Saturday, March 23, 2019

Saturday's Headlines: Mueller submits final report without further indictments

The Washington Post
Democracy Dies in Darkness
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
Mueller submits final report without further indictments
President Trump has been silent so far about the filing, but the White House says the next steps are up to Attorney General William P. Barr. The inquiry has consumed Washington for nearly two years and led to guilty pleas from former advisers to Trump.
The Fix: Barr's letter to Congress, annotated
Analysis: What will the people be told?
Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III follows a history of special investigators who have sought to determine if presidents or top officials have broken the law.
 
'If you took it all in in one day, it would kill you': What the investigation has already revealed
The 22-month-old inquiry has exposed numerous contacts between President Trump's associates and Russians, and it has generated unpredictable ripple effects.
 
Trump team had not coordinated an aggressive response machine
Despite the potential peril, behind the scenes President Trump and his team had made limited preparations in the run-up to Friday's delivery.
 
'We will fight': Democrats prepare to battle for Mueller's complete findings
Lawmakers are looking to the special counsel's findings to inform their investigations — and insist they will be satisfied with nothing short of a complete account of the results and the evidence that informed them.
 
The wait for the Mueller report is over. And now ... we wait.
For now, it's all known unknowns and the tantalizing possibility of unknown unknowns.
 
The Fix: The report has dropped. Here's what happens next.
Here are 3 options for Attorney General William Barr now that he has received Robert S. Mueller III's highly anticipated report on the Russia investigation.
 
How public perception of Mueller changed during his inquiry
Mueller's investigation lasted nearly two years. Here's how public perception of how he was handling it changed.
 
Top officials at Southern Poverty Law Center step down amid controversy
The group's president, Richard Cohen, and its legal director, Rhonda Brownstein, resigned a little more than a week after the center's co-founder and chief litigator, Morris Dees, was fired for unspecified misconduct.
 
The Islamic State's caliphate has been defeated, U.S.-backed forces say 
At its peak, the extremist group controlled a stretch of Syria and Iraq that was almost the size of Britain. The group had challenged international borders and drew foot soldiers from around the world.
 
 
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Opinions
Mueller has submitted his report. Now Barr must share it with the rest of us.
I wrote the special counsel rules. The attorney general can — and should — release the Mueller report.
Mr. President, beware the mistakes of Richard Nixon
Theresa May isn't the adult in the room. She's part of the problem.
Democrats, please don't do this
What should D.C. do with the RFK Stadium?
 
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More News
After New Zealand shooting, should governments treat 8chan like a terrorist recruiting site?
To some experts in online extremism, the celebration on the Internet message board 8chan of the New Zealand slaughter shows that the site warrants close monitoring and, when talk turns to violence, law-enforcement investigation and intervention.
 
'Trump likes Chairman Kim': President calls off upcoming round of North Korea sanctions
President Trump's move to forestall future sanctions is an attempt to salvage his nuclear negotiations with North Korea, even as national security adviser John Bolton and others seek punitive economic measures against Kim Jong Un's regime.
 
Politics overshadowed security in Trump's Golan Heights tweet
The timing of President Trump's Thursday endorsement of Israeli ownership of the Golan Heights had much to do with upcoming elections in Israel and the United States.
 
FEMA exposes personal information of 2.5 million disaster survivors
About 1.8 million people had banking information and addresses revealed, and an additional 725,000 had just their addresses shared, a Homeland Security official said. The Federal Emergency Management Agency said it "provided more information than was necessary" while transferring data to a contractor.
 
North Carolina and Duke roll; 12-5 upsets reign on tournament's second day
Follow the most recent news and highlights from the 2019 men's NCAA tournament.
 
Perspective
Before Virginia could advance past Gardner-Webb, it had to survive itself
Coach Tony Bennett told his players, "Don't panic, but play with fight." Eventually, they found that balance in moving on from being an NCAA tournament punchline.
 
After stumbling at first against Gardner-Webb, Virginia wakes up and dispels tourney demons
The Cavaliers fell behind by 14 points in the first half, raising echoes of last year's historic loss to UMBC. But Virginia's De'Andre Hunter led his team to a dominant second half and a 71-56 win.
 
Virginia Tech starts fast and holds off Saint Louis to advance
Hokies take a 22-point lead into halftime and grind out 66-52 win to earn date with Liberty.
 
A 19-year-old dies by suicide one year after surviving the Parkland school shooting
Sydney Aiello was a senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School last year, when a gunman killed 17 students and school staff.
 
How a flight attendant from Texas ended up in an ICE detention center for six weeks
The case is an example of how the Trump administration's attempts to end DACA have confused recipients, their families, government agencies and employers, muddling an already complex web of immigration policies.
 
Neo-Nazis hijacked Papa John's brand. Can Shaq take it back?
Bringing in basketball Hall of Famer Shaquille O'Neal as a brand "ambassador" could boost the company's quest to win back customers, especially among minorities, marketing experts say.
 
Post Reports | Listen Now
Roseanne Barr just can't shut up
Paul Sonne discusses the potential impacts of the Pentagon's plan to fund the border wall; Geoff Edgers shares his trip to Israel with Roseanne; and Ben Guarino explains the "zombie theory" of birth order.
 

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