Exclusive-Fistful of dollars and rice for Vietnam farmers displaced for $1.5 billion Trump golf clubNew Foto - Exclusive-Fistful of dollars and rice for Vietnam farmers displaced for $1.5 billion Trump golf club

By Khanh Vu and Francesco Guarascio HUNG YEN, August 11 (Reuters) -Vietnamese farmer Nguyen Thi Huong has slept poorly since authorities told her to vacate her farm for a Trump family-backed golf resort, offering just $3,200 and rice provisions in return. The golf resort, for which construction is scheduled to begin next month, is offering thousands of villagers such compensation packages to leave the land that has provided their livelihood for years or decades, according to six people with direct knowledge and documents seen by Reuters. The project is the first partnership for the family business of U.S. President Donald Trump in Vietnam, which fast-tracked approvals as it negotiated a crucial trade deal with Washington. Developers are now cutting compensation forecasts from an initial estimate exceeding $500 million, said one person familiar with the plans who declined to elaborate on reasons for the reduction. The 990-hectare site designated for the golf course currently supports fruit farms growing bananas, longan, and other crops. While some see opportunity, many farmers are elderly and fear they will struggle to find alternative livelihoods in Vietnam's vibrant economy with its largely young demographic. "The whole village is worried about this project because it will take our land and leave us jobless," said 50-year-old Huong, who was told to leave her 200-square-metre (2152.78 square-feet) plot in Hung Yen province near capital Hanoi for less than the average pay for one year in Vietnam. Vietnamese real estate company Kinhbac City and its partners will develop the luxury golf club after paying the Trump Organization $5 million for brand licensing rights, according to regulatory filings and a source familiar with the deal. Trump's family business will run the club once completed, but is not involved in the investment and in compensation to farmers. Trump has said his assets in the businesses are held in a trust managed by his children, but disclosures in June showed income from those sources ultimately accrues to the president. Vietnam's agriculture ministry, Hung Yen authorities, the Trump Organization and Kinhbac City did not reply to questions on compensation rates. Authorities will determine final compensation rates based on land size and location, with formal approval expected next month. Five farmers facing dispossessions said authorities flagged reimbursements worth between $12 and $30 per square metre of farmland. They also offered additional payments for uprooted plants and provisions of rice for some months, roughly in line with one document seen by Reuters. The person familiar with the compensation plan said the range was accurate, declining to be named because the information was not public. A local official declined to talk about the compensation but said rates for farmland in the area have usually not exceeded $14 per square metre. They are often higher in other provinces. In Communist-run Vietnam, farmland is managed by the state. Farmers are assigned small plots for long-term use but have little say when authorities decide to take the land back. Protests are common but usually fruitless. Compensation is paid by the state but developers foot the bill. Four of the farmers contacted by Reuters were not happy with the proposed rates because their small plots would produce low payments. Thousands of villagers will be affected, according to a second document from local authorities seen by Reuters, which stated final payment decisions were expected next month. Huong leases a larger plot from other villagers, but can claim land compensation only for the small one assigned to her and for the plants she grows. "What can someone like me do after that?" RICE FOR LAND Vietnam's Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh said farmers would be reimbursed fairly when he spoke in May at the groundbreaking ceremony for the golf project to an audience that included Trump's son Eric, a senior vice president of the Trump Organization. "We have no right to negotiate. That's a shame," said Do Dinh Huong, another farmer who was told his plot would be compensated at roughly $12 per square metre. He said he would have accepted what he believed was a low rate if the land were to be used to build roads or other public infrastructure. "But this is a business project. I don't know how that would contribute to people's life." Authorities have also offered rice as compensation, with provisions varying from two to twelve months, according to one of the documents seen by Reuters. Nguyen Thi Chuc, a 54-year-old farmer who grows bananas in what will become the Trump golf club, was told by authorities she might receive roughly $30 per square metre for her 200-square-metre plot. "I'm getting old and can't do anything else other than working on the farm," she said. Conversely, lawyers and investors in the province said the golf club would create better jobs and enrich villagers. Le Van Tu, a 65-year-old local who will be compensated for his small plot and owns an eatery in a village that the golf club will abut, said he will upgrade his diner into a restaurant to cater to wealthier clients. Land prices in the village have risen fivefold since the project was announced in October, he said. He was also happy a nearby pig farm will be gone: "It won't be stinky anymore." (Reporting by Francesco Guarascio and Khanh Vu; Editing by Saad Sayeed)

Exclusive-Fistful of dollars and rice for Vietnam farmers displaced for $1.5 billion Trump golf club

Exclusive-Fistful of dollars and rice for Vietnam farmers displaced for $1.5 billion Trump golf club By Khanh Vu and Francesco Guarascio HUN...
'The courts are helpless': Inside the Trump administration's steady erosion of judicial powerNew Foto - 'The courts are helpless': Inside the Trump administration's steady erosion of judicial power

Six months into Donald Trump's second term, his administration is at war with the federal judiciary, evading court orders blocking its agenda, suing judges for alleged misconduct, and veering toward what multiple current and former federal judges say could be a constitutional crisis. The administration this summer sued the entire federal district court in Maryland after its chief judge temporarily blocked immigration removals. It also filed a judicial misconduct complaint recently against the chief judge of the powerful DC District Court, James "Jeb" Boasberg, over comments he reportedly made in private to Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts in March. The standoff is unlikely to end anytime soon. On Friday,an appeals court ruledthat Boasberg cannot move ahead in his effort to hold Trump administration officials in contempt for misleading him in a fast-moving case in which migrant detainees were handed over to a Salvadoran prison. As Trump-appointed judges across the country continue to deliver the administration wins, the federal judiciary's ability to be a check on the executive branch has slowly been diminished. "They are trying to intimidate, threaten and just run over the courts in ways that we have never seen," said one retired federal judge, who, like about a half-dozen other former and current judges, spoke to CNN anonymously given the climate of harassment the Trump administration has created and the tradition of jurists not to comment publicly on politics and ongoing disputes. The courts have tools to fight back — a lawyer in a courtroom who refuses a direct order or lies could be held in contempt on the spot. Judges also have the power to demand witness testimony and documents. They may also commission independent investigations and can make a criminal referral or levy civil penalties, like fines. But so far, many judges have hesitated to move too quickly to levy sanctions or other punishments aimed at the Trump administration. "The truth is we are at the mercy of the executive branch," said one former federal appellate judge, adding that courts have fewer enforcement mechanisms than the White House, such as law enforcement and prosecutorial power. Sanctions situations also typically escalate slowly, and appeal opportunities for the Justice Department are ample and can take years. "At the end of the day, courts are helpless," the former judge added. Some judges, like Boasberg in Washington, DC, andJudge Paula Xinisin Maryland, have already analyzed how they could respond to disobedience by moving toward sanctions or contempt proceedings for members of the Trump administration. In both judges' courts, the administration has delayed following judicial orders when detainees were sent to a prison in El Salvador without the proper due process. Courts also move slowly at times. In one Maryland case on Friday, lawyers for a Venezuelan man sent to El Salvador by the Trump administration told a judge they are still looking at whether they'll ask the court to hold the administration in contempt. The administration actions happened in March. "The more egregious the contemptible behavior, the more speedy the judge will probably move, and the heavier weapons they'll use," said another former federal judge, who sat on a trial-level district court bench. "Courts in general will see they need to move with speed and sharpness on this, if they're going to get to the bottom of what happened," the former judge added. In some situations, Trump-appointed judges have slowed or stopped direct conflict between the administration and judges. The Supreme Court, with its conservative majority, this year signed off in Trump's favor on most emergency disputes over the use of his powers to reshape the federal government, undercutting standoffs. But Trump's appointees to the federal bench haven't unilaterally refrained from questioning the executive's approach. For instance, in a case over the Trump administration stopping the payout of grant programs, a judge in Rhode Island on Friday chastised the Department of Housing and Urban Development for "inaction" as potentially a "serious violation of the Court's order." Nonprofit groups that received grants for affordable housing for low-income senior citizens had reported the administration hadn't paid out $760 million in grants the court said it must months ago. The judge, the Trump-appointee Mary McElroy in the Rhode Island US District Court, responded, "At risk of understatement, that is serious," then invited the Trump administration to "explain itself." In Boasberg's immigration case on Friday, a divided DC Circuit Court of Appeals with two Trump appointees in the majority ended a contempt proceeding that began three and a half months ago. The hold that had been over the case and the decision Friday have hurt Boasberg's ability to gather evidence of suspected disobedience of Trump administration officials toward the court. Judge Greg Katsas of the DC Circuit, a Trump appointee, wrote that stopping the criminal contempt proceeding could help defuse a long and messy standoff between the judiciary and the Trump administration. Boasberg has already signaled some of his other options. "This Court will follow up," he said at a hearing in late July, noting recent whistleblower revelations about Justice Department leadership's approach to the case. "In addition, whether or not I am ultimately permitted to go forward with the contempt proceedings, I will certainly be assessing whether government counsel's conduct and veracity to the Court warrant a referral to state bars or our grievance committee which determines lawyers' fitness to practice in our court," the judge added in July. In late June, a whistleblowerpublicly accusedthen-top Trump Justice Department official Emil Bove of telling attorneys they may need to ignore court orders like Boasberg's and "consider telling the courts 'f*** you,'" the whistleblower wrote to Congress. Since then, Bove, a former defense attorney to Trump personally,was confirmedby the Republican-held Senate to become a judge himself. He now sits on the 3rd Circuit federal appeals court overseeing Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware. Bove told the Senate he couldn't recall whether he made the comments about ignoring the courts. Boasberg has been one of the judges who's been most criticized publicly by Trump and others in the president's top circle. Boasberg decided in mid-March the administration couldn't send detainees to El Salvador under a war-time act without due process and told the government to turn the airplanes around and bring the detainees back into US custody. In July, the Justice Department formally complained about Boasberg to the appeals court above him, accusing him of judicial misconduct. That complaint emerged after the conservative websitethe Federalistreported on comments Boasberg made at a private, annual meeting for leaders in the judicial branch — an incident separate from the immigration case he's handled. Boasberg and about a dozen other federal judges from around the country had an informal breakfast meeting with Roberts in early March, CNN has confirmed. When Roberts asked the judges to share what was concerning their jurisdictions, Boasberg said the judges of the trial-level court in Washington, DC, over which he presides, had concerns the Trump administration might ignore court orders, and that would cause a constitutional crisis. Roberts responded without indicating his thoughts, a person familiar with the meeting told CNN. A Supreme Court spokesperson didn't respond to a request for comment. "Judge Boasberg attempted to improperly influence Chief Justice Roberts," said the Justice Department's complaint about the judge, sent to the chief of the appellate court above him. The administration maintains it never intentionally violated his orders in the immigration case, and that after Boasberg spoke to Roberts at the judicial conference, he "began acting on his preconceived belief that the Trump Administration would not follow court orders," a reference to the immigration case proceeding. Steve Vladeck, Georgetown University law professor and CNN legal analyst, called the DOJ's complaint against Boasberg preposterousin a recent analysishe wrote on Substack. Vladeck said that while the complaint is likely to be dismissed when a court reviews it — just as most misconduct complaints against judges are resolved — the Trump administration's approach may have been intended more to intimidate other federal judges and play to the president's base. "None of these developments," including the Boasberg complaint, "are a constitutional crisis unto themselves," Vladeck told CNN. "But they all reflect efforts to undermine the power and prestige of the federal courts for if and when that day comes." "The problem is that too many people are waiting for a crossing-the-Rubicon moment, when what we've seen to date is the Trump administration finding lots of other ways to try to sneak into Rome," Vladeck added. However, several of the former and current judges who spoke to CNN thought the courts aren't yet facing a full-blown constitutional crisis. "We're in the incipient stages of a constitutional crisis. We're in the early stages," one federal judge told CNN recently. "We've all been talking about it since the moment [Trump's] been elected — that the administration could defy federal court orders." A full constitutional crisis, this judge said, would emerge if the administration disregarded Supreme Court orders. That hasn't happened yet, and attorneys from the Justice Department are still engaging in many proceedings by meeting their deadlines and arguing in earnest at court hearings. J. Harvie Wilkinson III, a long-serving, conservative judge appointed by Ronald Reagan on the 4th Circuit US Court of Appeals, pointed to presidential history in a recent opinion telling the Trump administration to follow court orders to facilitate the return of a Maryland immigrant, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, after he was mistakenly sent to El Salvador. Wilkinson wrote about President Dwight Eisenhower being willing to carry out the desegregation of schools following the Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education. "The branches come too close to grinding irrevocably against one another in a conflict that promises to diminish both," Wilkinson wrote. "The Executive may succeed for a time in weakening the courts, but over time history will script the tragic gap between what was and all that might have been, and law in time with sign its epitaph." Some of the Trump administration's unusual attacks of the judiciary are still testing how far they could go. The DOJ filed its complaint as the judges were gathering at the 4th Circuit's conference in Charlotte, North Carolina, in late June. The judges from Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia were shocked when they heard of the lawsuit naming all Maryland federal district judges all as defendants, and the district court realized the need to swiftly hire a lawyer to defend them, people familiar with the response told CNN. The Justice Department has said it sued as a way torein injudicial overreach. Defense attorney Paul Clement, on behalf of the Maryland judges, called the lawsuit "truly extraordinary" and "fundamentally incompatible with the separation of powers." Eleven former federal judges from various circuits, including some appointed by Republican presidents, warned in their own amicus brief in the case that if the Trump administration is allowed to carry its approach through "to its logical conclusion," it would "run roughshod over any effort by the judiciary to preserve its jurisdiction that frustrates the Executive's prerogatives. … That result would be devastating to the efficacy of the Nation's courts." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

‘The courts are helpless’: Inside the Trump administration’s steady erosion of judicial power

'The courts are helpless': Inside the Trump administration's steady erosion of judicial power Six months into Donald Trump's...
Collins homers off Diaz in the 9th inning to give MLB-best Brewers a 7-6 walk-off win over MetsNew Foto - Collins homers off Diaz in the 9th inning to give MLB-best Brewers a 7-6 walk-off win over Mets

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Isaac Collins hit a solo homer off Mets closer Edwin Diaz in the ninth inning and the MLB-best Milwaukee Brewers extended their winning streak to nine games with a 7-6, walk-off win over New York on Sunday. The Brewers trailed 5-0 early and tied it a 6-all in the eighth on Joey Ortiz's two-out RBI single off the glove of diving first baseman Pete Alonso. After Nick Mears (3-3) tossed a scoreless top half of the ninth, Collins sent a 2-2 pitch from Diaz (5-2) 363 feet to right field for his eighth homer. The Mets lost their seventh straight game and fell 5 1/2 games behind NL East-leading Philadelphia. William Contreras had two homers for the Brewers, a solo shot to open a three-run fourth, and a two-run homer in the fifth, his 12th, to pull Milwaukee within 6-5. The Mets scored in each of the first four innings for a five-run lead against Quinn Priester, who had won his previous 10 decisions. New York scored two in the first on RBI singles by Juan Soto and Jeff McNeil. Brett Baty opened the second with his 12th home run and Ronny Mauricio's RBI single made it 3-0 in the third. Cedric Mullins led off the fourth with his 16th home run before the Brewers answered with three runs in the bottom half on Conteras' homer and Ortiz's two-run single with two out. Alonso's RBI double put the Mets up 6-3 in the fifth. Key moment The Brewers had runners on first and third with one out in the seventh, but Tyler Rogers coaxed Andrew Vaughn into an inning-ending double-play grounder to short. Key stat Priester, who had not lost in 12 appearances, including nine starts, since May 13, was tagged for six runs and 10 hits in 4 1/3 innings. Up next RHP Freddy Peralta (13-5, 3.03) starts for the Brewers on Monday against Pirates LHP Andrew Heaney (5-9, 4.77). The Mets are idle Monday before opening a three-game home series against Atlanta. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Collins homers off Diaz in the 9th inning to give MLB-best Brewers a 7-6 walk-off win over Mets

Collins homers off Diaz in the 9th inning to give MLB-best Brewers a 7-6 walk-off win over Mets MILWAUKEE (AP) — Isaac Collins hit a solo ho...
How did Quinn Ewers play vs. Bears? Dolphins QB stalls in NFL preseason debutNew Foto - How did Quinn Ewers play vs. Bears? Dolphins QB stalls in NFL preseason debut

Quinn Ewersjoined theNFLrookie QB debut party on Sunday. Unfortunately, he may have had the worst time of them all. TheMiami Dolphins' 2025 seventh-round pick got the lion's share of the work vs. the Chicago Bears, giving him a first, lengthy taste of NFL action. The one-time five-star recruit and Texas Longhorn product, though, got something of a rude awakening in his Sunday debut. Ewers went just 4-for-16 passing and was under constant duress throughout the matchup, which ended in a24-24 tie. While the expectations are low for Ewers – and the competition even less so given preseason Week 1 – he had a debut that he may want to put in the rearview mirror soon. Here's how Ewers performed: Ewers put together a line to forget in his first NFL game action vs. the Bears: Completions/Attempts:5/18 Passing yards:91 (5.1 YPC) Passing touchdowns:0 Passer rating:48.1 Sacks:2 Interceptions:0 Fumbles (lost):2 (2) Rushing yards (attempts):0 (0) Ewers was the third quarterback on the field for the Dolphins following starterTua TagovailoaandZach Wilson, getting most of the passing work. He played with backups, so the less-than-great performance wasn't entirely on his shoulder pads. Still, Ewers showcased a lack of anticipation on some throws and took two inopportune strip sacks, including one while the Miami offense was backed up near its goal line. Austin Booker has his 3rd sack which leads to a takeaway!Watch on@NFLNetworkStream on@NFLPluspic.twitter.com/eMhWhgaCiX — NFL (@NFL)August 10, 2025 That all makes for a painful performance to forget for the rookie. He'll likely get another bite at the apple when the Dolphins take on the Detroit Lions on Saturday, Aug. 16. As the saying goes, it's only up from here for the Dolphins' seventh-rounder. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Quinn Ewers stats today: Dolphins QB has debut to forget

How did Quinn Ewers play vs. Bears? Dolphins QB stalls in NFL preseason debut

How did Quinn Ewers play vs. Bears? Dolphins QB stalls in NFL preseason debut Quinn Ewersjoined theNFLrookie QB debut party on Sunday. Unfor...
Trump Moves Obama's White House Portrait Out Of Visitors' SightNew Foto - Trump Moves Obama's White House Portrait Out Of Visitors' Sight

President Donald Trump has reportedly moved a portrait of former President Barack Obama to a location in the White House where visitors are typically not allowed, CNN reported Sunday. Theportraitis now hanging at the top of the Grand Staircase in the White House — a location that is generally inaccessible to visitors — alongside portraits of former Presidents George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush,accordingto CNN, which obtained a photo of the Obama portrait in its new location. It is the second time the portrait of Obama has been moved, with Trump having moved it in April in exchange for a photo showing the immediate aftermath of the July 2024assassination attemptTrump survived in Butler, Pennsylvania. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbardreleaseddocuments and amemoJuly 18 detailing evidence Obama's national security team "manufactured and politicized intelligence" as part of what she called a "years-long coup" against Trump after he defeated former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential race. Gabbard said during a July 23 White Housepress briefingshe had referred Obama to the Justice Department for possible criminal charges related to the "Russiagate" hoax, saying Obama led "the manufacturing" of the assessment that Russia interfered with the 2016 election on Trump's behalf.(RELATED: Jonathan Turley Says Corporate Media Not Interested In Covering Obama-Russiagate Story Because It 'Implicates Them') Former US President Barack Obama and former US First Lady Michelle Obama attend the unveiling of their portraits at the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC, February 12, 2018. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images) Special Counsel John Durham released areportin May 2023 on the origins of the FBI investigation of allegations that Trump's 2016 presidential campaign colluded with Russia, finding that the FBI "did not and could not corroborate" the claims from the now-discreditedSteele Dossier, which was used to obtain warrants tomonitorcommunications by Carter Page and other associates of Trump. FBI analyst Brian Autentestifiedin an October 2022 trial that the FBI offered former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele $1 million if he could corroborate the claims in the dossier, but Steele never did. In July, CIA Director John Ratcliffe referred former CIA Director John Brennan and former FBI Director James Comey to the FBI, which launched acriminal investigationinto the two for allegedly making false statements to Congress. Brennan denied wrongdoing during anappearanceon MSNBC's "Deadline: White House," telling host Nicolle Wallace the CIA "stayed true" and didn't try to influence the 2016 election during the Obama administration when Wallace questioned him about the probe. All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter's byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contactlicensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

Trump Moves Obama’s White House Portrait Out Of Visitors’ Sight

Trump Moves Obama's White House Portrait Out Of Visitors' Sight President Donald Trump has reportedly moved a portrait of former Pre...
Trump Calls For DC Homeless To Be Moved 'FAR From The Capital'New Foto - Trump Calls For DC Homeless To Be Moved 'FAR From The Capital'

President Donald Trump said that homeless people will have places to stay "FAR from the Capital" and pledged that violent criminals in Washington, D.C., will be prosecuted aggressively in a pair of Sunday posts on Truth Social. Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) staffer Edward Coristine, known by the moniker "Big Balls," wasseverely injuredwhen he intervened to prevent a carjacking in the District of Columbia. Trump said a Monday press conference would focus on safety in the nation's capital, and the presidentdirecteda massive increase in the federal law enforcement presence in Washington on Thursday.(RELATED: Trump Admin Official Known As 'Big Balls' Savagely Beaten Saving Woman From Carjacking) "We're having a News Conference tomorrow in the White House. I'm going to make our Capital safer and more beautiful than it ever was before. The Homeless have to move out, IMMEDIATELY," Trumppostedon Truth Social. "We will give you places to stay, but FAR from the Capital. The Criminals, you don't have to move out. We're going to put you in jail where you belong. It's all going to happen very fast, just like the Border. We went from millions pouring in, to ZERO in the last few months. This will be easier — Be prepared! There will be no 'MR. NICE GUY.' We want our Capital BACK." Crime in the District of Columbia became a hot-button issue after Eric Tarpinian-Jachym, an intern for Republican Rep. Ron Estes of Kansas, wasfatally shotJune 30. Two employees of the Israeli Embassy werekilledin a May shooting, while Democratic Rep. Angie Craig of Minnesota wasassaultedin her apartment in February 2023. Trump, whofloatedthe idea of a federal takeover of the district after Coristine was injured, announced the press conference would not just be about crime in a Sunday afternoon post on Truth Social. "The Press Conference on Crime and 'Beautification' will be held tomorrow, at 10:00 A.M. EST, in the Press Briefing Room, and it will not only involve ending the Crime, Murder, and Death in our Nation's Capital, but will also be about Cleanliness and the General Physical Renovation and Condition of our once beautiful and well maintained Capital," Trumpposted. "We are not going to allow people to spend $3.1 Billion Dollars on fixing up a building, like the Federal Reserve, which could have been done in a far more elegant and time sensitive manner for $50 to $100 Million Dollars. The Renovation would have actually been better, and we would have saved $3 Billion Dollars, Traffic Jams, and never-ending Construction."(RELATED: Congress Took Over DC In The 90s — And It Worked) "The Mayor of D.C., Muriel Bowser, is a good person who has tried, but she has been given many chances, and the Crime Numbers get worse, and the City only gets dirtier and less attractive," Trump continued. "The American Public is not going to put up with it any longer. Just like I took care of the Border, where you had ZERO Illegals coming across last month, from millions the year before, I will take care of our cherished Capital, and we will make it, truly, GREAT AGAIN! Before the tents, squalor, filth, and Crime, it was the most beautiful Capital in the World. It will soon be that again." According toArticle Iof the Constitution, Congress can exercise control over the nation's capital. Congressgrantedthe District of Columbia "home rule" in 1973, but Congress candisapprovelegislation passed by the D.C. government. All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter's byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contactlicensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

Trump Calls For DC Homeless To Be Moved ‘FAR From The Capital’

Trump Calls For DC Homeless To Be Moved 'FAR From The Capital' President Donald Trump said that homeless people will have places to ...
Tribute to former Liverpool forward Diogo Jota disrupted at WembleyNew Foto - Tribute to former Liverpool forward Diogo Jota disrupted at Wembley

LONDON (AP) — A tribute to former Liverpool forward Diogo Jota and his brother Andre Silva was disrupted on Sunday when some fans at the Community Shield match failed to observe a moment's silence. Before the game between Liverpool and Crystal Palace at Wembley Stadium both teams and their staff stood silently to commemorate the brothers, whodied in a car accident in Spainin July. A minority of Palace fans broke the silence, eliciting a strong response at the other end of the field as well as from other Eagles supporters who tried to silence those not respecting the tribute. Referee Chris Kavanagh then blew his whistle to signal the end of the tribute. Liverpool manager Arne Slot later played down the incident. "I don't think this was planned, or that this was the idea of the fan that made some noise. Maybe he wasn't aware of the fact that it was the minute of silence," he said. "And I think then the fans of Palace were trying to calm that person or those persons down ... They tried to calm him down, but that was a bit noisy as well. And then our fans reacted, 'Hey, what's happening here?'" Palace won the match --beating Liverpool 3-2 on penaltiesafter the game ended 2-2. This was Liverpool's first major game since the death of Jota, who was 28. The brothers died when the Lamborghini they were in veered off a road and burst into flames near the northwestern city of Zamora. The Premier League champion has made a number of tributes to Jota following his death, including retiring his No. 20 jersey. Liverpool supporters began to applaud Jota when Sunday's game reached the 20-minute mark and that applause quickly erupted into cheers as new signing Jeremie Frimpong scored to put the Merseyside club 2-1 ahead. The Community Shield is seen at the traditional curtain-raiser for the top-flight season in England and is played between the defending league champion and the winner of the FA Cup. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Tribute to former Liverpool forward Diogo Jota disrupted at Wembley

Tribute to former Liverpool forward Diogo Jota disrupted at Wembley LONDON (AP) — A tribute to former Liverpool forward Diogo Jota and his b...

 

MARIO VOUX © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com