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SCAR organizer arrested Saturday for alleged actions during Wednesday's protest
SCAR organizer arrested Saturday for alleged actions during Wednesday's protest

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

SCAR organizer arrested Saturday for alleged actions during Wednesday's protest

Jun. 16—Police on Saturday arrested an organizer for Spokane Community Against Racism for alleged actions he took Wednesday during a protest against immigration enforcement. Justice Forral, 33, is expected to face charges of third-degree assault of a law enforcement officer, according to court records. The Spokane County Sheriff's Office wrote in a news release they believe Forral grabbed a deputy's head and knocked off his hat in the midst of a group blocking a van outside of Spokane's ICE facility at 411 W. Cataldo Ave. The protest escalated from a sit-in protest started by former Spokane City Council President Ben Stuckart, to a gathering of hundreds of people that police eventually ordered to disperse. When they didn't leave, police deployed smoke canisters, pepper balls and foam projectiles. Forral was first arrested Wednesday on suspicion of unlawful imprisonment and failure to disperse. Police say Forral was part of the group blocking a van from leaving, according to the news release. More than 30 people were arrested that night, according to previous reports from The Spokesman-Review. Forral was later released without having to post bail only to be arrested again Saturday morning in Riverfront Park during the Pride celebration on the new assault allegations. Forral's attorney declined to comment Monday. SCAR did not respond to request for comment.

Amid demand for satellite support, Space Force leans on commercial
Amid demand for satellite support, Space Force leans on commercial

Yahoo

time16-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Amid demand for satellite support, Space Force leans on commercial

The Space Force this week announced a new Joint Antenna Marketplace aimed at helping it leverage commercial capacity and relieve the strain on its Satellite Control Network. Space Systems Command said Monday it awarded contracts to two firms — Auria, formerly Boecore, and Sphinx Defense — to establish the cloud-based marketplace prototype, dubbed JAM, which will connect satellite operations centers with government and commercial antennas. The service said Monday it's using the Pentagon's software acquisition pathway to create the marketplace, a tailored procurement method meant to help programs buy software more quickly. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth recently mandated that all military software be developed and purchased through the pathway. 'The program is currently in the planning phase of the Software Acquisition Pathway and is accelerating commercial capability delivery via prototype development,' SSC said in a statement. JAM will expand the Space Force's existing globally dispersed Satellite Control Network, or SCN, which provides critical launch support, satellite tracking and control, and emergency assistance for spacecraft. The Defense Department and other federal agencies rely on the network for operations support, and demand for the capability has grown significantly in recent years. For the last decade, utilization rates have surpassed the industry standard, according to a 2023 Government Accountability Office report. Space Force officials have said the current SCN architecture on its own may not meet the military's capacity needs during a conflict. The antennas in line to augment and eventually replace SCN's aging infrastructure through a program called Satellite Communications Augmentation Resource, or SCAR, are expected to increase satellite communications capacity by ten-fold for spacecraft in geosynchronous orbit, the Space Force estimates. The new phased-array antennas are being built by BlueHalo. The systems, dubbed Badger, provide multi-beam, multi-orbit mission operations and are designed to make it easier to track and manage satellites. They can also be easily transported around the world. The Space Force awarded the company $1.4 billion in 2022 to deliver 12 units by the early 2030s. However, under its current schedule, the first units won't deliver until the end of this year – a timeline that the service's acting acquisition executive says is not fast enough. Maj. Gen. Stephen Purdy told lawmakers Thursday that while SCAR is making progress, the program is moving 'too slow for my taste and too slow for the need.' Speaking at a House Armed Services Committee hearing, he said that along with helping the Space Force better leverage commercial systems, JAM provides a 'backup plan' for SCAR that provides the extra support in the near term. JAM builds on experimentation the service has conducted with the Space Development Agency and the Space Rapid Capabilities Office to integrate commercial capabilities through a cloud-based SCN. The marketplace 'is going after full-up commercial,' Purdy said, and will open up significant new capacity.

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