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Attorney General Talks About His Own Interactions With Police, Calls For "Concrete Action"

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“[T]he reality is the dialogue is not enough. We need concrete action to change things in this country,” Attorney General Eric Holder says in Missouri.

Attorney General Eric Holder shakes hands with a patron before his meeting with community leaders, at Drake's Place Restaurant in Florissant, Mo., on Aug. 20.

Pool / Reuters

WASHINGTON — Attorney General Eric Holder spoke in very personal terms Wednesday about his own interactions with police.

In Missouri to talk with officials and community members about the shooting of Michael Brown by Ferguson Police Department officer Darren Wilson and the subsequent unrest in the community, Holder said, "I am the Attorney General of the United States. But I am also a black man," detailing multiples times when he had "humiliating" experiences after being stopped by police.

After arriving in St. Louis on Wednesday, one of Holder's first stops was to speak with community members at St. Louis Community College.

In addition to talking there about his personal experience, he spoke about what he wanted to see happen next, saying, "We are starting here a good dialogue. But the reality is the dialogue is not enough. We need concrete action to change things in this country."

"The eyes of the nation and the world are watching Ferguson right now. The world is watching because the issues raised by the shooting of Michael Brown predate this incident. This is something that has a history to it and and the history simmers beneath the surface in more communities than just Ferguson.

"We have seen a great deal of progress over the years. But we also see problems and these problems stem from mistrust and mutual suspicion.

"I just had the opportunity to sit down with some wonderful young people and to hear them talk about the mistrust they have at a young age. These are young people and already they are concerned about potential interactions they might have with the police.

"I understand that mistrust. I am the Attorney General of the United States. But I am also a black man. I can remember being stopped on the New Jersey turnpike on two occasions and accused of speeding. Pulled over.... 'Let me search your car'... Go through the trunk of my car, look under the seats and all this kind of stuff. I remember how humiliating that was and how angry I was and the impact it had on me.

"I think about my time in Georgetown - a nice neighborhood of Washington - and I am running to a picture movie at about 8 o'clock at night. I am running with my cousin. Police car comes driving up, flashes his lights, yells 'where you going? Hold it!' I say 'Woah, I'm going to a movie.' Now my cousin started mouthing off. I'm like, 'This is not where we want to go. Keep quiet.' I'm angry and upset. We negotiate the whole thing and we walk to our movie. At the time that he stopped me, I was a federal prosecutor. I wasn't a kid. I was a federal prosecutor. I worked at the United States Department of Justice. So I've confronted this myself.

"We are starting here a good dialogue. But the reality is the dialogue is not enough. We need concrete action to change things in this country. That's what I have been trying to do. That's what the President has been trying to do. We have a very active Civil Rights Division. I am proud of what these men and women have done. As they write about the legacy of the Obama administration, a lot of it is going to be about what the Civil Rights Division has done.

"So this interaction must occur. This dialogue is important. But it can't simply be that we have a conversation that begins based on what happens on August 9, and ends sometime in December, and nothing happens. As I was just telling these young people, change is possible. The same kid who got stopped on the New Jersey freeway is now the Attorney general of the United States. This country is capable of change. But change doesn't happen by itself.

"So let's start here. Let's do the work today."


Fox News' Megyn Kelly Snaps When Ferguson Update Interrupts Segment On Slain American Journalist

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“I realize something’s happening in Ferguson, but we’re talking about something important here.”

During her show on Tuesday, Megyn Kelly was visibly frustrated when her interview about the beheading of American journalist James Foley was interrupted by a breaking news update from the protests in Ferguson.

"I realize something's happening in Ferguson," Kelly said. "But we're talking about something important here, so can you at least split-screen the video?"

"I realize something's happening in Ferguson," Kelly said. "But we're talking about something important here, so can you at least split-screen the video?"

Fox News / BuzzFeed

Fox News / BuzzFeed

LINK: This Is How We Should Remember James Foley


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7 Photos Of Obama Golfing On Martha's Vineyard Wednesday

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The New York Daily News was not a fan .

President Obama delivered a somber statement Wednesday on the beheading of American freelance journalist James Foley at the hands of ISIS militants. And then he went to the golf course.

The president played with with former NBA star Alonzo Mourning, private equity investor Glenn Hutchins, and longtime friend Cy Walker at the Vineyard Golf Club.

Before the White House press pool, the president is also golfing at the Farm Neck Golf Club on the Vineyard Thursday.

AP Photo/Steven Senne

AP Photo/Steven Senne

AP Photo/Steven Senne


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Fox News Contributor Calls Eric Holder "Reprehensible, A Dismissible Human"

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“…in terms of his job description.”

Fox News' Dr. Keith Ablow was back on Outnumbered Thursday, weighing in on Attorney General Eric Holder's remarks in Ferguson, Mo.

And here's Eric Holder, reprehensible, a dismissible human — in terms of his job description. He can't do his job. He literally goes there [Ferguson] and says, 'No, we are separate, and you can't trust caucasians.' Unbelievable.

Watch the clip:


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Rick Perry: "Very Real Possibility" ISIS Has Crossed Southern Border Into U.S.

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“Individuals from ISIS or other terrorist states could be, and I think it’s a very real possibility that they have already used that.”

Texas Gov. Rick Perry says ISIS terrorists could be using the southern border to get into the United States.

"Individuals from ISIS or other terrorist states could be, and I think it's a very real possibility that they have already used that," Perry said during a speech at the Heritage Foundation Thursday.

Perry said he didn't have any "clear evidence" of that but said "common sense" tells you it could occur, citing crimes from undocumented immigrants.

Here's the video of his remarks:

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Abortion Opponents Urge Social Conservatives To Drop The Ice Bucket Challenge

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Lila Rose warns Republicans dumping a bucket of ice on their heads supports “a culture of death” — by supporting stem-cell research.

Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman / MCT

WASHINGTON — Anti-abortion activist Lila Rose is warning Republicans that their support for the Ice Bucket Challenge drives support for embryonic stem-cell research, which she says contributes to the "culture of death" surrounding legalized abortion thanks to the ALS Association projects that include embryonic stem cell research.

"It hurts the pro-life cause, which calls for a consistent, cohesive ethic on the dignity of ALL human life, when pro-life politicians take part in gimmicks or events, however well-intended, that contribute directly and unapologetically to the culture of death," Rose told BuzzFeed Thursday when asked what message she has for anti-abortion politicians who do the Ice Bucket Challenge.

"Abortion advocates often accuse us of elevating the fetus's rights above the mother's. But the truth is that we want equal rights for all — including between the innocent pre-born and those with ALS," she added. "Consistency in this is literally a matter of life and death."

ALS ice bucket challenges have been posted to YouTube by many socially conservative politicians, including former President George W. Bush, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, North Carolina Reps. Renee Ellmers and Mark Meadows, Alabama Rep. Martha Roby. The program has raised millions for ALS-related charities, most notably the ALS Association.

Meanwhile, a debate has raged in anti-abortion circles over the challenge. The American Life League lists the Association as a charity "not worthy of support from pro-lifers." Multiple stories on LifeNews.com have been devoted to ALS Association stem cell research. The Archdiocese of Cincinnati has tried to thread the needle between support for the viral sensation — and those with ALS — by allowing the challenge at the schools it runs but forbidding money raised from going to the ALS Foundation.

Rose and other anti-abortion leaders aren't opposed to ALS research or donating money to the cause of curing the disease. But ice bucketing is closely associated with the ALS Association, which Rose and others are warning people away from. Some abortion opponents are suggesting their own ALS Association-free ice bucketing.

Rose suggested a list of charities Republican politicians can support with their ice bucket funds, including the John Paul II Medical Research Institute. That pitch appears to be working: Time reports the John Paul charity "has received dozens of donations per hour in recent days" where it usually "only receives a couple donations each day."

An anti-abortion activist known in the community for her undercover videos from inside Planned Parenthood clinics that have made her a social conservative sensation.

For now, Rose appears to be among the few anti-abortion leaders willing to take on the wildly popular ice bucket challenge. The anti-abortion community is usually not one to shy away from the spotlight, but when it comes to the viral fundraising sensation, the community is uncharacteristically quiet despite the internal debate. A spokesperson at National Right To Life did not make anyone available for comment, and none of the Republican politicians BuzzFeed reached spoke on the record.

For its part, an ALS Association spokesperson says it has systems in place to deal with sensitivities around stem cell research.

"The ALS Association primarily funds adult stem cell research. Currently, The Association is funding one study using embryonic stem cells (ESC), and the stem cell line was established many years ago under ethical guidelines set by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS); this research is funded by one specific donor, who is committed to this area of research," an Association spokesperson said in a statement. "In fact, donors may stipulate that their funds not be invested in this study or any stem cell project. Under very strict guidelines, The Association may fund embryonic stem cell research in the future."

Here's How The State Department Trolls Terrorists On Social Media

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“How ironic.”

The State Department is trolling terrorists on social media.

The U.S. government's Facebook and Twitter campaign, launched in December, is called "Think Again Turn Away," and aims to "expose the facts about terrorists and their propaganda."

Think Again Turn Away comes from the State Department's Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications (CSCC), whose mission is to "orient, and inform government-wide foreign communications activities targeted against terrorism and violent extremism, particularly al-Qaida and its affiliates and adherents."


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Mitt Romney Took The Ice Bucket Challenge And It's The Most Mitt Romney Thing Ever

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“That is cold.”

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facebook.com

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that affects nerve cells in the brain and the spinal cord. Motor neurons reach from the brain to the spinal cord and from the spinal cord to the muscles throughout the body. The progressive degeneration of the motor neurons in ALS eventually leads to their death. When the motor neurons die, the ability of the brain to initiate and control muscle movement is lost. With voluntary muscle action progressively affected, patients in the later stages of the disease may become totally paralyzed.


Pentagon Throws Cold Water On Perry Claim ISIS Terrorists Could Have Crossed Into The U.S.

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“I’ve seen no indication that they are coming across the border with Mexico.”

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A Pentagon spokesman said Friday the Defense Department has seen "no indication" that terrorists from ISIS have crossed the border from Mexico in the United States.

"I've seen no indication that they are coming across the border with Mexico," press decretary John Kirby said on CNN's New Day Friday. "We have no information that leads us to believe that. That said, we do know they have aspirations to hit western targets and it's something, as Secretary [Chuck] Hagel said yesterday, that we've got to take seriously and with have to try to be ready for it."

The comments Kirby made on New Day were also blasted out to reporters by the Mexican Embassy, an apparent indication they agree with the Pentagon's assessment.

Kirby's comments came in response to Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who asserted at a conservative think tank in a speech Thursday ISIS terrorists could have already crossed the border in the United States.

"Individuals from ISIS or other terrorist states could be, and I think it's a very real possibility that they have already used that," Perry said during a speech at the Heritage Foundation.

Perry added he didn't have any "clear evidence" of that but said "common sense" implies it could have happened.

Democratic Congressman: Ferguson "Resembled Tiananmen Square"

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“Most people saw the image of high-powered military equipment moving down the streets of an American city over the past few days and it looked more like Fallujah than Ferguson.”

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Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver of Missouri says Ferguson looks like Fallujah — where some of the worst fighting in the Iraq War took place — and Tiananmen Square, the site of the Chinese government's crackdown on pro-democracy protesters.

"We are concerned, as are many Americans...Republicans, Democrats, Tea Party, independents...about the militarization of police departments around the country," Cleaver said on Ed Schultz's radio program. "Most people saw the image of high-powered military equipment moving down the streets of an American city over the past few days and it looked more like Fallujah than Ferguson. It resembled Tiananmen Square and something is wrong with that."

Cleaver was speaking with Schultz about his and fellow Democratic Rep. Lacy Clay's upcoming meeting with Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel about their concerns over the militarization of American police departments.

Obama Administration: American Journalist's Execution Is "Attack On Our Country"

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James Foley’s execution was “absolutely” a terrorist attack, Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes says.

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Conservative Filmmaker Dinesh D'Souza Compares "What's Going On In Ferguson" To ISIS

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“You have these people who basically believe that to correct a perceived injustice, it’s perfectly okay to inflict all types of new injustices.”

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Conservative commentator and filmmaker Dinesh D'Souza compared the reaction following the death of an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, Mo., at the hands of a police officers to actions being committed by ISIS militants.

"The common thread between ISIS and what's going in Ferguson is you have these people who basically believe that to correct a perceived injustice, it's perfectly okay to inflict all types of new injustices," D'Souza said on NewsMaxTV's Steve Malzberg Show. "Behead guys who had nothing to do with it. Go and loot shops from business owners who were not part of the original problem whatsoever. And all of this is then licensed by the left and licensed to some degree by the media."

In May, Dinesh D'Souza pleaded guilty to charges he made $20,000 in illegal contributions to his friend Republican New York Senate candidate Wendy Long's campaign in 2012.

He awaits sentencing on Sept. 23.

Chelsea Manning Says She's Only Been Given "Lip-Service" On Gender Treatment

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“Ultimately, I just want to be able to live my life as the person that I am,” Manning says in a letter released to NBC News .

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Chelsea Manning says that the military ignored and since has given only "lip-service" to her efforts to receive medical treatment because she is transgender, she wrote in letter released on Friday.

"Treatment is, as a matter of law, about medical necessity," she wrote in the letter, provided to NBC News. "The U.S. Disciplinary Barracks restricts my ability to express myself based on my gender identity. For example, in my daily life I am reminded of this when I look at the name on my badge, the first initial sewed onto my clothing, the hair and grooming standards that I adhere to, and the titles and courtesies used by the staff."

Manning was convicted of violations of the Espionage Act and other offenses in July 2013 after leaking thousands of classified documents to WikiLeaks. She thereafter announced that she is transgender and has tried to receive treatment since. Earlier this month, her lawyers wrote that they would sue if a treatment plan is not put forth by September 4.

NBC News / Via msnbcmedia.msn.com

GoFundMe Page For Darren Wilson Replaced By Tax-Deductible Charity

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Donations go to Shield of Hope, a 501c3.

The original donation page to support the Ferguson, Mo., police officer who shot Mike Brown has been replaced with a charity.

A long message to the Support Officer Wilson GoFundMe page was posted Friday afternoon, noting that donations will now go directly to a 501c3 charity called Shield of Hope, which the post says is designated "the authorized charity for donations on behalf of Darren Wilson."

The old GoFundMe account had raised more than $234,000 before it was shut down. The new page has already raised more than $9,000.

GoFundMe distanced itself from the situation, saying in an email that it is a "neutral platform" and the campaign itself has not violated any of the site's terms. Additionally, the email from a spokesperson, identified only as Kelsea, said the pages do not appear in a public search because "a valid Facebook account has not been associated with it."

The original donation page said all donations that were already made will still go towards helping Darren Wilson, and other social media pages will continue to be operated independently.

When asked whether Missouri unions were supporting the GoFundMe account, a representative for the state Missouri Fraternal Order of Police told BuzzFeed "that account is run by Lodge 15."

Shield for Hope and Lodge 15 appear to share the same address. Earlier this week, a user on the Facebook page I Support Officer Wilson directed people to "mail any donations" to FOP Lodge 15, located at 9620 Lackland Road, with "Attention: Shield of Hope." That address is also given on the new GoFundMe page.

A post from another Missouri police union earlier this week also directed donations to Shield of Hope, also located on Lackland Road, but with two numbers in the address transposed.

Lodge 15 did not immediately respond to requests for comment via email and phone.

Good Afternoon,

We (being the admins of the page) began this GoFundMe site after our Facebook page "Support Darren Wilson" grew and we saw that there was a need for an online donation site for those who wanted to donate. We set up this GoFundMe page and it quickly gained enormous support for Officer Darren Wilson. Then, once we located the local charitable foundation, Shield of Hope (a non-profit organization), that has been designated as the authorized charity for donations on behalf of Darren Wilson, we began working together to have a GoFundMe page set up to collect and disburse donations for Officer Wilson through the Charitable Foundation. Unfortunately, to do so requires us to end collection on the current page that you are viewing now. GoFundMe does not allow transfer of existing campaigns, even to charities. Please know that all funds received from our events, this GoFundMe site and our TeeSpring campaign will be donated to Officer Darren Wilson, and in the future, donations will still be donated to Officer Wilson, but will be tax deductible for donors as well. Shield of Hope is a Certified Charity on GoFundMe, is available via public search with GoFundMe, and has been designated by the IRS as a 501©(3) non-profit organization.

With the creation of a new page, the donation amount shown will initially reset to zero. Please do not confuse this with the current donation amounts received on this page. Shield of Hope has offered to post all funds received from this GoFundMe page, our TeeSpring page and our rally/t-shirt funds collected on the street on their site indicating they have received these funds from us, once we are able to send those funds to the Foundation. This will allow all of our supporters to confirm that funds collected on this page were sent to the correct place for Officer Darren Wilson.

We will continue to operate the "Support Darren Wilson" Facebook page and TeeSpring page independently. If there are any other changes, we will post updates via our Facebook page. We will also still be available for direct contact for any questions, clarification and t-shirt sales.

The Ferguson Police Department has requested that all donations that supporters may wish to mail be made payable to "Shield of Hope" and mailed to Shield of Hope, 9620 Lackland Rd., St. Louis MO 63114.

New GoFundMe site through Shield of Hope: https://www.gofundme.com/OfficerWilsonFundraiser

Mailing Address for All Mail in Donations:
Shield of Hope
9620 Lackland Road
St. Louis, MO 63114
Phone Number: 314-423-8003

Contact E-mail Regarding T-shirts and questions about the original GoFundMe page: istand4darren@gmail.com

As a group, "Support Darren Wilson" is comprised of many people who want to give others the opportunity to support Officer Darren Wilson during this time. Some of us have never met Officer Darren Wilson while others are close family friends or even family themselves. The funds collected through GoFundMe and through TeeSpring along with our fundraisers on the ground will be going directly to Officer Darren Wilson through the non-profit Shield of Hope. These funds will be used to cover potential legal fees, relocation and living expenses of both Officer Darren Wilson and his immediate family.

We truly hope that everyone who has donated understands the transition. If not, please reach out to us. We do not want this to become a hindrance of the support Officer Darren Wilson is receiving.

Thank you for your understanding. We truly appreciate your time, efforts, prayers, kind words and donations. It means more than you could possibly know.

God Bless


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Unions Split, Take Sides After Ferguson

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While the progressive movement rallies around Michael Brown, some service unions and police unions are dividing.

Yuri Gripas / Reuters

WASHINGTON — This weekend, local organized labor will rally in support of Michael Brown — and local organized labor will keep working in support of the police and Darren Wilson, the man who shot Brown.

Brown's death has united progressives and Democrats, while bolstering growing coalitions skeptical of police tactics on the conservative side of the aisle. But labor is split: Organizations that represent law enforcement are warning against demilitarizing police forces and rushing to judgement on Wilson. At the same time, unions that represent big numbers of minority workers are putting their resources into vocal criticisms of police.

In New York City, unions representing teachers and health care workers expect to bring thousands to an anti-police violence march Saturday let by Al Sharpton. Meanwhile, on Friday, a Washington-area police union was celebrating being the largest donor to the controversial GoFundMe site aimed at funneling money to Ferguson, Missouri, police officer Darren Wilson.

"We cannot live in communities where men are targeted and can be killed by the police," said Chelsea-Lyn Rudder, spokesperson for SEIU 1199, a 400,000-member local of the larger Service Employees International Union. SEIU 1199 is a lead sponsor for this weekend's March For Justice For Victims Of Police Brutality, an effort led by Sharpton aimed at drawing attention to Brown's death as well as other high-profile police-related deaths like Sean Bell and Eric Garner.

Rudder said SEIU 1199 was invited to the protest by Sharpton, but the union's participation is personal.

"Sean Bell's mother is an SEIU member," Rudder said. She said that many of her union's members have personal experiences with the kinds of police tactics they're hoping to draw attention to at the march.

"A lot of our members are people of color," she said. "It's not superfluous to them, these are issues that they're actually living."

The United Federation of Teachers, New York's subsidiary of the national American Federation Of Teachers, is also sponsoring the march. That's led to an inter-union dispute.

"The UFT has other issues," the leader of a city police union told the New York Post. "This is not their issue."

Some police locals are rallying around Wilson. In Missouri, a national GoFundMe campaign in support of Wilson is now sending donations to a charity that appears to share an address with a St. Louis County police union.

In Anne Arundel County, Maryland, a Fraternal Order of Police Lodge donated $1,070 to the GoFundMe page set up for Wilson Thursday. BuzzFeed was unable to reach anyone at the Maryland state Fraternal Order of Police for comment.

"Our state as well as our locals operate not independently, but they make their own decisions," said Tim Richards, a spokesman for the national Fraternal Order of Police.

At the national level, leaders are also urging caution before judging the Ferguson police or calling for them to lose their military-style equipment.

In a letter posted Thursday to the website of the International Union of Police Associations, a member of the AFL-CIO, IUPA president Sam Cabral took the side of the Ferguson cops.

"It is the American tradition that we sometimes have heartfelt and polar opposite views of the same event," he wrote. "We welcome the federal microscope. We have lived with it for years."

Conversely, another AFL-CIO member president, Joe Hansen of the United Food and Commercial Workers President, blamed Michael Brown's death on "systemic problems."

"This entire episode highlights systemic problems that still plague our nation — abject poverty, the lack of good jobs, an absence of racial diversity in the halls of power," he wrote.

LINK: GoFundMe Page For Darren Wilson Replaced By Tax-Deductible Charity


Hillary Clinton Ignores Questions On Ferguson

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The former secretary of state has not commented on the shooting of Michael Brown or the subsequent protests.

WESTHAMPTON, N.Y. — Surrounded by a retinue of aides and members of her security detail, Hillary Clinton left a book signing on Sunday afternoon as two reporters asked questions about the protests in Ferguson, Missouri.

Clinton ignored them, exiting the bookstore through a backdoor.

Last week, Rev. Al Sharpton, the New York City preacher, called on Clinton and another possible presidential candidate, Jeb Bush, to speak out on the violence in Ferguson. "Jeb Bush, Hillary Clinton," he said, "don't get laryngitis on this issue."

But in the two weeks since the police shooting of Michael Brown, a black teenager, Clinton has not commented on the unrest in the St. Louis suburb.

On Sunday, she stayed quiet again, sticking to her routine at the signing at Books & Books, a shop on the main drag of this hamlet in the Hamptons.

The event capped off a two-month publicity tour to promote her memoir, Hard Choices. This month, Clinton and her husband have decamped to Amagansett for vacation. She is scheduled to appear at several Democratic Party fundraisers and at a campaign event in Iowa next month, Sen. Tom Harkin's annual steak fry.

Clinton's team added the Westhampton stop to her schedule just last week. A staffer at Books & Books said they started preparing for the event last Monday.

The owner, Jack McKeown, said he'd been trying for six months to schedule an event with Clinton. McKeown, who is also the former head of Clinton's publishing house, Simon & Schuster, told reporters he was able to get the signing on her calendar after running into an old mutual friend: Bob Barnett, the Washington lawyer who represents Clinton and negotiated her book contract.

British Embassy Trolls All Of The United States With Epic War Of 1812 Tweet

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Cold.

Following the defeat of American forces during Battle of Bladensburg at the hands of the British, Washington, D.C. was occupied and burned.

The occupation remains the last time the United States Capital was occupied by a foreign army.

The British Embassy marked the occasion with this trolly tweet:

The British Embassy marked the occasion with this trolly tweet:

Twitter: @UKinUSA

Justice Department Civil Rights Division Investigating Arizona Border Patrol Shootings

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The investigations could represent a shift in how the administration handles cross-border violence.

16 year old Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez was shot by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents in 2012 while walking in Nogales, Mexico.

John Stanton

WASHINGTON — The Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division has launched at least two investigations into Customs and Border Protection personnel based in Arizona over shooting deaths, as part of a broader effort to clamp down on violence and allegations of human rights violations.

CBP, and in particular the Tucson Sector in Arizona, use of force against undocumented immigrants and Mexican citizens inside their home country has come under increasing scrutiny over the last year, and the investigations come on the heels of a federal civil lawsuit filed by the family of a 16-year-old Nogales, Mexico, boy who was killed during a cross-border shooting by CBP.

The involvement of Justice Department headquarters could represent a significant shift in how the Obama administration is addressing violence along the border. FBI investigators almost never bring criminal charges against CBP agents and officers, and human rights organizations have accused the administration of turning a blind eye towards the border.

A Department of Justice spokesperson declined to comment. But a law enforcement official familiar with the investigations confirmed personnel from Justice's Civil Rights Division took part in a crime-scene visit last week in Nogales, Mexico, to investigate the 2012 shooting of Jose Antonio Elena Rodriguez.

According to the Nogales International, which first reported the Nogales visit, Assistant U.S. Attorneys Wallace Kleindienst and Karen Rolley and other federal officials joined their Mexican counterparts in the visit to the site of the shooting.

Although Kleindienst and Rolley are veteran prosecutors based in Arizona, the broader investigation into complaints against CBP is being run out of the civil rights division's D.C. office. "In general, when these types of cases come up they are run out of the civil rights division in Washington, D.C.," the law enforcement official explained.

Mexico Has Deported 93 Percent Of The Unaccompanied Minors Detained At Its Border

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The country has deported 13,000 children detained at the country’s southern border.

Stringer/Mexico / Reuters

WASHINGTON — Mexican officials have deported more than 13,000 of the 14,000 undocumented, unaccompanied minors who have been caught at Mexico's southern border, a rate significantly higher than in the United States, according to government sources familiar with the situation.

Additionally, Mexican authorities have deported more than 64,000 of the estimated 69,000 adults that have been detained along their southern border this year.

Those numbers stand in stark contrast to the deportation of minor immigrants from the United States: None of the more than 60,000 Central American minors detained this year have been deported.

According to a Department of Homeland Security spokesman, those minors — who are estimated to total as many as 90,000 by year's end — must first make their way through the legal system, which has seen significant backlogs, because they qualify to apply for asylum status.

"They are subject to removal, and are all issued Notices to Appear in immigration court, but due to the current backlog in the courts a [minor] encountered this year wouldn't have yet had their day in immigration court. So all the [minors] encountered this year still have their cases pending," the spokesman told BuzzFeed.

According to Mexican government sources, the vast majority of unaccompanied minors detained at the country's southern border comes from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador, the majority are between the ages of 12 and 17, and most are boys. Government officials provide the minors with temporary shelter, food, clothing, and medical treatment while in custody.

Most unaccompanied minors are returned to their country of origin by plane by Mexican authorities, while Central American children who are accompanied by an adult family member are also provided with bus tickets to their countries of origin.

Of the 1,000 minors who have not been deported from Mexico, some are applying for asylum in Mexico, while others have petitioned to be allowed to travel to the U.S. border in order to be reunited with family in the United States.

A Mexican government spokesman declined to comment for this story. But a fact sheet prepared by the government on its efforts to stem the flow of minor immigrants notes that starting in July, Mexico began implementing a series of new measures focused on its southern border with Belize and Guatemala, including increased checkpoints, and additional immigrant shelters and medical services.

However, one Mexican official noted that the shift of emphasis by the government to its southern border comes as migration levels of Mexican nationals into the United States is a net zero, meaning the numbers of Mexicans immigrating into the country equal the number moving back to their home country.

Democratic Congressman: Slaveholding States Became Tea Party, Oppose Obama Because Of His Race

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“I have been requested not to talk about that too much.”

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Democratic New York Rep. Charlie Rangel stood by earlier comments that Republican opposition to President Obama is in part based upon his race, and added in an interview with C-SPAN's Q&A that slaveholding states became Tea Party states.

"I have been requested not to talk about that too much," Rangel said in the interview, when asked about his previous remark. "I think the reason for it is that it is just too darn obvious as to what it is all about."

"I think if you take a look and see which counties and which Congressional districts, which areas of the United States had the most prejudice, it would be the slaveholding states," he continued. "It would be the Confederate states. It would be the states that fought the Union. Those that hated Lincoln."

Rangel went on, saying Confederates became Dixiecrats and are today members of the Tea Party.

"If you look at it today, they have changed parties," he said. "They used to be Dixiecrats, then they became Tea Party. The love and affection of embracing the Confederate flag. And then you place a birth that a lot of attention was given to him. The fact that people can say we have got to take our country back and lawyers know it is not what the written word it is how did you say that to determine what they really meant. So people said, please don't bring up that race thing anymore."

Rangel added he has been asked not to talk about race and the president by "people who want to avoid the controversy instead of dealing with the substance."

The Democratic congressman concluded by saying "most people know" that "if the president was not black and was white, this type of animosity would not be directed at the President of the United States of America."

Rangel has made similar comments in the past.

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