Albuquerque Journal

TODAY IN HISTORY

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TODAY IS MONDAY, JUNE 27, the 178th day of 2022. There are 187 days left in the year.

TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT IN HISTORY:

On this date in 2016, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its strongest defense of abortion rights in a quarter-century, striking down Texas’ widely replicated rules that sharply reduced abortion clinics. In 1844, Mormon leader Joseph Smith and his brother, Hyrum, were killed by a mob in Carthage, Illinois. In 1880, author-lecturer Helen Keller, who lived most of her life without sight or hearing, was born in Tuscumbia, Alabama. In 1942, the FBI announced the arrests of eight Nazi saboteurs put ashore in Florida and Long Island, New York. (All were tried and sentenced to death; six were executed, while two were spared for turning themselves in and cooperatin­g with U.S. authoritie­s.) In 1944, during World War II, American forces liberated the French port of Cherbourg from the Germans. In 1950, the U.N. Security Council passed a resolution calling on member nations to help South Korea repel an invasion from the North. In 1957, Hurricane Audrey slammed into coastal Louisiana and Texas as a Category 4 storm; the official death toll from the storm was placed at 390, although a variety of state, federal and local sources have estimated the number of fatalities at between 400 and 600. In 1991, Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, the first Black jurist to sit on the nation’s highest court, announced his retirement. (His departure led to the contentiou­s nomination of Clarence Thomas to succeed him.) In 2005, the Supreme Court ruled, in a pair of 5-4 decisions, that displaying the Ten Commandmen­ts on government property was constituti­onally permissibl­e in some cases, but not in others. BTK serial killer Dennis Rader pleaded guilty to 10 murders that had spread fear across Wichita, Kansas, beginning in the 1970s. (Rader later received multiple life sentences.) In 2006, a constituti­onal amendment to ban desecratio­n of the American flag died in a Senate cliffhange­r, falling one vote short of the 67 needed to send it to states for ratificati­on. In 2011, former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h was convicted by a federal jury in Chicago on a wide range of corruption charges, including the allegation that he’d tried to sell or trade President Barack Obama’s U.S. Senate seat. (Blagojevic­h was later sentenced to 14 years in prison; his sentence was commuted by President Donald Trump in February 2020.) In 2018, Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, whose vote often decided cases on abortion, gay rights and other contentiou­s issues, announced his retirement. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS: Former Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt is 84. Fashion designer Vera Wang is 73. Actor Tobey Maguire is 47. Reality TV star Khloe Kardashian is 38.

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