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Thursday, May 9, 2024

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Former Franklin Mayor Files Ethics Complaint Against Milwaukee County Supervisor Steve Taylor

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A former Franklin mayor has filed an ethics complaint against controversial Milwaukee County Supervisor Steve Taylor, accusing him of what he called “logrolling” or “pay to play.”

Stephen R. Olson, Franklin’s former mayor, is accusing Taylor of violating state law by allegedly requiring a payment from Franklin to Milwaukee County for $700,000. Half of that would go to Milwaukee County Supervisor Felicia Martin in return for her support and alleged influenced votes.

The dictionary definition of logrolling is “the practice of exchanging favors, especially in politics by reciprocal voting for each other’s proposed legislation.”

“Extracting the additional money essentially ‘double tax’ the citizens of Franklin,” the complaint alleges.

“The logroll or pay-to-play would force County Board Supervisors to give Taylor authority he is not legally entitled to. (Acting as the sole decision maker, professional staff, appraiser),” it says.

Taylor is adamantly denying the latest accusations being levied by Olson. “I write in response to Ethics Complaint 2023-ETH-54. In short, I do not understand the claimed ethical violation,” Taylor told WRN. “Nonetheless, I will try to respond by providing important facts for context. To be blunt, elected officials often strike compromises and negotiate across various axis for the betterment of the jurisdiction overall and the specific legislative district they represent. What has occurred here is no more than typical government business.” You can read his statement in full at the end of this article.

According to Olson’s complaint, “The City of Franklin is currently developing a major corporate business park in the vicinity of S. 27 St. and Oakwood Road. This park features direct access to I-94 and approximately 500 acres of land, most of which is developable in large tracts. The City has been planning this development since 2000. It currently has developed or is in construction of almost one million square feet of manufacturing and flex buildings valued at more than $100 million. The park is still being developed and includes roadways and other infrastructure.”

Olson claims that for a “period of time, Taylor held the elected position of Alderman for the City of Franklin for this district. He had involvement in the planning of infrastructure and target markets. In April of 2022, he was elected Supervisor for the newly formed 17th supervisory district which includes this area. He is no longer an alderman for the City of Franklin but remains politically active with several current members including the Mayor.”

Taylor was recently in the news when he appeared before the Franklin Common Council to help address residents’ noise complaints about the Rock sports and entertainment complex. He works for the Roc’s Foundation. In a closed-door meeting on the noise issues, Milwaukee County Supervisor Steve Taylor called fellow county supervisors “terrorists,” Wisconsin Right Now has learned. He has long been controversial in Franklin, a city riven by personality conflicts and disputes.

Taylor even called concerned neighbors “idiots” and “f*ckers” at one point, the sources show.

According to Olson’s complaint:

Sometime around 2019, during the development, requirements changed concerning the management of stormwater on the site for public roads. Planned ponds were relocated to maximize the tax benefits to the district and subsequently, the taxpayers, the complaint says.

Olson says that while acting as Mayor he entered into conversations with the Milwaukee County Executives (Chris Abele and David Crowley) and key members of their staffs as well as current supervisor Patty Logsdon for a lease agreement for varying sizes of land owned by the Milwaukee County Parks Department for use as a detention basin.

“Franklin currently leases at no cost a small portion of nearby land, on the same parcel, for a stormwater basin. These talks, although positive, lead nowhere,” he wrote.

In 2021 talks between Olson, Taylor, Logsdon, and Crowley restarted to secure the land, the complaint says.

A proposal was created for the no-charge lease of the land outlining the cost and benefit to Milwaukee County. Olson says nothing happened with that proposal.

In 2022, Taylor was elected Supervisor for the District and Olson initiated talks with him although his perspective had changed to the “you’re going to have to pay for the land,” the complaint alleges.

On October 20, 2022, Taylor made a presentation of a proposal to then Franklin Alderwoman Shari Hanneman, Director of Administration Peggy Steeno, and Director of Economic Development John Regetz to the Common Council. It discussed terms for Taylor’s support and the $700,000 price and half needing to go to Supervisor Martin’s district to secure her support, the complaint claims.

On January 3, 2023, Taylor appeared before the Franklin Common Council and re-iterated the terms. “At all times. he represents himself as an elected Milwaukee County Supervisor,” the complaint says.

He proposed that the City (actually, the TIF district) pay Milwaukee County a one-time payment of $700,000 for a 99-year lease for a certain amount of acreage, the complaint says, adding, that he would “get the votes.” His proposal was to “return” $350,000 to County projects in the City of Franklin and in order to get the votes that she controls, he would give the other $350,000 to Supervisor Felicia Martin for parks projects in her district, according to the complaint. Taylor confirms this arrangement in a letter to the Franklin Common Council dated 12/27/22, the complaint continues.

19.59 (1) b reads: No person may offer or give to a local public official, directly or indirectly, and no local public official may solicit or accept from any person, directly or indirectly, anything of value if it could reasonably be expected to influence the local public official’s vote, official actions or judgment, or could reasonably be considered as a reward for any official action or inaction on the part of the local public official.

The complaint claims that Taylor’s statements on video “are blatant, obvious and unambiguous. They are repeated in his letter and again in a similar presentation on 9/5/23 to the Franklin Common Council.

Based on Taylor’s comments, the Franklin Common Council “authorized expenditure of $47,000 to Rueckert-Mielke consulting engineers to prepare a formal cost estimate and feasibility recommendation on 1/17/23. Those funds would not have been expended without Taylor’s comments and veiled assurances that he’d get the necessary votes,” the complaint claims.

The complaint further alleges that Taylor “was instrumental in the election of John Nelson as Mayor of the City of Franklin on April 4, 2023.”

“Negotiations are currently being held with Milwaukee County to bring this violation to reality,” it alleges, adding, “The adverse financial impact of the attempt by Supervisor Taylor to extract an exorbitant amount of money for a lease on useless property without any unbiased appraisal and authority to enter into an agreement is huge.”

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Milwaukee County Supervisor Steve Taylor’s Response

WRN asked Taylor for comment regarding the allegations. Taylor sent us this response. We are reprinting it in full.

“I write in response to Ethics Complaint 2023-ETH-54. In short, I do not understand the claimed ethical violation. Nonetheless, I will try to respond by providing important facts for context. To be blunt, elected officials often strike compromises and negotiate across various axis for the betterment of the jurisdiction overall and the specific legislative district they represent. What has occurred here is no more than typical government business. I hesitate to add that there is no love lost among myself and the complainant here. But I cannot comment as to this individual’s motivation for filing this complaint.

On August 25th, 2022, I was emailed a stormwater management proposal from City of Franklin Economic Development Director John Regetz. The proposal requested 10 acres of Milwaukee County land for free. In my judgment, this proposal was a nonstarter for numerous reasons, but most basically because the County has stopped giving away land for free unless there is some clear and unequivocal higher order economic or social benefit to the County/district. I did not see such a benefit here.

That said, given the importance of stormwater management to Franklin, I reviewed the stormwater proposal to identify other alternatives to the no-cost County land giveaway. One possible solution was 5 acres of privately owned land. The acquisition of that land was valued at $600,000 or $120,000 per acre. That valuation implied a value of the County land sought by Franklin at no-cost at somewhere in the ballpark of $700,000 or $70,000 per acre.

In my judgment, some kind of deal with Franklin was possible if Franklin would agree to something close to fair market value for the requested 10 acres. In my view, were that to happen, two things would be important deal features: (1) half of the revenues should stay in the City of Franklin and be spent on Milwaukee County parkland or other maintenance or improvements; and (2) the other half of revenues should be directed, based on the County’s mission (to become the healthiest county in Wisconsin by achieving racial equity), to other less well-off County communities for parkland or Parks improvements and the like, using the administration’s equity matrix that helps prioritize projects, as well as community input and Board input.

Based on the above assessment, I reached out Supervisor Felisia Martin, one of my colleagues on the Parks Committee, to see if she would be interested in working with me on this approach. As you know, this is standard fare and is nothing more than day-to-day business of elected officials, equivalent in every meaningful way to Supervisors who author legislation asking colleagues if they would like to co-sponsor, except this was at the inception stage of a proposal.

I met with Supervisor Martin, we toured Franklin, and I showed her the three areas that for possible investment of the proceeds. Two of the Milwaukee County areas were in my district, one of which is adversely affected by the above-mentioned development which needs the stormwater management solution. Supervisor Martin said she was interested in working with me and that she would talk with Parks Administration to determine what Parks needed current improvements.

I met with City of Franklin staff and Council President in October 2022, sent a letter to the Franklin Common Council in December 2022, recapping that October meeting. Subsequently, I was asked by Alderman John Nelson to attend a Common Council meeting in January 2023 to discuss the letter I sent. This meeting was publicly noticed and opened to the public. I made clear that I was appearing in my capacity as a County Supervisor. Whatever next steps were taken by the City of Franklin after this meeting was up to their elected officials.

On August 8th, 2023, I was emailed a stormwater feasibility study by City of Franklin Engineer Glenn Morrow. Based on that study and multiple follow-ups by the City of Franklin, a meeting was scheduled between County and City officials on October 27th.

Prior to that meeting I spoke with Supervisor Martin who was still in support of the agreement outline that I shared with her in 2022. However, she wanted the other $350,000 to be put towards needed improvements in the Mitchell Park neighborhood, which is in Supervisor Miguel Martinez’s district.

No deal has been reached and at no time have I done anything except attempt to secure fair market value for County land in order to benefit my constituents and to help achieve the County’s mission.

In conclusion, it is my longstanding and very public viewpoint that giving away land to make developers more money is not good government. Getting fair value of publicly owned land and using it to improve the quality of life of County and district residents is good government. There is no violation of Wisconsin Statute section 19.59(1)(b) and I ask you to swiftly dismiss this complaint and to provide guidance, in your best judgment, to the complainant that the ethics complaint and review process should not be weaponized to attempt to settle longstanding political or personal grudges.”

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Jewish Groups Sue Palestinian Groups, Hamas Supporters

As rioters take over college campuses setting up encampments, committing acts of violence, vandalism and antisemitism forcing some graduation ceremonies to be canceled, a coalition of Jewish groups has sued Palestinian groups arguing they are “collaborators and propagandists for Hamas.”

The global law firm Greenberg Traurig, LLP, the National Jewish Advocacy Center, the Schoen Law Firm, and the Holtzman Vogel law firm sued AJP Educational Foundation Inc., otherwise known as American Muslims for Palestine, and National Students for Justice in Palestine. The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern Division of Virginia, Alexandria Division.

The plaintiffs are nine American and Israeli victims of the October 7 Hamas terrorist attack on Israel. They include survivors of the attack, family members of those Hamas murdered, and civilians still under fire from and displaced by Hamas’ continued aggression. The lawsuit alleges the plaintiffs continue to be injured by AMP and NSJP organizers who are knowingly providing “continuous, systematic, and substantial assistance to Hamas and its affiliates’ acts of international terrorism. AMP and NSJP are thus liable to Plaintiffs for the damages they incurred because AMP and NSJP aid and abet Hamas’s terrorism.”

They say they’ve experienced “a wide spectrum of physical and emotional injuries” as a result of the violence allegedly orchestrated by AMP and NJSP and are seeking compensatory damages.

“It is time that Hamas and all of its agents, like AMP and NSJP, be held responsible for their horrific actions,” they said in a joint statement. “We want to go on record to expose these groups for the terrorists they are and make certain that they are stopped from operating in the United States and other countries they infiltrate.”

Hamas, the acronym for Harakat al-Muqawama al-Islamiya (Islamic Resistance Movement), was designated by the U.S. State Department as a foreign terrorist organization in 1997. “It is the largest and most capable militant group in the Palestinian territories and one of the territories’ two major political parties,” according to the National Counterterrorism Center.

The lawsuit alleges AMP and NSJP are “collaborators and propagandists for Hamas” because on October 8 they responded to a Hamas founder’s call to hold “resistance” events on college campuses. The NSJP published a “tool kit” for Palestinian students in the U.S. to use against Israeli “occupiers” and “Zionist media campaigns,” The Center Square reported.

AMP and NSJP maintain Hamas’ attack was justified, call for the destruction of Israel and death to Jews, and have targeted American Jewish students with acts of violence.

After Oct. 7, antisemitism and violence escalated against Jews in America by nearly 400%, The Center Square reported. Since then, violence has increased on college campuses with leaders failing to stop it, another report found.

The call to violence was responded to differently by Republican and Democratic governors. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis issued an emergency declaration, instructed the state university system to deactivate pro-Palestinian student groups on campuses, and Florida law enforcement officers proactively cracked down on protestors.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott advanced efforts to combat antisemitism and state troopers quelled rioters attempting to take over the University of Texas in Austin. Unlike campuses in California and New York that were taken over by pro-Hamas encampments and in-person instruction and graduation ceremonies were canceled, no campuses were taken over in Texas and Florida, rioters were arrested, and graduation ceremonies are going forward.

After “day-of-rage” protests occurred last October, a poll found that a majority of Muslim-Americans surveyed, 57.5%, said Hamas “was justified in attacking Israel as part of their struggle for a Palestinian state,” The Center Square reported.

Included among them was U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Michigan, who was censured by Congress for her unapologetic support of Hamas. She claimed, the phrase being used by rioters, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free,” means it’s “an aspirational call for freedom, human rights, and peaceful coexistence, not death, destruction, or hate.”

Hamas disagrees. Its preamble to the 1988 Hamas Covenant of the Islamic Resistance Movement includes the famous claim, “Israel will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it obliterated others before it,’” The Center Square reported.

White House National Security Spokesperson John Kirby has also acknowledged, “Hamas does have genocidal intentions against the people of Israel. They’d like to see it wiped off the map. They’ve said so on purpose. That’s what’s at stake here.”

“This case is very simple: When someone tells you they are aiding and abetting terrorists—believe them,” Mark Goldfeder, CEO of the National Jewish Advocacy Center said.

Richard Edlin, Vice Chair of Greenberg Traurig, said free speech doesn’t include hate speech. “It is deeply ironic that the same people carrying signs saying, ‘Death to America’ and ‘Death to Jews’ claim they are protected by free speech,” he said. “They are not. Free speech has never included the active support of terrorism, and it has never protected the destruction of private property or the brutalization of innocent men, women, and children of many faiths, not just Jews.

“If the defendants believe they can set up operations in America to create a mass culture of fear, threats, violence, and intimidation to undermine our cherished educational institutions, affect our governmental policies, and force Hamas’s evil ideology on American or Israeli soil, they are about to find out how mistaken they are.”

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Milwaukee Mayor Replaces City’s Election Commission Director

(The Center Square) – Six months before Election Day, Milwaukee’s mayor has made a change at the top of his city’s elections commission.

Mayor Cavalier Johnson on Monday announced Paulina Gutiérrez as the new executive director of Milwaukee’s Election Commission.

“Paulina’s integrity and capabilities are ideally suited to this position. She will lead the office at an important juncture when public scrutiny of the work of the department will be extremely high,” Johnson said in a statement. “I have confidence in her, and I will make certain the department has the resources it needs to fulfill its duties.”

Johnson’s statement was silent on the fact Gutiérrez’s promotion means the former head of the commission, Claire Woodall, is being replaced.

The mayor told WISN TV that Woodall was offered a different position at the city, but he added that she apparently doesn’t want that job "as it stands right now."

Johnson also said the decision to make the change has more to do with the latest cycle of mayoral appointments than anything else.

Woodall has been in charge of the commission since 2020. She was appointed by former Milwaukee Mayor Tim Barrett, and she came under intense scrutiny for how she handled the 2020 election.

Woodall also faced questions after one of her chief deputies, Kimberly Zapata, mailed three fake military ballots to a Republican lawmaker.

Zapata said she mailed the ballots to warn State Rep. Janel Brandtjen about a weakness in Wisconsin’s electoral system. Zapata was convicted in the case, and last week a judge sentenced her to probation and a fine.

Gutiérrez has served as Milwaukee’s deputy director at the elections commission since early 2023. She begins her new position immediately. She sent an email to the Elections Commission staff over the weekend.

"Change, especially when it is unexpected, can often be unsettling," she wrote. "The experience of changing leadership is demanding and uncertain as we navigate uncharted waters and relearn to collaborate and communicate as an organization.”

Johnson made four other appointments Monday. He named Jim Bohl as city innovation director, as well as naming Jordan Primakow to be Milwaukee’s new legislative liaison director.

Johnson named former alderman Khalif Rainey to be Milwaukee’s new director of the office of African American affairs. And finally, the mayor named Veronica Rudychev as city labor negotiator.

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Wisconsin Democrats Continue to Push Ballot Drop Boxes

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin’s Democrat leadership continued its push for drop boxes as Attorney General Josh Kaul filed a response brief with the Wisconsin Supreme Court to allow them.

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers filed a brief in early April looking overturn a ruling from 2022 that said ballot drop boxes are not allowed under state law.

Kaul wrote that, by spring 2021, 570 drop boxes were placed across 66 of Wisconsin’s 72 counties and the share of Wisconsin voters casting an absentee ballot increased from 6% to 30% from 2002 to 2022.

Kaul argued Wisconsin law does not prohibit drop boxes.

“Voting should be safe, secure and accessible — and drop boxes are,” Kaul said in a statement. “Unfortunately, the use of drop boxes has been swept into the broader and baseless attacks on our elections and our democracy.

“Through our filing, we’re arguing that Wisconsin law does not prohibit the use of drop boxes, and that clerks should be able to determine whether to offer this convenient method of voting in their communities.”

Defund NPR

House Committees to Investigate NPR Over ‘Viewpoint Discrimination’

U.S. House committees are investigating “ideological bias” of National Public Radio (NPR), a nonprofit news organization established by Congress and partially funded by taxpayers.

NPR has come under fire after its former editor Uri Berliner said it had "lost America's trust" and criticized NPR’s Chief Executive Officer, Katherine Maher, for her focus on combating “misinformation” and reportedly criticizing the First Amendment.

Maher, who is connected to several global economic organizations, including the World Bank and World Economic Forum, has donated solely to Democratic political candidates, The Center Square first reported.

The House investigation is being spearheaded by House Energy and Commerce Committee chair Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-WA, and Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations Chair Morgan Griffith, R-VA. An oversight hearing is scheduled for Wednesday to examine NPR’s alleged “viewpoint discrimination.”

“NPR is entrusted with Americans’ hard-earned tax dollars. Serious allegations from a then-senior editor who spent decades at NPR reveal NPR engages in viewpoint discrimination and ideological bias that caters to a narrow, leftwing audience,” Rodgers and Griffith said in a joint statement. Citing a list of allegations, they said they “are deeply troubling and merit congressional investigation.”

NPR is funded by taxpayer money and donations from the general public and large philanthropic organizations, including the Rockefeller Foundation. The Rockefeller Foundation has funded advocacy efforts for years related to “green energy,” “global warming” and now “climate change,” most recently dedicating $1 billion “to advance people-centered climate action.” This includes funding several news outlets’ climate desks, including NPR’s, as stated on its funds’ various websites.

The foundation’s efforts were instrumental in pressuring President Joe Biden’s directive to halt new permits for liquified natural gas exports, The Wall Street Journal reported.

The Biden administration did so at a time when US LNG exports, led by Texas, have provided a lifeline to European allies that were previously depended on Russian oil, The Center Square exclusively reported. Natural gas has proven to be one of the cleanest energy sources and most reliable, with 2023 being a record year for domestic natural gas consumption, made possible by Texas production, The Center Square reported.

The Rockefeller Foundation was one of NPR’s founding donors helping its “Climate Desk” to launch in 2022 “to do stories that shape the national conversation on climate change,” it said. NPR claims, “climate related weather disasters are upending the way people live from China to California, from Pakistan to Florida. These extreme events have caused a global food crisis, the rise of new diseases and the displacement of millions of people.”

Initial climate reporters were funded by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and the Rockefeller Foundation, NPR said. From Oct. 1, 2022, through June 30, 2024, the Rockefeller Foundation donated $500,000 to NPR for its “climate change news.”

“Charities controlled by members of the Rockefeller family and billionaire donors were key funders of a successful campaign to pressure President Biden to pause new approvals of liquefied natural gas exports from the U.S.”, the Journal reported. The funds it refers to include the Rockefeller Family Fund (RFF) founded by John D. Rockefeller’s great-grandchildren, and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, founded by his five sons.

John D. Rockefeller founded Standard Oil in 1870, building his wealth in kerosene and gasoline to become the first billionaire in America and the wealthiest person in the country. By 1880, Standard Oil controlled 90% of the oil produced in the U.S., CNN Business reported. “Rockefeller's estimated $1.4 billion net worth in 1937 was equivalent to 1.5% of U.S. GDP. According to this metric he was (and still is) the richest individual in American business and economic history,” according to Harvard Business School.

In 2018, the RFF created the Funder Collaborative on Oil and Gas, explaining its efforts to prioritize opposing coal and help “groups that are fighting the development of oil, gas, plastics, and petrochemicals infrastructure.”

Its goal is to curtail U.S. oil and gas production and prevent development “of massive new domestic infrastructure” as “an urgent and necessary part of solving the climate crisis.” It stated core purpose “is to limit ongoing oil and gas production; prevent the lock-in of GHG-emissions for new and expanded oil, gas, and petrochemical infrastructure; and weaken the industry’s financial standing and political influence.”

The RFF, through the FCOG, finances numerous groups “to enact aggressive policies at the state and national levels to reduce carbon emissions; disrupt the life cycle of fossil fuels from drilling and mining to transportation and exporting,” among other actions.

Dozens of NPR articles share a common theme in highlighting natural gas plant pollution, its harm to the environment and its effect on climate change. Regularly cited sources also appear to work for advocacy groups funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, including the Environmental Integrity Project. Many articles claim industrial air pollution from oil and natural gas companies is already, or will in the future, primarily negatively impact low-income, black neighborhoods.

The Gulf Coast environment primarily in the oil and gas producing states of Texas and Louisiana would suffer, especially if more LNG export facilities are built, NPR-affiliated authors wrote. In one report, it warns, “Soon more natural vistas here could be lost,” referring to Cameron Parish, Louisiana, a major oil and natural gas hub. It also solely interviewed opponents of LNG plants in the parish, reporting that after the U.S. became the top LNG exporter, “as the industry has grown, so has opposition.”

In other articles, NPR posits that tax credits helped fund union workers’ six-figure salaries and water pollution allegedly created by oil and gas companies created racial inequities.

NPR also claims Biden’s LNG permit ban “doesn’t affect more than a dozen plants that are already operating, or that are under construction or have received permits. Nor will it halt the export of gas.”

It also reported LNG exports “drove up utility bills for citizens,” a claim refuted by federal data, The Center Square first reported.

NPR also claimed, “oil field flaring emits five times more methane than expected,” when data from the World Bank, EIA, EPA and other agencies found that natural gas companies in the Permian Basin produce some of the cleanest natural gas in the world, The Center Square first reported. As natural gas production and LNG exports exponentially increased, Texas producers also led the United States in emissions reductions, the data shows.

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NYPD Says Protesters Had Weapons, Gas Masks & ‘Death to America!’ Pamphlets

A high-ranking official with the New York Police Department said protesters had weapons including knives and hammers as well as pamphlets with "Death to America!" written on them.

Michael Kemper, a NYPD's chief of transit, posted photos Friday of what police confiscated from the protesters.

“For those romanticizing the protests occurring on college campuses, ‘Death to America!’ is one sentiment that runs counter to what we believe in, what we stand for, and what many have fought for on behalf of this country,” Kemper stated on X. “And if you think the words written on this piece of paper are disturbing … you should hear the vile, disgusting, hateful, & threatening words coming out of the mouths of far too many of these so called ‘peaceful protestors.’”

Kemper posted a video of a pamphlet that stated, “Death to Israeli Real Estate” and “Death to America!” The pamphlet also stated, “DISRUPT/RECLAIM/DESTROY Zionist business interests everywhere!”

NYPD Deputy Commissioner Kaz Daughtry posted on X photos of items he said the police confiscated from protesters who took over Hamilton Hall at Columbia University. The photo showed gas masks, ear plugs, helmets, goggles, tape, hammers, knives, ropes, and a book on terrorism. The book is by Charles Townshend, Professor of International History at Keele University in England. It was published in 2011 and is 161 pages.

"These are not the tools of students protesting, these are the tools of agitators, of people who were working on something nefarious," Daughtry said on X. "Thankfully, your NYPD was able to prevent whatever they were planning and stop them before they could do it."

Kemper asked who was organizing the protests.

"However, as we have been stating for the past 2 weeks, there is an underlying radical indoctrination of some of these students. Vulnerable and young people being influenced by professional agitators. Who is funding and leading this movement?" Kemper asked on X.

Kemper also posted a letter from The New School requesting the NYPD's assistance in removing protesters from their campus on Friday.

"The actions and continuing escalation of these individuals are a substantial disruption of the educational environment and regular operations of the university," the letter stated.

The New School is a university in New York City. It closed all academic building on Friday and classes were moved to online. The college said classes on campus would resume Saturday.

Fox News reported that 56 protesters were arrested at The New School and New York University.

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Congressman Tom Tiffany Gets Wolf Plan Through House, Calls It First Step

(The Center Square) – A Northwoods’ congressman says he has the science on his side in the debate over what to do about the gray wolf.

Republican Congressman Tom Tiffany got his plan to take the gray wolf off the endangered species list through the House. It was a close vote, just 209 to 205, and the plan faces a dim future in the U.S. Senate.

Still, Tiffany said there’s more than enough evidence that the gray wolf population is large enough to remove it from the protected list.

“The science is clear; the gray wolf has met and exceeded recovery goals,” Tiffany said in a statement. “[This vote] represents an important first step towards restoring local control over the skyrocketing gray wolf population in Wisconsin.”

Tiffany said there have been plenty of attacks on dogs, deer and cattle in Wisconsin that prove his point.

Keith Mark, founder and CEO of Hunter Nation, said the proposal to de-list the gray wolf should get a vote in the Senate.

“Wildlife should not be a partisan issue. Unmanaged wolf populations are causing significant problems in states that have both Republican and Democrat Senators,” Mark told The Center Square.

Hunter Nation has been one of the loudest voices in the debate over how to handle wolves in Wisconsin.

Mark said Tiffany’s plan is not only based in science, it is based in the government’s own data and suggestions.

“What message does it send when we place an animal on the list, set population goals and establish strict management criteria for de-listing, and when the animal achieves the pre-set population goals, it is not taken off of the endangered list? By every metric set from the onset, wolves have far exceeded every population goal established. Gray wolves are no longer endangered. They need to be managed at the state level like all other wildlife,” Mark added.

But even if that did happen, the future of wolves in Wisconsin is likely sealed.

The Wisconsin DNR is moving ahead with its own wolf management plan that essentially forbids wolf hunting and trapping.

Hunter Nation is opposed to that, as is Tiffany and many of Wisconsin’s other Republican congressmen.

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Palestinian Refugees in the U.S.? Biden’s Potential Plan Takes Fire

President Joe Biden is reportedly considering bringing Palestinian refugees into the U.S., but news of that potential decision sparked a wave of criticism for Biden.

A group of Republican lawmakers in the House and Senate sent a letter to the president condemning the alleged plan, which was reported by CBS News earlier this week.

“U.S. and allied officials have very little access to Gazans living in the area, making it nearly impossible to conduct thorough vetting before admitting them into our country,” the letter said. “We must ensure Gazans with terrorist ties or sympathies are denied admission into the United States – no easy feat, given the fact that the Gazans were the ones who voted Hamas into power in 2006. Without thorough vetting, your administration may inadvertently accept terrorists posing as refugees into the interior.

"This is especially the case as Hamas terrorists have a long track record of co-mingling with civilian populations in Gaza," the letter added.

Biden has been trying to navigate the difficult issue of the Israel-Hamas war, which reignited last fall when the terrorist group Hamas killed more than 1,000 Israelis, many of them civilians, and carried out rapes and other atrocities.

“With more than a third of Gazans supporting the Hamas militants, we are not confident that your administration can adequately vet this high-risk population for terrorist ties and sympathies before admitting them into the United States,” the letter said. “We are further worried that accepting Gazan refugees might cause a crisis at the Egypt-Gaza border, leading to chaos that would only empower Iran-backed Hamas.

Israel has responded with a sustained bombing campaign targeting Hamas members and leaders.

The humanitarian fallout of the war, though, has led many far-left advocates in the U.S. to occupy college campuses and more to push for an end to the bombing.

Hundreds of migrants with known or suspected terrorist ties have been caught trying to enter the U.S. in recent years through both the northern and southern border. With millions of migrants who have entered the U.S. undetected in recent years, it is unknown just how many are terrorists or have terrorist ties.

“Border officials have arrested 169 people on the FBI terror watch lists in Fiscal Year 2023, a record-setting number that exceeds the total of the last six fiscal years combined,” the letter said. “Apprehended terrorists include a Hezbollah fighter who intended ‘to make a bomb’ and was headed for New York.”

The lawmakers also questioned Biden’s efforts to rescue American hostages from the hands of Hamas, which is designated a terrorist group by the U.S. State Department.

“We are also frustrated that your administration is pushing ahead with a plan to evacuate Gazans from the Strip when there are still American citizens held hostage by Hamas,” the letter said. “We demand that your administration cease planning for accepting Gazan refugees until you adequately answer our concerns and focus your attention instead on securing the release of U.S. hostages held by Hamas.”

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