Los Angeles Times

Biden revels in ‘a crisis averted’ on debt

President’s first speech from the Oval Office emphasizes his ability to work with the GOP.

- By Kwasi Gyamfi Asiedu and Owen Tucker-Smith

WASHINGTON — President Biden used the first Oval Office speech of his presidency to declare victory after a bipartisan deal to raise the debt ceiling passed both chambers of Congress, preventing a debt default and economic chaos.

In the 13-minute speech Friday evening, the president praised Republican and Democratic negotiator­s and commended Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) for working with him on the deal, which the two men finalized just days before the Treasury was set to run out of money to pay the country’s bills.

But even as he thanked his political opponents, Biden was quick to draw a contrast with them. He recalled Republican­s’ prior calls to cut Social Security and Medicare, and he slammed their proposed cuts to Medicaid, clean energy investment­s and Internal Revenue Service funding.

“Republican­s may not like it,” he said, “but I am going to make sure the wealthy pay their fair share. … I am going to be coming back, and with your help, I’m gonna win.”

The prime-time speech from behind the Resolute Desk represente­d a shift of sorts for Biden.

Some Democrats had worried that the president was too quiet during the weeks-long negotiatio­ns, allowing McCarthy to hog the media spotlight. The Oval Office address allowed him to speak directly to the American people not at a time of imminent crisis but

LIBERTY, Mo. — The family of a Black Kansas City teenager who was shot by a white man after he mistakenly knocked on the man’s door are frustrated with the prosecutor’s handling of the case, attorneys for the family said Thursday.

The complaints came after a preliminar­y hearing for 84-year-old Andrew Lester was set for Aug. 31-Sept. 1 and just days after a Clay County judge approved a request by Lester’s attorney to seal documents in the case.

Lester has pleaded not guilty to first-degree assault and armed criminal action in the shooting of Ralph Yarl, then 16, when he knocked on Lester’s door April 13 while trying to pick up his younger brothers, who were at a home a block away.

Civil rights attorneys Benjamin Crump and Lee Merritt said in a Zoom news conference that they had previously asked Clay County Prosecutor Zachary Thompson to step aside and let Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker be named as a special prosecutor in the case but that Thompson “adamantly” refused.

The family is upset that Thompson did not more aggressive­ly challenge the motion to seal court records and that the preliminar­y hearing was delayed for 90 days, which Thompson did not object to in court.

“We continue to encourage the prosecutor to zealously prosecute this case as he would had the dynamics been different,” Crump said.

“We don’t want any different form of justice or policy because we have a young teenage Black kid shot by an older white man.”

Thompson’s office said in a statement that the focus of his office “remains squarely on following the law and achieving justice.”

The shooting drew internatio­nal attention amid claims that Lester received preferenti­al treatment from investigat­ors after he shot Ralph.

President Biden and several celebritie­s issued statements calling for justice for the teenager.

Lester admitted that he shot Ralph through the door without warning because he was “scared to death” he was about to be robbed by the Black person standing at his door. He remains free after posting $20,000 — 10% of his $200,000 bond.

The teen’s father, Paul Yarl, said after Thursday’s hearing that he hopes Lester eventually serves jail time.

“The shooter was going to kill Ralph,” Yarl said. “It’s obvious, right? He shot him twice. His intent was to finish him off. So yeah, we need justice for that.”

Ralph Yarl, who has celebrated his 17th birthday since the shooting, suffered gunshot wounds to his head and wrist and continues to recover at home.

His mother, Cleo Nagbe, said he is trying to get back some normality in his life.

“The longer we stretch this out, the longer it takes him to get that little bit of normalcy he needs to spend his teenage years just doing teenager stuff. ... Ralph needs to be the teenager that he needs to be that Lester is stealing away from him,” Nagbe said.

Merritt said that the appropriat­e circumstan­ces to seal court documents have not been met and that sealing them benefits Lester at the expense of Ralph and his family.

“The state’s failure, Mr. Thompson’s failure to make the appropriat­e objections to the seal, is costing this family peace of mind,” Merritt said. “It’s costing them access to equal justice under the law.”

On Tuesday, Clay County Judge Louis Angles granted a request from Lester’s attorney to seal the court documents, saying the publicity led to threats against Lester, who his attorney says has been forced to move three times. He also said the publicity has made it more difficult for the case to be heard before a fair and impartial jury.

“The overwhelmi­ng majority of the reporting continues to assert that the alleged actions of [Lester] were racially motivated, which if believed, virtually eliminates the defense available to [Lester] related to the reasonable­ness of his actions,” Angles wrote in the ruling.

The judge noted in his order that Lester’s personal cellphone number was posted on a public platform after the shooting, leading to several text messages calling him a “murderer” who “should burn in hell.” Others threatened to shoot up Lester’s home, which has been vandalized since the shooting.

In his reply to the motion, Thompson argued that legal precedents largely favored keeping court documents open to the public, but he did not directly oppose sealing the records.

Nagbe and Ralph’s aunt, Faith Spoonmore, said the family was upset that some of the arguments for sealing court records focused on Lester’s health problems and being harassed since the shooting with little discussion about the continuing problems Ralph is facing.

They said Ralph, who will be a senior in high school in the fall, has restrictio­ns on playing with friends and playing his band instrument­s, while also suffering from the emotional trauma of the shooting.

“That is what we need to talk about, that is what the judge needs to understand,” Spoonmore said. “That Lester is suffering the consequenc­es of his actions, but Ralph is suffering the consequenc­es of being Black in America. That is what the judge needs to hear.”

 ?? Jim Watson Pool Photo ?? BIDEN spoke out after saying little during talks.
Jim Watson Pool Photo BIDEN spoke out after saying little during talks.
 ?? Charlie Riedel Associated Press ?? PEOPLE IN Kansas City, Mo., attend a rally in April in support of Ralph Yarl, a Black teenager who was shot after he mistakenly went to the wrong address to pick up his brothers and knocked on the door.
Charlie Riedel Associated Press PEOPLE IN Kansas City, Mo., attend a rally in April in support of Ralph Yarl, a Black teenager who was shot after he mistakenly went to the wrong address to pick up his brothers and knocked on the door.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States