gregory served. 

May 5 - Third prosecutor passes it on to grand jury   

Tom Durden is the third prosecutor to have the case come across his desk. 

He said that his office would approach it without prior prejudice.  

This week, he announced that he would not make a decision on whether or not to charge, and that he wants to convene a grand jury to take it on. 

May 7 - Georgia Bureau of Investigation files charges

The GBI announced that it was bringing charges of murder and aggravated assault against the Gregory and Travis on May 7. 

'Second, it is crucial to understand that the English family -- the homeowners -- were not part of what the McMichaels did. 

'The first accounts suggested a link between the McMichaels and the homeowners, but there is none. 

'The English family had no relationship with the McMichaels and did not even know what had occurred until after Mr. Arbery's death was reported to them.

'After seeing Mr. Arbery's photo in news reports, Larry English did not even think Mr. Arbery was the person that appears in this video. 

'Even if it had been, however, Mr. English would never have sought a vigilante response, much less one resulting in a tragic death,' his attorney, Elizabeth Graddy, told First Coast News. 

Ahmaud's parents' lawyer confirmed that it is him in the video. 

'This video is consistent with the evidence already known to us. 

'Ahmaud Arbery was out for a jog. He stopped by a property under construction where he engaged in no illegal activity and remained for only a brief period.

'Ahmaud did not take anything from the construction site. He did not cause any damage to the property,' Lee Merritt said.  

Last week, after growing global outrage, the case was taken out of local prosecutors' hands to be investigated by the state. 

Gregory and Travis were both charged with murder and aggravated assault. 

Greg McMichael had investigated Arbery before when he worked as an investigator in the Brunswick DA's office. 

In a letter to Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr recusing himself from the case, Waycross Judicial Circuit District Attorney George Barnhill said that his own son and Gregory 'both helped with the previous prosecution of (Ahmaud) Arbery'.

Arbery had previously been sentenced to five years probation as a first offender on charges of carrying a weapon on campus and several counts of obstructing a law enforcement officer.

According to the The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, he was also convicted of probation violation in 2018 after he was charged with shoplifting.

Arbery had previously been sentenced to five years probation as a first offender on charges of carrying a weapon on campus and several counts of obstructing a law enforcement officer.

According to the The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, he was also convicted of probation violation in 2018 after he was charged with shoplifting.

Gregory, who retired from the DA's office in 2019, had not mentioned his involvement in the case to police. 

George E. Barnhill was the second DA to recuse himself in mid-April following pressure from Arbery's family. He claims he only learned of his son's link to the victim 'three or four weeks' ago. 

In his letter, Barnhill added that criminal charges against the McMichaels was unwarranted, citing the criminal history of Arbery's brother and cousin. 

Exclusive photos show the moment Gregory McMichael (pictured) and his son Travis McMichael were arrested at their home in Brunswick, Georgia, on Thursday

Exclusive photos show the moment Gregory McMichael (pictured) and his son Travis McMichael were arrested at their home in Brunswick, Georgia, on Thursday

An officer with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation is seen leading 34-year-old Travis McMichael out of the home in handcuffs

An officer with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation is seen leading 34-year-old Travis McMichael out of the home in handcuffs

PICTURED: Black Georgia man, 20, is arrested for setting up fake Facebook page in support of Ahmaud Arbery's two killers and threatening protesters who paid their respects at the spot where the 25-year-old jogger was 'lynched'

Rashawn Smith, 20, was arrested in Midway, Georgia, on Sunday after authorities alleged he created a fake Facebook account and used it to make a hoax threat against protesters demanding justice for murdered jogger Ahmaud Arbery

Rashawn Smith, 20, was arrested in Midway, Georgia, on Sunday after authorities alleged he created a fake Facebook account and used it to make a hoax threat against protesters demanding justice for murdered jogger Ahmaud Arbery

Georgia state investigators announced on Sunday that they have arrested a 20-year-old man suspected of creating a fake Facebook account and using it to post a 'hoax' threat against protesters angry over the killing of unarmed black man 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation on Sunday said state police arrested Rashawn Smith and charged him with dissemination of information relating to terroristic acts.

Smith allegedly created a fake Facebook page and used it to make threats against the protesters.

He was taken into custody in Midway, a town about 50 miles north of Brunswick.

Earlier in the day, the GBI said it had 'been made aware of a Facebook post that contains a threat to future protests related to Ahmaud Arbery'.

It was not immediately clear if Smith has an attorney who could comment on the charge.

Hundreds of people gathered alongside some 300 bikers in Brunswick on Saturday to honor Arbery.

The bikers were seen kneeling at the spot where Arbery was fatally shot on February 23 by two white men who claim they were making a citizen's arrest as they suspected him of a neighborhood burglary.

On Saturday bikers were seen kneeling at the spot where Arbery was fatally shot. One of the balloons left at the site reads 'Happy birthday'. Arbery would have turned 26 on Friday

On Saturday bikers were seen kneeling at the spot where Arbery was fatally shot. One of the balloons left at the site reads 'Happy birthday'. Arbery would have turned 26 on Friday

Hundreds of people alongside some 300 bikers gathered in Brunswick to honor Arbery on Saturday

Hundreds of people alongside some 300 bikers gathered in Brunswick to honor Arbery on Saturday

Some of the protesters held up signs which read 'Our lives matter too!' and 'Dear white people, when you don't call out racism you are upholding white supremacy by default!'

Some of the protesters held up signs which read 'Our lives matter too!' and 'Dear white people, when you don't call out racism you are upholding white supremacy by default!'

Several of those in attendance near the Sidney Lanier Bridge wore face masks and t-shirts with the phrase 'I run with Maud' in tribute to Arbery.

The memorial ceremony on Saturday was held just a day after protesters gathered at the same site demanding justice for Arbery on what would have been his 26th birthday.

Georgia's attorney general on Sunday asked the Department of Justice to investigate the handling of Arbery's killing.

'We are committed to a complete and transparent review of how the Ahmaud Arbery case was handled from the outset,' Attorney General Chris Carr said in a statement.

'The family, the community and the state of Georgia deserve answers, and we will work with others in law enforcement at the state and federal level to find those answers.' 

Under Georgia law, someone who isn't a sworn police officer can arrest and detain another person only if a felony is committed in the presence of the arresting citizen. 

Georgia AG asks the US Justice Department to investigate Ahmaud Arbery's shooting as it's revealed top prosecutor who recused himself said slaying by two armed white men was 'justifiable homicide'

George Barnhill, Sr, the top prosecutor for the Waycross Judicial Circuit

George Barnhill, Sr (left), the top prosecutor for the Waycross Judicial Circuit, told police in February that the fatal shooting of Ahmaud Arbery (right), 25, by two white men was a 'justifiable homicide'

Georgia's attorney general on Sunday asked the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate the handling of the investigation into the killing of Arbery.

Arbery was killed on February 23 but no arrests were made until Thursday after national outrage over the case swelled last week when video surfaced that showed the shooting which was blasted as a 'lynching'.

'We are committed to a complete and transparent review of how the Ahmaud Arbery case was handled from the outset,' Attorney General Chris Carr said in a statement.

'The family, the community and the state of Georgia deserve answers, and we will work with others in law enforcement at the state and federal level to find those answers.'

Attorneys for Arbery's mother and father applauded Carr for reaching out to federal officials.

'We have requested the involvement of the DOJ since we first took this case,' attorneys S. Lee Merritt, Benjamin Crump and L. Chris Stewart said in a statement.

'There are far too many questions about how this case was handled and why it took 74 days for two of the killers to be arrested and charged in Mr. Arbery's death.'

Last week, a Justice Department spokesman said the FBI is assisting in the investigation and the DOJ would assist if a federal crime is uncovered.

It comes after it emerged the Georgia district attorney who recused himself from the case told investigators that the fatal shooting was a 'justifiable homicide' and that the father and son duo who killed Arbery should not be charged.

George Barnhill, Sr, the top prosecutor for the Waycross Judicial Circuit, told police in Glynn County on February 24 – the day after the shooting – that there was insufficient evidence to charge Travis McMichael, 34, and his 64-year-old father, former police officer Greg McMichael.

The Glynn County Police Department released a statement to The Brunswick News on Saturday saying Travis and Greg McMichael were brought in for questioning at around 3.30pm on February 23. 

Earlier this week, two Glynn County commissioners said that the current Brunswick District Attorney, Jackie Johnson, also blocked police from arresting the McMichaels because she was friends with Gregory McMichael.

Officers investigating the scene of the fatal shooting on February 23 told Johnson's office that they had cause to arrest the father and son at the time but the DA shut them down.

Gregory McMichael had worked as an investigator in her office until his retirement in 2019 causing Johnson to recuse herself from the case a few days after the shooting.

'She shut them down to protect her friend McMichael,' Glynn County Commissioner Allen Booker told The Atlanta Journal Constitution.

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2020-05-12 04:47:36Z
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Coronavirus updates: Seoul nightclub outbreak passes 100 cases - BBC News

Some 101 people have now tested positive for the coronavirus after a cluster outbreak at clubs in Seoul’s party district of Itaewon.

Containing this latest surge in cases is a huge challenge for South Korea’s “track, trace and test” measures which have so far proved successful.

All club-goers were required to put down their names and contact numbers at the door. It was one of the guidelines for re-opening on 19 April - along with wearing masks and using hand sanitiser.

Some of the clubs at the centre of the investigation were run for and by the LGBT community. And in conservative South Korea, LGBT people face daily discrimination.

"Coming out" can often mean losing your life as you know it - your family, your job. Some of the names and numbers left at the door of the club were false - which is making it difficult for officials to track everyone down.

A Catholic-run newspaper in Seoul was the first to run with the headline that the outbreak came from “gay nightclubs”, a term health officials were deliberately trying to avoid.

Amnesty International has today hit out at some of the media coverage and said that “stirring up hatred and branding a certain group is the biggest obstacle to effective disease prevention".

Now, health officials have said that people being tested do not have to give their name. They also believe that there is more than one person at the source of this infection.

A team of over 8,500 police are tracking down nearly 11,000 people who were in Itaewon on that holiday weekend. They have phone numbers based on network towers and they’ve been checking credit card records.

Texts have been sent in English and Korean urging people to get a test. The Korean Centre for Disease Control has clarified to the BBC that anyone who was in the area at the time, including foreigners, can be tested for free. So far, more than 7,000 people have come forward.

Public health was valued over privacy at the height of this outbreak. In efforts to be transparent, some local governments, including Seoul, were releasing the last names, ages and occupations of those who tested positive in press releases to hundreds of journalists.

But now this country is learning that privacy is a matter of public health, if this outbreak is to be brought under control.

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2020-05-12 04:40:09Z
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Trump clashes with Asian American reporter and ends press conference after dispute with CNN - Daily Mail

'Why are you saying that to me?' Asian American reporter challenges Donald Trump when he tells her to 'ask China' why there are so many deaths - then cuts off press conference after dispute with female CNN journalist

  • President Donald Trump berated an Asian American reporter that asked him about the death rate due to the coronavirus 
  • Trump then cut off his press conference after a CNN reporter he previously clashed with tried to question him 
  • CBS News' Weijia Jiang asked the president why he was talking about successful test rates when so many people were still dying from coronavirus
  • She did not mention China but Trump did in his response 
  • 'Don't ask me. Ask China that question, okay,' Trump said 
  • Trump moved on to CNN's Kaitlin Collins, who let Jiang asked a follow up 
  • 'Why are you saying that to me,' asked Jiang, who is Chinese American 
  • Trump snapped at her and then refused to answer a question from Collins
  • When Collins pressed the president, Trump ended the press conference 
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

President Donald Trump berated an Asian American reporter who asked him about the death rate due to the coronavirus - suggesting she ask the Chinese - and then cut off his press conference after a CNN reporter he previously clashed with tried to question him.

The president on Monday had another round of run-ins with CBS News' Weijia Jiang and CNN's Kaitlan Collins, each of whom he's bickered with at previous press conferences.

Trump previously said neither Jiang nor her fellow CBS News reporter was a 'Donna Reed' and White House staff tried to move Collins out of her front row seat to the back of the briefing room in late April.

Trump was testy with both of them again on Monday. 

President Donald Trump berated an Asian American reporter that asked him about the death rate due to the coronavirus

President Donald Trump berated an Asian American reporter that asked him about the death rate due to the coronavirus

President Trump clashed with CBS News' Weijia Jiang (sitting in the red jacket) and CNN's Kaitlan Collins (standing in the white jacket) in the White House Rose Garden press conference

President Trump clashed with CBS News' Weijia Jiang (sitting in the red jacket) and CNN's Kaitlan Collins (standing in the white jacket) in the White House Rose Garden press conference

Abrupt end: Donald Trump suddenly ended his press conference with an argument with CNN reporter Kaitlan Collins immediately after calling Weijia Jiang's question 'nasty'

Abrupt end: Donald Trump suddenly ended his press conference with an argument with CNN reporter Kaitlan Collins immediately after calling Weijia Jiang's question 'nasty'

Rapid departure: Unexpectedly Trump left the Rose Garden podium after clashing with two female reporters

Rapid departure: Unexpectedly Trump left the Rose Garden podium after clashing with two female reporters

Jiang asked President Trump why he was emphasizing the United States' led in testing for the coronavirus when there was still a high rate of infection. 'Why does that matter? Why is it global competition to you if every day Americans are still losing their lives and we are still seeing more cases every day?' she asked.

'Maybe that's a question you should ask China,' Trump responded. The administration has tried to put the blame for the coronavirus on China.

'Don't ask me. Ask China that question, okay,' the president said. 'When you ask them that question, you make it a very unusual answer.'

He then moved on to call on Collins. 'Yes behind you please,' he said.

But, before she went to the microphone, Collins said to Jiang: 'Do you want to follow up?'

Jiang, who is Chinese American, asked Trump: 'Sir, why are you saying that to me -specifically.'

Her implication seemed to be the president answered her that way because of her race. Jiang did not mention China in her question but Trump brought it up in his response. 

'I'm not saying it specifically to anybody,' Trump said. 'I'm saying that to anyone who would ask a nasty question like that.'

'That's not a nasty question,' she responded.

CBS News' Weijia Jiang, who is Chinese American, asked President Trump why he mentioned China in his answer to her question, which was not about China

CBS News' Weijia Jiang, who is Chinese American, asked President Trump why he mentioned China in his answer to her question, which was not about China

CNN's Kaitlin Collins tried to ask her question but Trump ended his press conference

CNN's Kaitlin Collins tried to ask her question but Trump ended his press conference

Trump moved on to call on another reporter. 'Anyone else? Please go ahead. In the back.'

Collins stepped up to the microphone: 'I have two questions.'

Trump waved her off. 'No it's okay. We'll go over here. Next.'

'You called on me,' Collins told him.

'I did. And you didn't respond,' the president said.

'I just wanted to let my colleague finish,' Collins said, gesturing to Jiang.

And, with that, Trump ended his press conference.  

'Ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much. Appreciate it,' he said and turned to walk back into the Oval Office. 

MEET TRUMP'S LATEST TARGET 

Weijia Jiang got her first broadcast news break for Channel One aged just 13 when she was a student reporter and anchor for the children's network which was also a proving ground for CNN's Anderson Cooper and Fox and Friends' Brian Kilmeade.

Jiang was born in Xiamen, China, to parents who immigrated to West Virginia when she was two. They ran a Chinese restaurant in Buckhannon in the state's coal-mining belt.

She went on to study at the College of William and Mary and Syracuse, in New York, before throwing herself into a local television career first in Maryland, then in New York. 

The 35-year-old moved to Washington D.C. in 2016 for CBS, and is now a permanent White House correspondent. 

An Edward R. Murrow Award-winner, the clash with Trump was not her first; in 2018, at the height of the storm over the Supreme Court nomination of Brett Kavanaugh, he told her to 'sit down' and 'stop interrupting' when she pressed him to answer her question. 

She married her husband, Luther Lowe, a Washington D.C.-based executive with Yelp, in California two years ago in a ceremony performed by Jim Obergefell, whose fight for recognition of same sex-marriage led to the Supreme Court to legalize gay marriage.

The president has faced criticism for what appears to be a disproportion series of attacks on female reporters. Also facing his wrath has been Paula Reid of CBS News and Yamiche Alcindor of PBS.

In mid-April, Trump told Jiang to 'keep your voice down' as she asked him about what he did to warn the American people in February that the coronavirus was being spread like 'wildfire.'  

Jiang pointed to comments Trump had made earlier, in which he said he was 'angry' because information about the coronavirus 'should have been told to us' earlier. 

'Many Americans are saying the exact same thing about you, that you should have warned them the virus was spreading like wildfire through the month of February, instead of holding rallies with thousands of people,' Jiang said. 'Why did you wait so long to warn them?'  

Trump interrupted Jiang to ask her 'who are you with?' and then pointed to his late January ban of flights coming in from China. 

'Chinese nationals ... by the way, not Americans who were also coming in from China,' Jiang corrected the president. 

 To this he responded to the reporter by saying, 'Nice and easy.' 'Nice and easy, just relax,' Trump said. 

'We cut it off. People were amazed. These gentlemen, everybody was amazed that I did it. We had 21 people in the room, everybody was against it but me. Dr. Fauci said, had I not done that perhaps tens of thousands and maybe  much more than that would have died,' the president continued. 'I was very early. Very, very early.'   

Trump then pointed to a tweet that he had sent out earlier Sunday quoting Fox News Channels Bret Baier who wrote that at the February 19 Democratic debate in Las Vegas the coronavirus didn't come up once. 

'It wasn't even mentioned - the Democrats,' Trump said.   

President Trump told a female reporter on Sunday to 'keep your voice down' and 'just relax' when she asked him why he didn't sound the alarm sooner that the coronavirus was spreading like wildfire

President Trump told a female reporter on Sunday to 'keep your voice down' and 'just relax' when she asked him why he didn't sound the alarm sooner that the coronavirus was spreading like wildfire 

CBS News' Weijia Jiang pointed to the president's comments - that he was 'angry' that the U.S. wasn't informed sooner about coronavirus - when asking why he didn't warn the American people sooner about the pandemic

CBS News' Weijia Jiang pointed to the president's comments - that he was 'angry' that the U.S. wasn't informed sooner about coronavirus - when asking why he didn't warn the American people sooner about the pandemic 

Jiang detailed the encounter on Twitter Sunday, commenting that the president had told her to 'relax'

Jiang detailed the encounter on Twitter Sunday, commenting that the president had told her to 'relax'  

'And you're the president, sir. And you didn't warn people that it was spreading so quickly,' Jiang shot back.  'And, by the way, when you issued the ban, the virus was already here.' 

Trump then asked the CBS News reporter if she knew how many cases were in the United States when he implemented the China ban. 'Do you know the number?' he asked. 'Tell me. '

'But did you know that it was going to spread and become a pandemic?' Jiang answered instead. 

The president said she needed to do her research. 

'I did my research,' Jiang said. 'On the 23rd of March you said you knew this was going to be a pandemic, well before the [World Health Organization.] So did you know it was going to spread?' 

Trump said that he 'did know it.'  

'All - anybody knew it. Just - are you ready? How many cases were in the United States when I did my ban? How many people had died in the United States?' Trump continued to ask. 

When Jiang took that to mean that he didn't think it was going to spread, Trump laid into her. 

'Keep your voice down, please,' he told her 'Keep your voice down.' 

In an interview with The New York Post last week, Trump said neither Jiang nor her colleague Paula Reid were a 'Donna Reed.'  

'It wasn't Donna Reed, I can tell you that,' Trump said, referring to the the mom in an eponymous family TV sitcom of the '50s and '60s. 

In late April, President Trump abruptly cut off one of his coronavirus press briefings without taking any questions from the press shortly after Collins refused to move to the back of the room.

Collins said she was asked by White House officials to swap seats with another reporter several rows behind her, minutes before Trump's briefing on Friday afternoon.

Reporters' seats are assigned in advance through the White House Correspondents Association, and major TV networks, such as CNN, have front row seats. 

Collins cited the WHCA guidelines and refused to switch seats with Washington Blade's Chris Johnson, who was sitting in the sixth row and who also refused to move. A White House official then suggested the Secret Service would get involved if they didn't swap seats, although no action was taken. 

Moments later, Trump entered the room for the briefing but cut it short after 22 minutes, failing to take any questions from the press.  

Kaitlan Collins, CNN's White House Correspondent, said she was asked by White House officials to swap seats with another reporter several rows back minutes before Trump's briefing on Friday afternoon

Kaitlan Collins, CNN's White House Correspondent, said she was asked by White House officials to swap seats with another reporter several rows back minutes before Trump's briefing on Friday afternoon

Kaitlin Collins, circled, had a front row seat at that April 24 briefing

Kaitlin Collins, circled, had a front row seat at that April 24 briefing

Trump left the briefing after 22 minutes, refusing to take questions from the media

Trump left the briefing after 22 minutes, refusing to take questions from the media 

 

The day before that briefing, Trump had a spat with Collins as he addressed a question from another reporter about Kim Jong Un's health status, as reports circulated the North Korean dictator was near death.

When Collins tried to follow up with her own question, Trump cut her off, saying: 'No, that’s enough. The problem is, you don’t write the truth.' 

Collins tried to interject, but Trump said: 'No, not CNN. I told you, CNN is fake news. Don’t talk to me.' 

It seems Thursday's altercation played into Friday's incident when the White House tried to move Collins to the back of the room.  

However, the White House does not control press seating.  

It is handled by the WHCA and is seating is determined by the news outlet's size. 

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2020-05-12 03:18:23Z
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White House staff ordered to wear masks - BBC News

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White House staff have been ordered to wear masks when entering the West Wing after two aides tested positive for coronavirus.

The White House personnel office has said that staff must cover their faces at all times except when seated at their desks, socially distant from colleagues.

The directive comes after an aide for Vice-President Mike Pence and a valet for President Trump fell ill.

Mr Trump said he required the policy.

Appearing without a mask in the Rose Garden for a press briefing on Monday, however, the president claimed he did not need to follow the directive because he kept "far away from everyone", and played down the White House infections.

"We have hundreds of people a day pouring into the White House" each day, he said. "I think we're doing a good job containing it."

Three members of the White House coronavirus task force went into self-isolation for two weeks after possible exposure to the illness.

They include Dr Anthony Fauci, who has become the public face of the fight against the virus in the US.

Mr Pence's press secretary Katie Miller, the wife of Trump aide Stephen Miller, tested positive for the virus on Friday.

Her diagnosis came after a valet for US President Donald Trump was also confirmed to have the illness.

Mr Trump shrugged of the White House spread, saying it was "basically one person" who had contracted the virus and that people who were in contact had since tested negative.

What else did President Trump say?

Mr Trump said more funds would be made available to increase testing in states.

The government is to provide $11bn (£8.9bn) to states to meet testing goals this month. States were asked how many tests they hope to conduct in May, and will be given supplies to match the targets.

Senior White House officials who come into regular contact with Mr Trump are currently being tested daily for the coronavirus.

Pressed by journalists on when all Americans could expect to have access to testing, Mr Trump said: "If someone wants to be tested right now they will be able to be tested". The claim is heavily disputed.

Donald Trump held his press conference to talk about the growing number of coronavirus tests available to Americans, but it was the impact of the pandemic on the White House itself that became the focus of attention.

At an event held in the Rose Garden last week, none of the attendees, including Vice-President Mike Pence, wore masks. Four days later, Pence - regularly at the president's side - was notably absent, his press secretary having tested positive for the virus days ago. Everyone in attendance, including presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner, had masks, after a directive requiring them for all White House staff.

It was an order that applied to everyone - that is, except the president, who continued to decline the protection.

This made for a striking contrast, as Trump spoke of the "pent-up demand" and "enthusiasm" in the US for reopening businesses and easing government-ordered social distance restrictions, while denying that the system that protects White House personnel from infection had broken down.

"We have a lot of people coming in and out," he said. "We are running a country."

It underlines a fundamental challenge facing the US in the days ahead. Can the US economy reopen and recover when even the White House isn't safe?

What's going on with testing?

For weeks, Mr Trump has sought to encourage an easing of lockdown measures throughout the US, arguing it was time to get back to work amid dire economic news.

However, public health experts have warned that easing restrictions too early could lead to a resurgence of transmissions and a second coronavirus wave.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) had issued guidelines suggesting that lockdowns should not be eased unless a region has seen 14 days of declines in infections and be able to conduct 30 tests for every thousand residents.

According to the CovidTracking Project, a charity, they US conducted an average of 248,000 daily tests in the first week of May.

According to the White House, the number has increased to 300,000 a day, but prominent public health researchers say at least 900,000 daily tests are needed before the US should reopen.

As of this week, the US has tested only 2.75% of its 330 million population, and no state has tested 10% of residents. In over a dozen states where lockdown measures have been relaxed, including Texas, South Carolina and Arizona, less than 2% of residents have been tested.

Last week, the White House rejected the CDC's reopening guidance, but some states are adopting the standards.

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2020-05-12 02:16:34Z
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