logo
Trump pardons ex-Connecticut Governor Rowland and commutes Chicago gang leader Hoover's sentence

Trump pardons ex-Connecticut Governor Rowland and commutes Chicago gang leader Hoover's sentence

Yahooa day ago

President Donald Trump has pardoned Connecticut's former Republican Gov. John Rowland, who was convicted in two federal criminal cases, including one that contributed to his resignation
Trump also commuted the prison sentence for notorious Chicago gang leader Larry Hoover, a White House spokesman told Fox News Digital.
Rowland was released early from federal custody in 2018 after his 2014 conviction for election fraud and obstruction of justice. That was his second stint in prison after his 2004 federal corruption conviction.
In July 2004, Rowland resigned less than halfway through his third term as governor instead of testifying before a special House Committee inquiry. He pleaded guilty that year to his role in a pay-to-play scheme that included $90,000 in luxury flights on Key Air, an Oxford, Connecticut-based airline, to Las Vegas and Florida.
Trump Announces Pardon For Todd And Julie Chrisley After Reality Tv Stars' Fraud, Tax Evasion Convictions
He served 10 months in federal prison and several months of house arrest in that case.
Read On The Fox News App
Trump also commuted the sentence of Larry Hoover.
Hoover, the co-founder of the Chicago gang Gangster Disciples, has been serving a life sentence at a supermax prison in Colorado.
Trump Pardons Former Virginia Sheriff Convicted Of Taking $75K In Bribes
He was originally imprisoned for a 1973 murder and later convicted in 1998 for operating a criminal enterprise. At the time of his 1998 conviction, Hoover was serving a 200-year sentence for the killing of drug dealer William "Pooky" Young.
He later renounced his criminal activities and sought a reduced sentence. It was unclear when Hoover would be released from prison. During a 2018 meeting with Trump, Kanye "Ye" West campaigned for Hoover's freedom.
"So, it's very important for me to get Hoover out, because in an alternate universe, I am him," West said, according to a White House transcript of the meeting. "And I have to go and get him free because he was doing positive inside of Chicago, just like how I'm moving back to Chicago, and it's not just about, you know, getting on stage and being an entertainer and having a monolithic voice that's forced to be a specific party."
Trump also pardoned rapper Kentrell Gaulden, the Louisiana-based artist known as NBA YoungBoy who was convicted of possessing weapons as a felon and released from prison earlier this year.
Also pardoned were former U.S. Rep. Michael Grimm, R-N.Y.; Kevin Eric Baisden; Mark C. Bashaw; former reality television personalities Todd and Julie Chrisley; and Tanner Mansell and John Moore, who were both convicted of stealing fish gear in federal waters.
The Associated Press contributed to this report. Original article source: Trump pardons ex-Connecticut Governor Rowland and commutes Chicago gang leader Hoover's sentence

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Democrats to square off in Wayne primary for chance to challenge mayor
Democrats to square off in Wayne primary for chance to challenge mayor

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Democrats to square off in Wayne primary for chance to challenge mayor

WAYNE — A pair of Democrats will vie for the party nomination to run for mayor in one of the only contested primary elections in Passaic County on June 10. James Freeswick, 75, is facing Donald Pavlak Jr., 64, the Board of Education president and the candidate endorsed by party leaders. The winner will challenge Republican Mayor Christopher Vergano in a general election on Nov. 4. Vergano, 66, is finishing his fourth four-year term. He is uncontested in the GOP primary. The contested race pits two men who each possess a desire to serve the community, although Pavlak has enjoyed much more success at the polls. The retired police sergeant has never lost an election, while Freeswick has come up short in seven attempts. This marks his third bid for the mayor's office. But just to participate in the process, Freeswick said, is a token victory. Municipal government: Clifton City Council members last got a raise in 1962. Is it time for another? 'I believe in American democracy,' said Freeswick, whose foray into politics began when he was elected as the first Student Council president of Wayne Hills High School nearly 60 years ago. 'I don't take it personally when I lose an election,' he added. 'It's the way it is — the voters get to decide.' Freeswick may have a better shot to win this primary, he said, because Gov. Phil Murphy signed a new law on March 6 to overhaul the ballot design, obliterating a county-line system that was viewed as unfair to non-endorsed candidates. The controversial change was precipitated by a federal lawsuit filed last year by then-Rep. Andy Kim, a Democrat who has since succeeded Bob Menéndez as senator. 'It can't hurt,' Freeswick said of his more conspicuous ballot position. 'It certainly can't hurt — it's certainly more equitable.' Pavlak, meanwhile, said he is relying on his reputation as a straight shooter. He said he models his honest approach after his late father, who was the police chief here until retiring in September 1999. Story continues below photo gallery. 'I always prided myself on telling the truth,' said Pavlak, now in his seventh term on the school board. 'Whether you like it or don't like it, you're going to hear the truth out of my mouth.' Freeswick and Pavlak expressed similar attitudes toward promoting the local economy, repairing crumbling infrastructure and stabilizing the tax base. Their opinions varied significantly on affordable housing. Pavlak said he would explore ideas to satisfy the state mandate that do not involve private development. He stopped short of suggesting that he would recommend the formation of a public housing authority. 'The vision I have is to keep Wayne the community that it is and to not make it a vertical community,' said Pavlak, a 1979 graduate of DePaul Catholic High School. 'Every option should be on the table. We have used the same playbook for 20-plus years, and it's not working.' Freeswick attacked his opponent's plan to address the issue, calling it 'very vague.' He said he is opposed to public housing and that if elected, he would adopt the method used by the current administration — settling site by site with for-profit builders. 'That's the way municipalities in New Jersey have complied with their Mount Laurel quotas,' Freeswick said. 'That's the best path to follow.' Three at-large seats on the Township Council are also up for grabs, and the Democrat and Republican slates are uncontested in their respective primaries. Council members Jill Sasso and David Varano, both Republicans finishing their second terms, did not seek reelection. The county's only other contested primary is happening in Wanaque, where Borough Council President Edward Leonard and Councilman Dominick Cortellessa are being challenged by Republican Angela Demetriou. In-person early voting begins on June 3 at 10 a.m., a week before the date of the primaries. Philip DeVencentis is a reporter for For access to the most important news in your community, subscribe or activate your digital account. Email: devencentis@ This article originally appeared on Wayne NJ Democrats vie to challenge mayor in 2025 election

Exclusive: Schumer's new megabill play
Exclusive: Schumer's new megabill play

Politico

time30 minutes ago

  • Politico

Exclusive: Schumer's new megabill play

IN TODAY'S EDITION:— Schumer zeroes in on clean-energy credits— Oversight race heats up — Megabill could hit hospitals hard Chuck Schumer tells us Democrats have a ripe new target in their fight against the megabill: leveraging Republican infighting over whether to eviscerate clean-energy credits. In an exclusive interview with Lisa Thursday, the Senate minority leader said his caucus is looking to make it politically untenable for Majority Leader John Thune and his members to follow House Republicans in gutting green credits under the Biden-era climate law. Those credits, Schumer points out, have widely benefited red states. Schumer's game plan: Needle Republicans already wary of job and investment losses back home to compel Thune to skip the drastic cuts that House GOP leaders included to bring hard-liners along. How Senate Democrats will do it: Ramp up the public pressure campaign Schumer kick-started Thursday against the backdrop of a rooftop solar field in Manhattan, and force Republicans to take tough votes through eventual vote-a-rama amendments. 'There are a whole number of Republicans, particularly those that have a lot of clean-energy investments in their states, who really didn't like what the House did,' Schumer told Lisa. 'And the question is: Will they be able to put enough pressure on Thune, or even vote [with us] on some amendments?' Why Schumer sees this as a fruitful avenue for attack: A quartet of GOP senators — Lisa Murkowski, Thom Tillis, John Curtis and Jerry Moran — warned their leadership weeks ago against a 'full-scale repeal of current credits.' Tillis has already raised concerns about the House language. Schumer said he's spoken privately to 'a good number of Republican colleagues' who dislike the House's cuts, but declined to name names. 'The irony here is most of the new solar, wind and battery factories are in red states. And so we want to make it clear … [the rollbacks] are going to be huge problems in their states,' Schumer said. Democrats may have an unlikely ally in this fight. Elon Musk's Tesla on Thursday blasted plans to phase out the clean-energy tax credits and terminate most credits for electric vehicles at the end of the year, arguing it would 'threaten America's energy independence and the reliability of our grid.' But Republicans have a more pressing challenge awaiting in the Senate. Pet policy provisions that House Republicans tucked into the megabill could get ruled out by the Senate parliamentarian for not meeting the Byrd Rule — the requirement that components of a reconciliation package have budgetary impacts. And they could get cut in what's known as a 'Byrd Bath.' The seven 'Byrd droppings' to keep an eye on, per our Jordain Carney this morning: tax-cut accounting, AI regulations, judicial powers, gun regulations, farm bill provisions, Planned Parenthood funds and energy permitting. TGIF. Wouldn't be a recess without a Sen. Chuck Grassley Dairy Queen post. See you all on Monday. And email your Inside Congress scribes at lkashinsky@ mmccarthy@ and bleonard@ THE LEADERSHIP SUITE Johnson's text to Musk Speaker Mike Johnson said he defended the House-passed GOP megabill to Musk after the billionaire publicly trashed it Tuesday for not cutting enough spending. 'I sent my good friend Elon a long text message last night explaining it can be both big and beautiful,' Johnson said in an interview with Fox News on Thursday, adding that the Congressional Budget Office projections that Musk referred to are 'historically totally unreliable.' The speaker also said the projections didn't take into account potential revenue from President Donald Trump's tariffs. 'This is a pro-growth package,' Johnson said. 'Lower tax rates, less regulation. We'll do exactly what we did in the first Trump administration, but this time on steroids.' Musk is scheduled to have a press conference with Trump in the Oval Office at 1:30 p.m. today to mark 'his last day,' according to a Truth Social post Thursday. Oversight election heats up The race to replace the late Rep. Gerry Connolly as the top Democrat on House Oversight is officially on. Reps. Stephen Lynch, 70, and Robert Garcia, 47, both launched campaigns on Thursday, while Rep. Kweisi Mfume, 76, told colleagues he intends to run, our Nicholas Wu and Hailey Fuchs report. Lynch, who's been filling in for Connolly on the dais, touted the former ranking member's 'trust and endorsement' as part of his opening pitch in a letter to colleagues. Garcia, in a nod to how the contest will test Democrats' appetite for elevating younger leaders to leadership roles, suggested his caucus needed to value 'fresh energy' as well as seniority. Mfume likened himself to fellow Marylander and former Oversight Chair Elijah Cummings, who died in 2019, in his own letter to colleagues. The election to serve as one of Democrats' most prominent foils to Trump will take place June 24. Candidates will first go before the House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee, which will then make recommendations to the full caucus. Key Republicans ramp up probes of Biden's decline Top Republicans may not be able to steer clear of the recent maelstrom over President Joe Biden's mental state much longer. Sens. John Cornyn and Eric Schmitt will force the issue June 18 when they hold a Senate Judiciary hearing probing Biden's decline while in office. GOP leaders have given hard-liners some leash on these red-meat probes in the past. But they remain fearful that going too far down conspiracy rabbit holes could backfire politically, our Kyle Cheney writes in, especially when it comes to a former president no longer seeking office. POLICY RUNDOWN MEGABILL COULD HIT HOSPITALS HARD — Health care providers could lose close to $800 billion in revenue over the next decade if the House-passed GOP megabill becomes law, according to a new analysis from the Urban Institute backed by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Hospitals would take the brunt of the losses, with $306 billion in lost revenue, per the analysis from the think tank and philanthropy headed by former CDC acting director Rich Besser. Prescription drug revenue would also fall by $184 billion, and physicians' revenue would fall by $79 billion. Uncompensated care would rise $198 billion over a decade. Those findings stem from changes to both Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act under the bill, which would cumulatively lead to more than 11 million people losing health care coverage, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Republicans have made the case that they're going after waste, fraud and abuse in Medicaid, while Democrats argue that provisions like Medicaid work requirements will lead to many people who are eligible losing coverage. MAJOR NEW CRYPTO BILL — House Financial Services Chair French Hill released a new version of landmark cryptocurrency legislation aiming to overhaul the regulation of digital assets, our Jasper Goodman and Katherine Hapgood report. The legislation is central to Republicans' push to move industry-friendly crypto legislation, and has three Democratic backers already. It would divide oversight of digital assets among regulators by giving the Commodity Futures Trading Commission new power over them. Hill is eyeing a June 10 markup for a committee vote on the legislation, according to three people with knowledge of the matter who were granted anonymity to discuss unannounced plans. Republicans, with the support of key crypto industry players, are considering tying this bill to different stablecoin legislation and passing both by the August recess. But that could complicate the path forward for the latter. As Senate Banking Chair Tim Scott recently told Katherine: 'Why would we want to do both at the same time when we already have the votes to do the GENIUS Act by itself?' RUBIO'S OVERHAUL — Secretary of State Marco Rubio is pushing to gut his agency's human rights bureau as part of a massive reorganization, according to internal documents obtained by our Robbie Gramer and people familiar with the planning. The State Department sent a document to Congress notifying lawmakers of the changes that call for the elimination of most offices in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor. That would lead to funding freezes or cuts to programs ranging from internet freedom initiatives in autocratic countries to support for pro-democracy civil society groups facing repression in sub-Saharan Africa. It also calls for the creation of new positions that reflect Trump administration values, including emphasizing debates over digital censorship and creating a deputy assistant secretary of State role focused on 'Democracy and Western Values.' The move is part of a wider effort to reorganize more than 300 bureaus and offices outlined in the document, all to revamp what the Trump administration views as an unwieldy and bloated foreign policy bureaucracy. Best of POLITICO Pro and E&E: CAMPAIGN STOP HUIZENGA DEFIANT — Republican Rep. Bill Huizenga is moving ahead with plans to run for Michigan's open Senate seat despite GOP attempts to dissuade him. He intends to make a final decision this summer, Adam Wren and Lisa scooped. Huizenga's update came a day after the NRSC went public with its attempts to keep him out of the GOP primary against former Rep. Mike Rogers. But Huizenga argues Republicans need a new candidate after Rogers lost to now-Sen. Elissa Slotkin, a Democrat, last year even as Trump won the state. ICYMI: HOYER'S CHALLENGER — Former House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, 85, has drawn a 35-year-old challenger who's explicitly calling to 'stop treating congressional seats as lifetime appointments.' Harry Jarin is the latest in a wave of younger Democrats mounting long-shot challenges to aging incumbents. TUNNEL TALK NEW ETHICS REPORT — The Office of Congressional Conduct believes Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick may have violated House rules while requesting community project funding, also known as earmarks, on behalf of a for-profit entity, Hailey and Nicholas report. The findings of a new report made public Thursday by the congressional watchdog group — which reviews outside ethics complaints against House members and recommends further action to the House Ethics Committee — builds on allegations the Florida Democrat has been facing since 2023. THE CARRYOUT Welcome back to our Capitol Hill food recommendations — by Hill people, for Hill people. We're back with our next lawmaker-suggested eat. Sen. Ruben Gallego isn't a fan of any food on the Hill, though the former House member claims Senate food is far better than what's available on the House side. When he's in DC, he will occasionally settle for some Old Bay wings. Do you agree? Email us at mmccarthy@ and lkashinsky@ THE BEST OF THE REST New York NGOs Worry They Won't Be Able to Make Up for Steep Medicaid and SNAP Cuts, from Shifra Dayak at NOTUS Trump's Senate Antagonists (Ranked), from Leigh Ann Caldwell at Puck CAPITOL HILL INFLUENCE Former Sen. Jon Tester is joining Unite the Country as a senior adviser. FIRST IN INSIDE CONGRESS: NO TAX ON TIPS TAKEDOWN — The Independent Restaurant Coalition sent a letter urging members of Congress to amend the portion of the megabill that would eliminate taxes on tips to include changes to the way service charges are taxed. The letter was signed by more than 500 business owners and workers from 47 states. The Senate already unanimously passed No Tax on Tips outside of the reconciliation package. CRYPTO GIANT ADDS DEM LOBBYING SUPPORT — Tether has started working with Lilette Advisors, the firm started last year by Biden alumni, on the GOP-led GENIUS Act beginning on May 6, POLITICO Influence reports. Ankit Desai, who worked for Biden during his time in the Senate, is listed as the sole lobbyist on the account. Tether previously added Miller Strategies, Ridgeline Advocacy Group and Jucundus Business Services — additions that made its roster of hired guns overwhelmingly Republican. HAPPY BIRTHDAY Former Rep. Steve Israel … NBC's Frank Thorp … Reema Dodin … Miryam Lipper … Stratton Kirton … Loren Duggan … Nicholas Ballasy … POLITICO's Maggie Miller … Rob Noel … Novartis' Nicole Longo … Jeff Freeland … Chris Gowen … Holland & Knight's Scott Mason TRIVIA THURSDAY'S ANSWER: Shanelle Wilson correctly answered that fiscal 1997 was the last time Congress passed all 12 regular appropriations bills on time. TODAY'S QUESTION, from Shanelle: A proposed amendment becomes part of the Constitution as soon as it is ratified by how many states? The first person to correctly guess gets a mention in the next edition of Inside Congress. Send your answers to insidecongress@

Seattle weather: Sunny, warm to end the week
Seattle weather: Sunny, warm to end the week

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Seattle weather: Sunny, warm to end the week

The Brief A weak cold front brought light rain and cooler temperatures to western Washington on Thursday, dropping highs by 10-20 degrees. Sunshine and summer-like warmth are expected to return on Friday as a high pressure ridge rebuilds. Another cold front on Saturday may bring showers, with skies clearing and temperatures in the low 70s next week. SEATTLE - A weak cold front swept through early this morning, bringing light rain and cooler temperatures to western Washington on Thursday. After seeing highs in the 80s yesterday, they were about 10-20 degrees cooler today, near the average of 68 degrees. What's next A high pressure ridge once again rebuilds tonight with sunshine and summer-like warmth back on Friday. Another disturbance and cold front will push through Saturday afternoon bringing another chance for showers. Amounts will be similar to Wednesday morning's rain, ranging between .10-.30". After Saturday's rain chance, skies will once again clear with plenty of sunshine and highs hovering in the low 70s for much of next week. The Source Information in this story came from FOX 13 Seattle Meteorologist Ilona McCauley and the National Weather Service. Ex-Seattle police Chief Adrian Diaz files lawsuit, claims wrongful termination Crews battle Second Creek Fire near Leavenworth, WA 2 injured in separate Seattle shootings Teen, child killed in Lacey, WA mobile home fire Crews investigate explosion at Woodinville, WA hardware store College Inn Pub announces closure after 50 years in Seattle Dave's Hot Chicken to open 4 new locations in Seattle area. Here's where To get the best local news, weather and sports in Seattle for free, sign up for the daily FOX Seattle Newsletter. Download the free FOX LOCAL app for mobile in the Apple App Store or Google Play Store for live Seattle news, top stories, weather updates and more local and national news.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store