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OnPolitics Today: James Comey says the 'fake news' on Trump is true

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«It’s true. All of it.» — Han Solo (and James Comey, basically) .
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One day before James Comey’s hugely anticipated testimony, a committee released the former FBI director’s statement detailing his chats with President Trump. You can read the whole thing here, and you should.
Comey confirms that Trump requested his loyalty, as previously reported by news outlets, and that Trump asked the then-director to drop an investigation into ex-national security adviser Michael Flynn, as previously reported by news outlets.
In short, Comey said the anonymously sourced stories on Trump and Russia —the sort Trump has decried as #FakeNews on multiple occasions — are true. Comey testifies at 10 a.m. Eastern time on Thursday, and we have your full viewing guide here. Trump may even comment live on Comey’s testimony via tweets. Or, as Comey might call them, #FakeTweets.
It’s OnPolitics Today, the daily politics roundup from USA TODAY. Subscribe here.
We’re not going to say Trump sounds like a mafia boss in Comey’s seven-page statement, but he doesn’t not sound like a mafia boss, either. “I need loyalty, I expect loyalty, » Trump said, per Comey, at a Jan. 27 dinner between just the two of them. That made it weird, according to Comey.
“I didn’ t move, speak or change my facial expression any way during the awkward silence that followed, » he says.
Comey describes the dinner as «at least in part, an effort to have me ask for my job and create some sort of patronage relationship.»
One bright spot for Trump: The statement confirms Trump’s assertion that Comey told the president multiple times that he wasn’t the subject of the FBI’s Russia inquiry, a bit Trump’s attorney said makes him feel «completely and totally vindicated.»
The memo is extensively detailed — a grandfather clock in the Oval Office is noted multiple times — and hints at the meticulous records Comey said he began keeping after his meetings with Trump. In one call with the president, Comey recounts how Trump asked him how they might «lift the cloud» of the ongoing Russia investigation tied to his associates.
Again, just read the whole thing. And tune in tomorrow.
The Trump Organization profited off of a charity golf tournament aimed at benefitting kids cancer research, according to Forbes. The total costs of an annual tournament at the Trump National Golf Club in New York’s Westchester County began at about $50,000 before ballooning to $322,000 by 2015, according to Forbes.
Eric Trump said his foundation used the course «free of charge, » but Forbes found that the family’s conglomerate actually was paid, «part of more than $1.2 million that has no documented recipients past the Trump Organization.»
Also this week: Eric Trump said that Democrats are » not even people .» The comment came in an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, as Trump lamented the state of political discourse in the nation.
«Morals have flown out the window, » said Trump, whose father, the president, once bragged about groping women aboard an «Access Hollywood» bus.
The heads of the NSA and national intelligence both told senators Wednesday that they never felt «pressured» to interfere with the Russia investigation. And that’s about all they said.
Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats and National Security Agency Director Michael Rogers declined to say much on the matter before the Senate Intelligence Committee, alongside Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.
Coats and Rogers refused to say whether Trump asked them to downplay any Trump-Russia ties. McCabe refused to answer questions about Comey and Trump, and Rosenstein refused to discuss Comey’s firing. Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia later said he left the hearing «with more questions than when I went in.»

© Source: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/onpolitics/2017/06/07/onpolitics-today-james-comey-says-fake-news-trump-true/102608082/
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Bob Stoops restored Oklahoma Sooners to greatness

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The winningest coach in the history of Oklahoma, one of the most storied programs in history, is among an elite club of coaches who were able to leave on their own terms.
Bob Stoops is leaving coaching the same way he conducted his business for 18 seasons on the Oklahoma sideline. He made the decision his gut told him to make, when he wanted to make it, and everyone else would have to live with it. And just as he won throughout his career with the Sooners, he won at retiring, too.
The winningest coach (190-48, .798) in the history of one of the most storied programs in college football is leaving on his terms, with his health intact, at 56 years of age. The list of college football icons who leave of their own accord in good health at a relatively young age is so short we need the chain gang to measure it.
Tom Osborne, Ara Parseghian, Bud Wilkinson… and Stoops. But then, Stoops should be used to being in rare company.
Stoops won’t be listed among the greatest coaches in the history of the game. You have to win more than one national championship to get in that conversation. Who among us, after the electrifying start to his Oklahoma career, thought he would win only one ring?
But Stoops is on the next level, and there aren’t many standing with him.
The son of a high school coach from Youngstown, Ohio, never shed the lunch-pail sensibility of that steel town. He remained grounded even as his salary soared above $5 million per year. He just wasn’t all that impressed with himself. He wasn’t all that impressed with anyone or anything that carried itself as better than everyone else.
When the SEC won seven consecutive national championships and its people decided that they had been sent down from on high to lead the sport, Stoops relished taking shots at the league’s «propaganda.» He loved it even more when the No. 10 Sooners, a 17-point underdog, upset No. 3 Alabama, 45-31, in the 2014 Allstate Sugar Bowl.
Editor’s Picks Sooners’ Stoops steps down after 18 seasons
Bob Stoops, saying «the timing is perfect to hand over the reins, » exits as the Sooners’ all-time winningest coach with a 190-48 record. O-coordinator Lincoln Riley replaces him. Meet Lincoln Riley, the 33-year-old taking over the Oklahoma Sooners
OU coach Bob Stoops knew Lincoln Riley was head coach material. Now Riley, the youngest head coach in the FBS, gets his chance to prove it. Bob Stoops’ career at Oklahoma by the numbers
.798 (winning percentage) , 14 (10-win seasons) … a by-the-numbers look at Bob Stoops’ career as Oklahoma’s coach.
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Bob Stoops, saying «the timing is perfect to hand over the reins, » exits as the Sooners’ all-time winningest coach with a 190-48 record. O-coordinator Lincoln Riley replaces him.
OU coach Bob Stoops knew Lincoln Riley was head coach material. Now Riley, the youngest head coach in the FBS, gets his chance to prove it.
.798 (winning percentage) , 14 (10-win seasons) … a by-the-numbers look at Bob Stoops’ career as Oklahoma’s coach.
He lived by old-school rules, the ones he grew up by. When Oklahoma offered him the job after the 1998 season, he would not accept it until he fulfilled his promise to meet with athletic director Bob Bowlsby of Iowa, his alma mater. Stoops flew to Atlanta, met with Bowlsby, and then accepted the Oklahoma job (Bowlsby hired Kirk Ferentz, who remains at Iowa) .
Stoops might have grown up in Woody Hayes country, but he liked the speed and excitement of Barry Switzer’s Wishbone offense at Oklahoma. Stoops recalled being the defensive coordinator at Florida in 1997, looking up at the TV and seeing Northwestern manhandle Oklahoma, 24-0, and saying, to head coach Steve Spurrier and some other coaches, «That shouldn’t be happening at Oklahoma.»
«I said the exact words, ‘That’s a sleeping giant right there, ‘» Stoops told me in 2003.
Stoops took over a program that went 3-8 in 1998 and won seven games his first season (the fewest wins in his 18 seasons) . The Sooners won the BCS championship in the 2000 season, finishing with a dominant 13-2 victory over defending national champion Florida State. Stoops took Oklahoma to the BCS championship game in 2003,2004 and 2008, and to the 2015 College Football Playoff. But the Sooners never made it to the top again.
Oklahoma fans had to be content with 10 Big 12 championships, 14 seasons of double-digit victories, and an 11-7 record in the Red River Rivalry against Texas. Only the morons complained.
As much as loved to beat the Longhorns, or Oklahoma State (14-4) , Stoops didn’t like to circle games on the schedule.
«How do you win them all if you’re just worried about this one?» Stoops explained to me in 2011. «Really! Because in my mind, truly, you preach that you have to be invested in every game…. You get to thinking it doesn’t send the totally right message. I truly believe you’re never too high or low. That way you have a chance to play at about the same level. We don’t count on being too jacked up. I just truly believe that only goes so far.»
He infused his teams with a cold-eyed pragmatism. Here’s the job. Here’s what it takes to do it. He never made excuses. When injuries wrecked the 2009 Sooners, and they lost three games by a total of five points, and they had to rally to finish 8-5, Stoops threw the untested freshmen onto the field and coached them up.
«My point to them is, it doesn’t much matter, » Stoops said with a laugh. «It happened. You have to make it not happen.»
The Sooners won 32 games in the next three seasons.
His pragmatism extended throughout his decision-making. Stoops came in to the Big 12 as the defensive genius who helped Steve Spurrier win a ring at Florida in 1996. But he also made the rest of the league adapt to the spread offense, and defense in the Big 12 has never recovered.
He made tough staff decisions, running off offensive coordinator Josh Heupel after the 2014 season. Heupel had been the quarterback on Stoops’ national championship team.
Stoops courted controversy in 2014 by signing wide receiver Dorial Green-Beckham after he had been kicked off the Missouri team. Later that year, Stoops suspended tailback Joe Mixon for a year after Mixon slugged a woman and broke her jaw in a Norman restaurant. Last December, Stoops said that if someone did now what Mixon had done, nothing short of a dismissal would suffice. That was about as much as he ever backed off.
Until Wednesday. Stoops made the decision he wanted to make. He didn’t want to be his generation’s Joe Paterno. Stoops’s father, Ron Sr., died on a high school sideline of a heart attack at age 54. Stoops wants to enjoy his life. He wants to watch his twins, Drake and Isaac, play their senior year of high school football and their college ball, too. He likes to travel and to tee it up. He and his wife Carol just bought a 5,500-square-foot row home on the Gold Coast in downtown Chicago, where they have had a vacation home for more than a decade.
He called Spurrier, his mentor, and gave him the news.
«He didn’t want to go from the sideline to the graveyard, » Spurrier told my colleague Gene Wojciechowski. Bobby’s pretty much able to go out on top. He’s had a wonderful career. He knew when enough was enough.»
His enough was plenty. Anyone concerned that Riley, his successor, is 33 and has no head coaching experience, should note that Wilkinson, Switzer and Stoops all started at Oklahoma in their 30s with no head coaching experience. As omens go, Oklahoma is OK.

© Source: http://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/19572245/bob-stoops-restored-oklahoma-sooners-greatness
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Oldest fossils of our species push back origin of modern humans

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Ancient bones dating back 300,000 years could change our understanding of how humans first evolved in Africa
The oldest known bones of our species, dating back around 300,000 years, have been discovered in a cave in Morocco.
The fossils — which belong to five individuals, including a teenager and a younger child — push back the origin of Homo sapiens by 100,000 years, scientists say. The fossils also suggest that our species originated throughout the entire African continent instead of mainly in its eastern corner as previous research had suggested.
The findings, described in two studies published in the June 8 issue of the journal Nature, represent the very roots of our species, the researchers said. As such, they help to clarify when and where Homo sapiens evolved from earlier lineages, such as Homo heidelbergensis or Homo rhodesiensis.
The five individuals may have been taking shelter in the Moroccan cave while hunting, possibly for gazelle or wildebeest, in what may have been a green Sahara. Though their faces looked a lot like ours do today, the individuals discovered in Morocco had smaller versions of a brain region called the cerebellum and an elongated braincase, the researchers said. [See Photos of the Fossilized Human Bones and Excavation Site]
Archaeologists uncovered the human fossils, including a partial skull and a lower jaw, during excavations at the archaeological site of Jebel Irhoud in Morocco that began in 2004. But the site has a much earlier excavation history: Scientists first found some of the remains of these same individuals, along with stone tools, in the 1960s during mining operations. Those fossils were originally dated as about 40,000 years old and were considered to come from an African form of Neanderthal.
However, subsequent research cast doubts on whether those fossils were 40,000-year-old Neanderthal bones. For example, the excavations that collected the fossils did not make it clear which layers of earth the bones were found in, which makes their age uncertain, said Shannon McPherron, an archaeologist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and a co-author of one of the new studies. [Image Gallery: Our Closest Human Ancestor]
In addition, before the 1980s, any human fossils that were about 40,000 years old and had primitive features, such as strong brow ridges, were often labeled as Neanderthal, whereas they might not be labeled that way today, said Jean-Jacques Hublin, a paleoanthropologist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology and co-lead author of one of the new studies.
The new analyses revealed that all of the fossils recovered from the site came from at least five individuals — three adults, one adolescent and one 7- to 8-year-old child, Hublin said. Those individuals date back about 285,000 to 350,000 years — much older than 40,000 years.
«These dates were a big ‘wow, ‘ I would say. We realized this site was much older than anyone could have imagined, » Hublin told Live Science. «This material represents the very root of our species — the oldest specimens ever found in Africa or elsewhere.»
In one study, computer models and hundreds of 3D X-ray measurements of the fossils suggested that numerous features of the face, jaw and teeth were almost indistinguishable from those of modern-day humans. Their faces were those «of people you could cross on the street today, » Hublin told Live Science.
However, the braincase was rather elongated, resembling that of more archaic human lineages. Together, the anatomical features of these newly discovered fossils suggest «a rather more complex picture for the emergence of our species than previously thought, with different parts of the anatomy evolving at different rates — some fixed quite early in a modern way, and others taking a longer time to reach the modern condition, » Hublin said.
In the other new study, researchers analyzed flint tools found alongside the fossils. At one point in the distant past, these stone artifacts were heated by flame, perhaps when people there lit fires that inadvertently burned discarded flint tools scattered on or buried in the ground underneath, McPherron told Live Science.
Crystals within these artifacts gave off light when the researchers heated them, and the amount of light they gave off was related to how much time had passed since they were last heated. This analytical technique, known as thermoluminescence dating, suggested the site was about 300,000 to 350,000 years old.
«Well-dated sites of this age are exceptionally rare in Africa, but we were fortunate that so many of the Jebel Irhoud flint artifacts had been heated in the past, » geochronology expert Daniel Richter, who was the lead author of the fossil-dating study when he was at the Max Planck Institute in Germany, said in a statement. (Richter is now at Freiberg Instruments GmbH.)
Moreover, Richter and his colleagues directly calculated the age of a human jawbone found at the site. Radioactive isotopes found within a tooth indicated that the jaw was as old as thermoluminescence dating suggested it was.
The scientists were not able to recover genetic data from these fossils because the heat and the age of the remains destroyed the DNA, Hublin said. Still, the elongated, primitive nature of the braincase revealed a number of facts about the biology of these ancient H. sapiens. For example, they had a smaller cerebellum — the brain region that helps coordinate muscle activity — than modern humans do, Hublin said.
Previous research suggested that a series of genetic mutations that play roles in brain development and the connection of different brain regions emerged in H. sapiens after the ancestors of modern humans split from extinct lineages such as the Neanderthals and the Denisovans, Hublin said. «This maybe explains the gradual changes in the braincase that we see that distinguish our lineage, » he said. [Human Origins: How Hominids Evolved (Infographic)]
Animal fossils at the site also revealed that these ancient people ate plenty of gazelle meat, as well as the occasional zebra, wildebeest and other game, including perhaps ostrich eggs, said Teresa Steele, a paleoanthropologist at the University of California, Davis. Cuts and breaks on long bones suggest that humans broke them open, likely to eat the marrow, she added. Other animal fossils found at the site include ones from porcupines, aurochs, hares, leopards, hyenas, lions, foxes, jackals, snakes, tortoises, snails and freshwater mollusks.
«I think the overall picture we’re looking at from the archaeological data is a hunting encampment, a place where people passing across the landscape took shelter at night as they moved through the area in search of subsistence, » McPherron said.
Until now, the oldest H. sapiens fossils were found in eastern Africa, from the site of Omo Kibish in Ethiopia, suggesting that this was where our species originated. But now, these newfound 300,000-year-old fossils from northern Africa suggest that our species might not have evolved in a single area in Africa. Rather, these findings — in combination with a 260,000-year-old partial skull from Florisbad, South Africa, that a 1996 study suggested might have been from H. sapiens — reveal that our species might have evolved across all of Africa, the researchers said.
«If there is a Garden of Eden, it is Africa; it is the size of Africa, » Hublin said. «Our model is one where there was probably the evolution of different populations of H. sapiens in different parts of Africa. Sometimes, there was some kind of isolation between them, but in other periods, they were connected when the environment changed — ‘green Sahara’ periods happened several times. During these periods of connection, we think there were exchanges of innovations, and also exchanges of genes.»
One » green Sahara » period may have occurred between about 300,000 and 330,000 years ago, Hublin said. «This means grasslands over the Sahara. Rivers. Huge lakes, like those in Germany, in size. Fauna such as elephants and zebra. All over a geographic domain that is absolutely gigantic — the Sahara is the size of the United States, » Hublin said. «These periods happened again and again, probably playing a role in what we think were episodes of connection and exchanges between different populations of H. sapiens .»
Original article on Live Science .

© Source: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/oldest-fossils-of-our-species-push-back-origin-of-modern-humans/
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特急「ひだ」「南紀」にハイブリッド車投入へ JR東海

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JR東海は7日、 特急「ひだ」 「南紀」 に蓄電池とディーゼルエンジンで動くハイブリッド車両を同社として初めて投入すると発表した。 2019年末に試験走行車(1編成4両)を造り、 22年度までの 置き換えを目指…
JR東海は7日、特急「ひだ」「南紀」に蓄電池とディーゼルエンジンで動くハイブリッド車両を同社として初めて投入すると発表した。2019年末に試験走行車(1編成4両)を造り、22年度までの置き換えを目指す。
現在の85系気動車(ディーゼル車)は1両にエンジンが2基ついているが、エンジンは1基に減り、より静かになるという。燃費は約15%向上し、二酸化炭素の排出量も約15%減る。
トイレは洋式にし、温水洗浄便座を装備。全席にコンセントを設け、スーツケースなどを置ける荷物置き場を客室内に設ける。
ハイブリッド車両はJR東日本…

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Why Qatar’s links to Islamist groups worry Beijing

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With China facing its own fight against extremism, Doha’s backing of a host of radical organisations is a source of unspoken concern for China’s leadership
As Qatar’s diplomatic crisis continues to unfold, the tiny Gulf country’s intricate ties with Islamist groups have caused unease in China, which faces its own fight at home against extremism. Beijing has long been concerned about the influence of Islamist extremism spreading from countries such as Syria and Afghanistan into China’s northwestern Muslim-majority region of Xinjiang. Accusations by Qatar’s Arab neighbours that Doha is destabilising the region with its support for Islamist groups may echo Beijing’s unspoken concerns about Qatar, Chinese analysts said. Doha’s repeated strong denials of such claims have been met with scepticism amid the perception that Qatar has been a key financial patron of a host of extremist groups, including an al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria, Muslim Brotherhood and ISIS. Qatar has also been home to exiled Hamas official Khaled Mashaal since 2012. Pan Guang, a Middle East expert with the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, said Qatar’s alleged links to these extremist groups has been a source of unease for Beijing. “Although the Qatari government has long opposed terrorism, the country’s mainstream society has been dominated by Salafist ideology, and therefore unavoidably share intricate connections with the radicalised Salafist groups, ” Pan said. Salafism is an ultra-conservative school of thought within Sunni Islam that advocates a return to the 6th-century traditions of the first three generations of Muslims, around the time when Prophet Mohammed was still alive. Today, most of the world’s Salafis are from Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. About 46.87 per cent of Qataris, 44.8 per cent of Emiratis and 22.9 per cent of Saudis are Salafis, according to Columbia University research. Salafist influence is also present among China’s Muslim community, mainly in the southern province of Yunnan and across the northwest in Gansu, Ningxia and Xinjiang. Wang Lian, a research analyst on Middle East politics with Peking University, cautioned the need to prevent Salafi doctrine from being used by extremists in China. “We need to differentiate the devoted, conservative Muslims from the extremists who use [the Salafi doctrine] to achieve their political aim, ” he said. Wang said despite Qatar’s large Salafi population, there is no evidence to date of the country’s involvement in the radicalisation of China’s Uyghur population. China’s chief concern is still the influence of extremist groups in Syria and Afghanistan, he said. Pan, the Shanghai-based expert, said China and Qatar’s main differences are their respective positions on Middle East politics. “China’s adherence to the principle of non-interference is in contrast to the active interference policy of Qatar in Libya and Syria, ” he said. On Monday, one of Libya’s three rival governments was among the six Arab nations that cut diplomatic relations with Qatar. Libyan army commander Gen. Khalifa Haftar last week accused Qatar of financially supporting terrorist groups in Libya. China and Qatar also were split at one point over an influential Qatari state-funded broadcaster’s coverage of China’s policy and positions on some issues. China in 2012 expelled an Al Jazeera journalist after the news network produced a number of programs critical of China, including one that examined the alleged use of prison labour to make products sold in Western markets. Beijing was particularly uneasy about the broadcaster’s coverage of human rights conditions in China, Pan said. “After the Arab Spring, [Al Jazeera] was active in attacking other regimes in the region and promoting so-called human rights and democracy, and criticising China’s policy and positions on Libya and Syria, ” he said. The broadcaster’s China coverage has improved since the Qatari government adjusted its policy, but Beijing remains wary about its “interference” in the country’s internal affairs, Pan said.

© Source: http://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy-defence/article/2097372/why-qatars-links-islamist-groups-worry-beijing
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CMT Awards 2017: They wore that? Fashions and photos from the red carpet

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Check out those fashions from the red carpet at the 2017 CMT Music Awards.
Wednesday night’s 2017 CMT Music Awards will honor country’s music’s top acts as well as lend its stage to pop, rock and R&B performers and Hollywood stars.
But we’re not waiting for the awards show to join the fun.
Think fashion.
Professional and amateur critics alike undoubtedly are checking out what the celebrities are wearing as they arrive on the red carpet in Nashville.
For the latest photos and other fashion updates, check back here before the awards show airs live on CMT at 8 p.m. Eastern.
Keith Urban has the most nominations at this year’s show, including Video of the Year. The other nominees in this top category are Carrie Underwood, Cole Swindell, Florida Georgia Line, Luke Bryan, Miranda Lambert and the CMA-produced 50th anniversary video featuring an all-star cast billed as Artists of Then, Now & Forever.
Awards are based on voting by fans. Here is a complete list of nominees.
Underwood, Shelton, Thomas Rhett and Little Big Town are among those set to perform Wednesday night. Bryan will sing with Jason Derulo, while Earth, Wind & Fire will join Lady Antebellum and Peter Frampton will perform with Brothers Osborne.
Ashton Kutcher, Jada Pinkett Smith and Katherine Heigl are among the presenters.
Jason Aldean and Darius Rucker are scheduled to pay tribute to Gregg Allman, who died last month.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.

© Source: http://www.nola.com/music/index.ssf/2017/06/cmt_awards_2017_they_wore_that.html
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Trump chooses former Justice Department official Christopher Wray to head the FBI

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President Trump’s tweet on nominating a new FBI director appeared an attempt to seize attention before ousted FBI chief James Comey testifies to Congress
After a tumultuous month at the White House and a public search that often resembled a reality television show, President Trump took to Twitter early Wednesday to announce a mainstream choice to replace fired FBI Director James B. Comey: a former Justice Department prosecutor and white-collar criminal defense lawyer who is likely to win Senate approval.
Trump’s surprise choice of Christopher A. Wray, who led the Justice Department’s criminal division from 2003 to 2005, caught House Speaker Paul D. Ryan and other senior Republicans off guard.
While at the Justice Department, Wray led headline-grabbing investigations of corporate fraud, including the prosecution of top officials at Enron Corp., the energy giant that went bust in 2001. He also played a role in the agency’s scramble to track terrorists after the attacks on Sept. 11,2001.
While in private practice, Wray represented embattled Republican Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey during the state’s Bridgegate scandal.
In the weeks since Trump abruptly fired Comey on May 9, the president has interviewed a slew of candidates to head an agency that is investigating Trump’s campaign and at least one of his top White House aides for dealings with Russia, FBI inquiries that Trump has denounced as a “witch hunt.”
At least six candidates — including three current and former members of Congress — later withdrew their names from consideration. While none described it as a snub, the chorus of “thanks but no thanks” highlighted Trump’s mounting difficulty in filling dozens of top-level positions in his administration.
Wray, 50, is likely to face tough questions in his confirmation hearings as to whether he can maintain the FBI’s traditional independence in the Trump era. He also may be grilled by Democrats on whether he helped prepare or approve Justice Department memos for the George W. Bush administration that critics said sanctioned torture.
“His loyalty pledge must be to the Constitution and the country, not to Donald Trump, » said Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) , a member of the Judiciary Committee.
Trump’s early-morning tweet appeared aimed at least in part at seizing public attention at the start of two days of nationally televised congressional hearings that will try to determine whether Trump sought to pressure Comey and other top U. S. officials to get the FBI to back off the various Russia investigations.
But the president’s announcement was overshadowed when the Senate Intelligence Committee unexpectedly released a seven-page statement by Comey that detailed his account of nine one-on-one meetings and phone calls with Trump before being fired.
Wray has most recently worked as a litigation partner at King & Spalding, an international law firm with 900 lawyers in 19 offices in the United States, Europe, the Middle East and Asia, according to the firm’s website. The married father of two called it “a great honor” to be chosen to lead the FBI.
“I look forward to serving the American people with integrity as the leader of what I know firsthand to be an extraordinary group of men and women who have dedicated their careers to protecting this country, ” Wray said in a statement issued by the White House.
In the same statement, Trump described Wray as “an impeccably qualified individual” who would serve the nation “as a fierce guardian of the law and model of integrity.”
In a rare bit of bipartisanship, some of Trump’s toughest critics applauded the choice.
“Considering some of the more political candidates who were being floated, and the president’s abysmal judgment, the country should breathe a sigh of relief that he chose a talented, credentialed, respected, deeply experienced individual like Wray, ” said Norman Eisen, a former ethics czar to President Obama who has harshly criticized Trump.
Eisen said he got to know Wray during the federal prosecution of officials from Enron, the former Houston-based energy giant whose leaders were charged with fraud, money laundering, insider trading and other crimes after the $64-billion company collapsed in what was then the nation’s largest bankruptcy.
Eisen, who worked on the defense team while Wray oversaw the prosecution, called Wray tough but fair. He said Wray avoided trying to capitalize on public anger but did not pull punches against an energy company seen as close to Bush’s administration.
Another frequent Trump critic, Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) , called Wray «tough, qualified and principled.”
Trump’s use of a tweet to announce his FBI pick solidified Twitter’s role as an official mode of communication at the White House. He did so days after several senior advisors, including Kellyanne Conway, said reporters were paying too much attention to the president’s tweets.
The choice of Wray surprised many lawmakers on Capitol Hill, including members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which will review his nomination — and even surprised some in the White House. Trump’s press office took more than five hours to issue a four-paragraph news release.
Born in Massachusetts, Wray graduated from Yale University in 1989 and three years later from Yale Law School, where he edited the Yale Law Review. After a year clerking for a federal appeals judge, he became a federal prosecutor in 1997 in the Northern District of Georgia, which includes Atlanta.
He came to Washington in 2001 to join the Justice Department as an associate deputy attorney general. Two years later, he was promoted to lead the department’s criminal division.
In 2004, during a showdown between the Bush White House and the Justice Department over a secret surveillance program, Wray was among the officials who threatened to resign if the secret program was renewed without changes.
When then-Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft lay in a hospital bed and White House aides were headed to his room to pressure him to renew the program, Wray stopped Comey in the hallway to join those standing up to the White House, according to a 2008 account in the Washington Post.
«Look, I don’t know what’s going on, but before you guys all pull the rip cords, please give me a heads-up so I can jump with you, » he said. In the end, Bush backed down and the program was changed.
In his highest-profile case since leaving government, Wray represented Christie in “Bridgegate, ” a case that helped sink the governor’s hopes of winning national office.
In 2016, three of Christie’s top aides were convicted of deliberately creating a massive traffic jam at the George Washington Bridge, a major artery into New York, to punish a local mayor who had declined to endorse Christie in his state reelection bid.
Christie, a former U. S. attorney from New Jersey, was not accused of wrongdoing. He described Wray on Wednesday as the “gold standard” for lawyers.
“When I had to retain legal counsel during a very, very troubling, confusing and difficult time for me, I made one phone call and that was to Chris Wray, ” he told reporters. “I can’ t give a better recommendation than that.”
Before choosing Wray, Trump spent a month considering a long list of politicians, former prosecutors and others. A parade of candidates trooped through the Justice Department and White House for interviews in an unusually public display.
At one point last month, Joe Lieberman, a former U. S. senator from Connecticut who ran for vice president on the Democratic ticket in 2000, was considered the front-runner. But he soon withdrew his name, as did Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) and Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S. C.) .
Others who pulled their names from the shortlist included Michael J. Garcia, a New York judge and former U. S. attorney; former FBI official Richard McFeely; and Alice Fisher, a former assistant attorney general.
Trump settled on Wray after interviewing him in the last week at the White House along with John Pistole, a former director of the Transportation Security Administration. The president said little about Wray in speeches later Wednesday in Cincinnati that focused on infrastructure and healthcare.
noah.bierman@latimes.com
Twitter: @noahbierman
j oseph.tanfani@latimes.com
Twitter: @JTanfani
Times staff writer Lisa Mascaro contributed to this report.

© Source: http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-fbi-trump-20170607-story.html
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SportsNation — Sports world reacts to news of Oklahoma's Bob Stoops retiring

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Former players, coaches and fans were abuzz Wednesday afternoon in the aftermath of the stunning news about the revered Sooners coach.
The college football landscape experienced a seismic shock wave Wednesday afternoon with the sudden news of Bob Stoops’ resignation after 18 years as the head football coach at the University of Oklahoma.
Stoops, 56, inherited a program coming off its third straight losing season when he took over before the 1999 season. He quickly returned the Sooners to their glory days as a national power, winning a national championship in his second season, producing Heisman-winning quarterbacks Jason White and Sam Bradford, and winning an unprecedented 10 Big 12 titles. Stoops is the winningest coach in OU history (190 wins) , and among coaches in the Sooners’ rich history, only Hall of Famers Barry Switzer and Bud Wilkinson posted a better career winning percentage than Stoops’ .798.
Incumbent Sooners quarterback Baker Mayfield, an early Heisman Trophy favorite for 2017, had a heartfelt message for his coach and mentor:
@OU_CoachStoops Thank you for everything Coach. You turned a little boy’s dreams into a reality. I will be forever grateful. #ThanksBob
— Baker Mayfield (@baker_mayfield6) June 7,2017
Stoops leaves the college game as one of its most popular figures. The social media world was buzzing, with numerous former players weighing in:
It’s time. #BobStatue pic.twitter.com/BVQS6VnuHY
— Gabe Ikard (@GabeIkard) June 7,2017
Timing is perfect! Lincoln Riley is in the exact same position as was Stoops. Never been a head coach but white hot as a coordinator! Loyal!
— Spencer Tillman (@SpenceTillman) June 7,2017
WHAT!?! Coach Stoops!?! Mannnnn heck naw!!
— Gerald McCoy (@Geraldini93) June 7,2017
Honor & Privilege to have played for @OU_CoachStoops! Great coach, better man! TY for all you have done for me and my family!! #BoomerSooner
— Dusty Dvoracek (@Dusty94_WWLS) June 7,2017
You took a chance on a skinny broke kid from a small city and let me flourish on the biggest stage. I’m forever grateful @OU_CoachStoops
— AARON COLVIN (@AColvin_22) June 7,2017
Crazy that Stoops retiring but just goes to show more to life than football! #hellvacoach
— Curtis Lofton (@CurtisLofton50) June 7,2017
Man I honestly don’t know where to start with this… First I want to say congratulations on a great coaching career at the University of Oklahoma, Coach Stoops. The winningest coach in Oklahoma History.. won every major bowl game and a National Championship! You coached many greats and you got more rings than anyone in Big 12 history. You were the coach that made me the person I am today. You gave me a second chance no one ever would of did in your position, and you never gave up on me after everything we’ve been through! I thank you everyday, coach, and I’ll never forget it. I will continue to make you happy and proud. I’ll forever be thankful for the opportunity you gave me! I Love you Coach! #LivingLegend #Boomer
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Reports: N. Korea fires 1 projectile off east coast, says S. Korea military

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Kim Jong Un’s regime fired four anti-ship cruise missiles, according to a US defense official.
North Korea on Thursday morning fired what’s believed to be surface-to-ship missiles, South Korea’s joint chiefs of staff said.
Kim Jong Un’s regime fired four anti-ship cruise missiles, according to a US defense official.
The official tells CNN that the Pentagon is not expected to release the typical statement about tracking the launches because these were not ballistic missile capable of posing a long-range threat.
North Korean state media has made no mention of the reported launches.
The South Korean military said the missiles flew about 124 miles (200 kilometers) . The launches occurred near the port city of Wonsan on North Korea’s east coast.
This is the fourth missile test since South Korean President Moon Jae-in took office in May. The preceding test came at the end of May when North Korea fired what it claimed was a new type of ballistic missile. That projectile also was fired from Wosnan. Japanese and South Korean monitors said it flew 248 miles (400 kilometers) over the Sea of Japan, also know as the East Sea.
Thursday’s launch is the first since the United Nations Security Council unanimously passed new sanctions against North Korea last week.
The resolution slapped even more UN sanctions on North Korea and condemned the regime’s continued proliferation of its nuclear and ballistic program.
The sanctions extend a travel ban and asset freeze on high-level North Korean officials and state entities that deal with the program, according to the resolution.
China has called on Pyongyang to suspend its testing while calling on the US to stop military exercises on and near the Korean Peninsula, which North Korea sees as a threat to its sovereignty.
CNN’s KJ Kwon in Seoul contributed to this report.

© Source: http://www.wmur.com/article/reports-n-korea-fires-1-projectile-off-east-coast-says-s-korea-military/9992072
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Chris Christie: Trump's pressure on Comey was "normal New York City conversation"

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Christie tried to defend Trump’s behavior detailed in Comey’s prepared testimony.
Demanding pledges of loyalty at a one-on-one dinner? Asking the FBI director to drop an investigation into one of your associates? That’s just “normal New York City conversation” to President Trump, according to New Jersey governor and onetime member of Trump’s inner circle Chris Christie. Shortly after fired FBI Director James Comey’s was released Wednesday afternoon, Chris Christie appeared on MSNBC to offer a defense of Trump’s interactions with Comey, which Comey himself called “inappropriate.” In his testimony, Comey detailed a with Trump that made him “uncomfortable” and led him to document every interaction. The testimony includes Comey’s allegation that Trump asked him to drop the FBI investigation into fired National Security Adviser Michael Flynn. When MSNBC host Nicolle Wallace asked about this allegation, Christie blamed Trump’s inexperience with government agencies, and said Trump considers that sort of thing “normal New York City conversation.” Here’s the extended quote: People immediately took to Twitter to analyze — and in some cases to mock — Christie’s response. Comey will deliver his prepared testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee. But in the meantime, Christie’s early response offers a window into how the GOP and Twitter users might respond to Comey’s statement and his answers to questions from senators on the committee.

© Source: https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/6/7/15759692/chris-christie-comey-normal-new-york-city-conversation
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