Top Items:
Washington Post:
CIA concludes Saudi crown prince ordered Jamal Khashoggi's assassination — The CIA has concluded that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ordered the assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Istanbul last month, contradicting the Saudi government's claims that he was not involved in the killing …
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Washington Post:
Woman says she married Khashoggi in ceremony kept secret from his fiancee and some in his family
Woman says she married Khashoggi in ceremony kept secret from his fiancee and some in his family
Discussion:
CNN and Patterico's Pontifications
Julian E. Barnes / New York Times:
C.I.A. Concludes That Saudi Crown Prince Ordered Khashoggi Killed
C.I.A. Concludes That Saudi Crown Prince Ordered Khashoggi Killed
Discussion:
The Week
Warren P. Strobel / Wall Street Journal:
CIA Concludes Saudi Journalist Was Killed on Crown Prince's Order
New York Times:
How the Trump Administration Stepped Up Pursuit of WikiLeaks's Assange — WASHINGTON — Soon after he took over as C.I.A. director, Mike Pompeo privately told lawmakers about a new target for American spies: Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks. — Intent on finding out more about Mr …
Discussion:
Politico, more at Mediagazer »
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Rachel Weiner / Washington Post:
This prosecutor's cut-and-paste mistake revealed case against WikiLeaks founder — Any writer's nightmare is a copy-and-paste error that goes into print. — But it's the rare typo that makes international news. — That's what happened to Kellen Dwyer, an assistant U.S. attorney …
Discussion:
Mashable
Dell Cameron / Gizmodo:
WikiLeaks Helped Hackers Rifle Through Stolen Company Emails, Leaked FBI Docs Show — The revelation that U.S. prosecutors have prepared an indictment against Julian Assange, a fact the government inadvertently made public Thursday evening, has again fanned the flames of speculation …
Discussion:
Lawfare, Breitbart and Law & Crime, more at Mediagazer »
Margaret Sullivan / Washington Post:
Booting Jim Acosta from the White House was bad for press rights. Charging Julian Assange might be worse.
Booting Jim Acosta from the White House was bad for press rights. Charging Julian Assange might be worse.
Discussion:
Breitbart, Bloomberg, Vox and Committee to Protect …
Sacramento Bee:
Camp Fire refugees create new town of ‘Wallywood’ as officials struggle with housing crisis — As searchers sift through dirt and ash for remains of the dead in the Northern California foothills Friday, officials struggled with a growing crisis: How to help the living, many of whom are now homeless.
Discussion:
Vox
RELATED:
Amanda Mull / The Atlantic:
Smoke Days Are Now California's Snow Days — Wildfire smoke has closed schools and canceled events across Northern California. But not everyone can stay indoors. — The particulates in smoke don't destroy homes. They don't down trees. But in the case of wildfires, smoke's impacts …
Discussion:
San Francisco Chronicle, Curbed SF and ThinkProgress
New York Times:
List of Missing in California Fire Is Over 1,000 People. Here Is How They're Being Counted. — As the death toll continues to rise in the deadliest wildfire in California history, the sheriff of the Northern California county where the fire still rages said on Friday that more than 1,000 people …
Discussion:
ThinkProgress and The Daily Caller
Mihir Zaveri / New York Times:
As Inmates, They Fight California's Fires. As Ex-Convicts, Their Firefighting Prospects Wilt.
As Inmates, They Fight California's Fires. As Ex-Convicts, Their Firefighting Prospects Wilt.
Discussion:
Axios
Carla Marinucci / Politico:
RIP, California GOP: Republicans lash out after midterm election debacle — LOS ANGELES — In the wake of a near-political annihilation in California that has left even longtime conservative stronghold Orange County bereft of a single Republican in the House of Representatives …
Discussion:
Political Wire, CALmatters, Washington Free Beacon and Washington Examiner
RELATED:
Los Angeles Times:
Going, going ... with midterm wipeout, California Republican Party drifts closer to irrelevance — For a party in freefall the last two decades, California Republicans learned that it's possible to plunge even further. — The GOP not only lost every statewide office in the midterm election …
Mihir Zaveri / New York Times:
A Gay Councilman in Texas, Ousted From Office, Says He Was Blackmailed With Naked Photos — This month's midterm elections resulted in the election of more openly lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people than ever before. But for Cross Coburn, who served as an openly gay councilman …
Jennifer Rubin / Washington Post:
Here's what a primary challenge to Trump would accomplish — “I think we have to go all out. I think this situation absolutely requires a really futile and stupid gesture be done on somebody's part!” — Otter, from 1978's “Animal House” — I confess that, for months now …
Discussion:
Althouse
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Pamela Brown / CNN:
Trump legal team balks at Mueller's questions on post-2016 election activity
Trump legal team balks at Mueller's questions on post-2016 election activity
Discussion:
CNBC, The Atlantic and Washington Post
Mike DeBonis / Washington Post:
Democratic Rep. Moulton draws fire for campaign to deny Pelosi speaker's job — Democratic Rep. Seth Moulton, the hard-charging Marine who served four tours of duty in Iraq is leading the challenge to Rep. Nancy Pelosi and her bid for speaker — and is suddenly taking incoming fire from all quarters.
Discussion:
Politico and Political Wire
RELATED:
Pilar Melendez / The Daily Beast:
Lou Dobbs Loses His Mind After CNN Defeats White House Over Acosta's Press Access — Once again, the pro-Trump host openly contradicts his own network bosses, bashing CNN's win against the White House as ‘outrageous.’ — Minutes after a federal judge ordered the White House …
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Ashton Pittman / Jackson Free Press:
Hyde-Smith Accepts $2,700 Donation from Notorious White Supremacist … JACKSON—U.S. Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith accepted a donation from Peter Sieve, a businessman in Washington state known for his white supremacist views, just days after a video published by Bayou Brief surfaced in which she says she would be …
Discussion:
Raw Story, The Bayou Brief, Sludge, Washington Post, IJR and Popular Information
Noor Al-Sibai / Raw Story:
Authorities find a rocket launcher and pipe bombs during massive Florida white supremacist sting — Thirty-nine members of the United Aryan Brotherhood and Unforgiven neo-Nazi groups were arrested in a Florida drug trafficking sting — and one had functional pipe bombs in his home.
RELATED:
Isabel Rosales / WFTS:
39 suspected gang members charged in major drug, gun trafficking investigation in Pasco
39 suspected gang members charged in major drug, gun trafficking investigation in Pasco
Discussion:
Washington Press and The Root
HuffPost:
D.C.'s Neo-Nazi Brothers Were Hiding In Plain Sight — A neighbor in Washington's Bloomingdale neighborhood warned a cop about extremists Jeffrey and Edward Clark. It wasn't enough. — WASHINGTON By last summer, Kamau Bilal had heard enough. When the Clarks became one of the first white families …
Benjamin Wood / Salt Lake Tribune:
Rep. Mia Love jumps ahead of Ben McAdams by 419 votes after updates from Utah, Salt Lake counties — Two-term Republican Rep. Mia Love, R-Utah, is winning the 4th Congressional District for the first time since Election Day after an updated vote count in Utah County pushed her narrowly …
Discussion:
Fox News, RedState, fox13now.com and Political Wire
RELATED:
Felicia Sonmez / Washington Post:
Rep. Mia Love pulls ahead of Democrat Ben McAdams as judge dismisses her lawsuit
Rep. Mia Love pulls ahead of Democrat Ben McAdams as judge dismisses her lawsuit
Discussion:
Joe.My.God. and Salt Lake Tribune
Jessica Taylor / NPR:
Georgia's Stacey Abrams Admits Defeat, Says Kemp Used ‘Deliberate’ Suppression To Win — Republican Brian Kemp will be the next governor of Georgia, with Democrat Stacey Abrams admitting Friday afternoon that there was no path to victory, following a bitter 10-day battle since Election Day.
Discussion:
Associated Press, Vox, Advocate, KAJ-TV, The Intellectualist, The Week and Raw Story
RELATED:
Dave Philipps / New York Times:
Decorated Navy SEAL Is Accused of War Crimes in Iraq — NAVAL BASE SAN DIEGO — Edward Gallagher was something special, even by the punishing standards of the Navy SEALs. Both a lifesaving medic and a crack sniper, he was repeatedly decorated for valor and for coolheaded leadership during 19 years of combat deployments.
RELATED:
David E. Bernstein / Reason:
American Civil Liberties Union, RIP — The ACLU no longer even pretends to believe in civil liberties. — In the late 1960s, the ACLU was a small but powerful liberal organization devoted to a civil libertarian agenda composed primarily of devotion to freedom of speech, free exercise of religion, and the rights of accused criminals.
Discussion:
Simple Justice, Law & Crime, Viking Pundit and The Daily Caller
Tal Kopan / San Francisco Chronicle:
More than 14,000 immigrant children are in U.S. custody, an all-time high — WASHINGTON — The number of undocumented immigrant children in government custody has topped 14,000 for the first time, a rise that shows no signs of slowing as the Trump administration enforces policies that are keeping them in government facilities longer.
Discussion:
Political Wire
Marc Caputo / Politico:
‘Nelson has no path’: Democrats admit Scott beats Florida icon — Sen. Bill Nelson has run out of time, run out of favorable court rulings and is about to officially run out of votes. — After losing to Gov. Rick Scott on Election Day, losing after an automatic recount and appearing …
Discussion:
Le·gal In·sur·rec· tion, New York Times, RedState, electionlawblog.org and BuzzFeed News
Jonathan S. Tobin / National Review:
Why the Senate Shouldn't Grandstand on Mueller — Even if you think the special counsel should be protected, the bill is unconstitutional. — Jeff Flake may be leaving the Senate soon, but he's determined that his exit will be one of non-stop moral posturing.
Ann Gibbons / Science:
Why 536 was ‘the worst year to be alive’ — Ask medieval historian Michael McCormick what year was the worst to be alive, and he's got an answer: “536.” Not 1349, when the Black Death wiped out half of Europe. Not 1918, when the flu killed 50 million to 100 million people, mostly young adults.
Discussion:
LewRockwell and The Daily Caller